Some individuals remember their childhood as golden summers and bedtime stories, dinners around the table and bicycles left in driveways. My childhood didn’t look like that—not until Grandma Grace arrived and rewrote everything.
My mother, Delia, and my sister, Cynthia, were always chasing bad men and worse decisions. And me? I was the quiet one. A shadow in the chaos. A child born into noise but made of silence.
Then one day, when I turned six, Grandma Grace showed up, packed a small bag with my things, and said simply, “You’re coming home with me, Tom.”
I did. Because home wasn’t a place—it was her.
She was a loving, supportive presence—always there for important moments, making sacrifices for my future, and commanding respect through quiet strength.