My husband and I called my sweet, 85-year-old grandma to tell her I got a new job. She congratulated us, talked for a bit, and then hung up. Later, she called me to say, “Sweetheart, come by tomorrow. I have something I think youโre ready for now.”
I assumed it was one of her sentimental knick-knacks. Maybe an old photo album or a worn-out quilt. Sheโd always been the kind to attach meaning to the smallest things. I told her weโd stop by after lunch.
The next day, I found her waiting on the porch with a glass of iced tea in one hand and a folded napkin in the other. She didnโt hug me like usual. Instead, she looked me up and down like she was measuring something.
โYou look like a woman whoโs about to learn something,โ she said, then smiled and shuffled back inside.
She led me to the kitchen and pulled a ceramic cookie jar from the top of the fridge. It was shaped like a chubby chicken. I recognized it instantlyโit had been around my entire life, filled with oatmeal cookies, notes, even spare buttons.
โThis,โ she said, brushing dust from its lid, โisnโt just a jar. Itโs a map.โ
I laughed, thinking it was another one of her metaphors. But then she opened it, reached inside, and pulled out a bundle of faded envelopes tied together with string.
She handed them to me, her voice suddenly lower. โTheyโre all letters. From me to myself. One a year, every year, on my birthday. I started when I was 20.โ
I blinked, unsure what to say.
โI want you to read them. Not all today. Take them home. One a week. And maybeโฆ write your own.โ
I nodded, overwhelmed by the gesture. I promised her I would.
At home, I untied the bundle and began with the letter marked: Age 20 โ July 1958.
The first few were lightheartedโmusings on love, dreams, recipes she wanted to try. As I read more, the letters shifted. Some were raw. Honest. She talked about feeling like she wasnโt enough, about losing a baby in 1963, about the loneliness she sometimes felt even when surrounded by family.
Each letter was like a piece of her I never knew existed.
My husband noticed how quiet I became over the next few weeks. Iโd read a letter on Sunday nights, and each one stayed with me, shaping the way I looked at my grandmaโand at myself.
But it wasnโt until I got to Age 42 โ July 1980 that everything changed.
That letter was different. Not handwritten like the others, but typed on a yellowing sheet of paper. And there was a post-it stuck to the front that said: โGive this one time.โ
I sat on the couch with a blanket and read.
She wrote about her friend, Lorna, who she hadnโt spoken to in years. About a misunderstanding that turned into silence. She talked about how pride kept her from picking up the phone. And about how, when she finally did, it was too lateโLorna had passed in her sleep two weeks earlier.
โI think about her every day,โ she wrote. โAnd I realize now, forgiveness isnโt just a gift you give to others. Itโs one you give to yourself. If you wait too long, you lose the chance to do either.โ
I sat there for a long time after that one. I had someone like that too. My college roommate, Maris. We had a falling out over something stupid. She borrowed my car without asking, I yelled at her in front of friends, she moved out, and we never spoke again.
It had been five years.
The next morning, I looked her up on Instagram. She was still in town. Still smiling that same sideways smile in every photo. I stared at the message box for hours before typing something short.
Hey. I know itโs been a while. I was thinking of you and would love to talk.
She replied in ten minutes.
Thought youโd never say that. Coffee tomorrow?
We met. It was awkward. Then it wasnโt. Turns out weโd both carried that wound for longer than we realized.
My grandmaโs letter had somehow healed something in me that I didnโt even know was infected.
Week by week, letter by letter, my heart grew softer.
But one letter, the last one in the bundle, came with no age, no year. Just a note on the envelope that read: Only open when you get the job youโve always wanted.
That had to be now, right? I had just landed a role as Director of Community Programs at a nonprofit Iโd admired for years. It was everything Iโd worked toward.
So, I opened it.
Inside was a check. A real, legitimate-looking check. Made out to me. $3,000. And a note.
โCongratulations. You made it. I saved this for you.โ
I thought it was a joke. But it wasnโt. I called her instantly.
โYou saved money for me?โ I asked.
She chuckled. โEvery year I didnโt know what to get you for your birthday, I put $50 in a jar. Sometimes $100, if I could.โ
โBut why?โ
โBecause I knew one day youโd chase a dream. And dreams are expensive.โ
I cried harder than I expected.
My husband and I used the money to start a small side project weโd talked about for yearsโcreating a community garden in our neighborhood. A safe space where kids could learn about plants, food, and nature.
It took months, but we did it.
My grandma came to the ribbon cutting. She wore a pink sunhat and brought lemon cookies. Everyone called her โMiss Juneโ by the end of the day.
That evening, she pulled me aside. Her eyes were misty.
โIโm proud of you. Not just for the job. For listening. For learning.โ
I told her it was all her. Her words. Her wisdom.
She smiled. โNo, honey. You did the work. I just left the breadcrumbs.โ
Six months later, she passed away peacefully in her sleep.
Her house, exactly as she left it, was full of little secrets. Letters in books, recipes tucked in coat pockets, even a note inside a flour tin that read: Flour is like life. A mess, until you know what to do with it.
We laughed and cried while packing up her things.
But one discovery stopped me cold.
In her bedroom closet, hidden behind a stack of sweaters, was another ceramic jar. This one wasnโt a chicken. It was shaped like a heart.
Inside were letters. Dozens. But not to herself.
To me.
To my sister.
To my dad.
To neighbors. Friends. Even to Maris, my college roommate.
She had written every one of us something. Some were long, others just a line or two.
Mine simply said: Keep writing your story. Youโre better at it than you think. And donโt forget to leave a map.
I framed it.
A few weeks later, I started my own jar. Not a ceramic oneโI bought a wooden box and lined it with velvet. My first letter was messy. Rambly. But it was mine.
I wrote to my future self, to my maybe-kids, to the people I hadnโt met yet.
And every time I felt stuck, I opened one of hers. Not just to read, but to remember.
To remember that life isnโt made in leaps, but in letters.
In quiet decisions.
In forgiveness offered before itโs earned.
In gardens planted with someone elseโs check.
In jars shaped like chickens.
Hereโs the twist I didnโt expect: That job I thought was the one? It wasnโt. A year in, I realized I was burnt out. The title didnโt mean what I thought it would. The people werenโt who I imagined theyโd be. I started dreading Mondays again.
But because of everything my grandma had taught me, I didnโt panic. I pivoted.
With support from my husband and encouragement from Marisโwho had become one of my closest friends againโI left.
We turned the community garden into a full nonprofit. We built educational programs. Partnered with schools. Raised funds. Started a podcast about rebuilding communities through kindness, food, and connection.
It wasnโt the path I thought Iโd take.
But it was mine.
And the $3,000 jar?
We started our own version.
Every month, we set aside a small sum. Not much. But enough to surprise someone. A teenager who needs supplies. A mom starting a business. A retired teacher who still volunteers at the library.
We call it Juneโs Jar.
And every time we give from it, we tuck in a note that says:
Dreams are expensive. But someone believes in yours. Keep going.
My grandma never ran a company or went viral. But she changed more lives than sheโll ever know.
And now, maybe I get to do the same.
If this story reached you somehowโif youโre sitting with an unopened letter in your heart, or a call youโve been meaning to make, or a jar of dreams collecting dustโconsider this your sign.
Go call your person.
Start your jar.
Write your map.
You never know whoโs following the breadcrumbs.
If this story touched you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. And maybe, just maybe, start your own jar today.



