My Mom Wore the Same Ragged Coat for Thirty Winters – After Her Funeral, I Checked the Pockets and Fell to My Knees

My Mom Wore the Same Ragged Coat for Thirty Winters – After Her Funeral, I Checked the Pockets and Fell to My Knees

I ran my hand along the lining.

Mom had sewn inside pockets herself years ago. Deep ones.

They were bulging.

It felt heavier than wool should feel.

I slipped my hand inside one of the hidden pockets, expecting to find old tissues or candy wrappers she’d forgotten about over the years.

Instead, my fingers closed around a thick bundle of envelopes, held together with a brittle rubber band that looked as old as the coat itself.

There were 30 of them, carefully numbered in Mom’s familiar handwriting. None of them had stamps or addresses.

I sat down on the floor right there by the door, still holding the coat, and opened the envelope marked “1.”

There were 30 of them, carefully numbered.

The first line made my vision blur.

“Dear Jimmy, When you find these, I’ll be gone. Please don’t judge me until you’ve read them all.”

I read every word.

She explained everything in that first letter.

His name was Robin… my father.

She said he was the love of her life at 22. That they’d met in the town square of our little city on a cold November afternoon when she’d been trying to carry groceries and dropped everything on the sidewalk.

His name was Robin.
He’d helped her pick them up. And never really left after that.

For two years they were inseparable.

Then he got an opportunity to work abroad. To earn more money than either of them had ever seen.

He promised to come back. Promised he’d save enough and return, and they’d build something real.

The day he left, it was freezing.

He took the coat off his own back and wrapped it around her shoulders.

“Just to keep you warm while I’m gone,” he’d said.

He promised to come back.

Mom wrote that she’d laughed and told my dad he’d freeze without it.

He said he’d be fine.

Post navigation

Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

back to top