There are certain memories that stick with you forever — not because they were extravagant, but because of the way they made you feel.
For me, it was weekends at Grandma’s house.
Back then, life moved slower. There were no smartphones to distract us, no endless streaming services pulling us into our own worlds. Instead, we had each other — and Grandma made sure we never wanted for anything more.
Every Sunday without fail, the entire family would gather at her small but cozy home. Aunts, uncles, cousins, neighbors who practically were family — everyone showed up. The smell of slow-cooked food filled the air, usually something simmering on the stove for hours — chicken and dumplings, collard greens, cornbread, or whatever recipe she felt like reviving that week.
We’d sit around mismatched furniture, on porch swings, or even on blankets in the backyard, laughing, telling stories, and eating until we could barely move.
Grandma wasn’t just a cook — she was a storyteller. Every dish came with a memory. Every photo on the wall had a story behind it. She knew all of our names, our favorite foods, our fears, and our dreams. And somehow, she always knew exactly what to say to make everything better.
Those days weren’t perfect — there were arguments, loud moments, and the occasional burnt casserole — but they were real. They were ours.
As the years passed, things changed.
Family members moved away for work or school. Some drifted apart. Life got busier. Birthdays turned into text messages. Holidays became smaller, scattered across time zones and Zoom calls.
And Grandma? She aged quietly, still cooking every Sunday — but now mostly for herself.
I remember visiting her one afternoon after college. I walked in expecting the usual chaos — cousins fighting over the TV, babies crying, someone asking if dinner was ready. But instead, it was quiet. Too quiet.
She looked up from her chair and smiled softly. “I miss the noise,” she said.
That broke my heart.
A few months later, she passed away peacefully in her sleep. Her house was sold soon after, and now, nothing really brings the family together the way it used to.
Sometimes I wonder if others feel the same — if you, too, have memories of those full-house Sundays, of sitting on the floor playing cards while adults talked politics and gossip over coffee and cake.
If you do, then you know what I mean when I say:
Those weren’t just gatherings.
They were the glue that held us together.
And sometimes, late at night, I find myself scrolling through old photos — Grandma in her apron, cousins chasing each other through the yard, birthday candles flickering on a worn kitchen table — and I whisper to myself:
“I miss that, too.”