How to be adopted

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Dear grandmother, from your secret granddaughter...

Dear grandmother,

I wanted to thank you for the cardigans you knitted for my first baby.

They came in big batches. We didn’t know what we were having so you knitted a mixture of colours from yellow and green to pink and multi-coloured. It was a boy: your first great-grandchild. He has never met you and we don’t have a photograph of you.

When his sister was born a few years later, she wore the pink and yellow ones and we took photos for you. I hope you saw them.

I often wonder if she looks like you.

At the time I thought we were on the cusp of a relationship, but that never materialised and I’ve only met you once. I wish I’d known it would just be the once. I wish I'd known you were my last surviving biological grandparent. I would have asked you more questions. I would have looked into your eyes properly. I would have remembered what colour your eyes are. 

As it is, I will remember the gesture. Not a shop-bought gift, not just one hand-knitted cardigan, but dozens of soft, colourful creations made from a variety of wools and given different finishes. I wonder what you were thinking about during the hours it took to knit them.

I didn’t realise the significance of the gesture at the time, I was so caught up in being a mum to a newborn. Now I choose to think you were knitting the cardigans not just for my baby, but for me as well.  You didn’t know me as a baby and you couldn’t be there for me as a grandmother. You didn’t meet me until I was an adult, but I carry hope that you would have loved me, and maybe even fought to keep me in the family. It’s nice to think like that sometimes, but realistically I know it's unlikely.

We may never know what might have been, but I choose to see your gesture as one of love and redemption. I promise to pass your cardigans down to my children. In this way they will be able to feel a connection to their ancestors despite their complicated family tree. It will be our version of sepia-toned photographs on the wall at home.

And if I am lucky enough to have grandchildren to wear your cardigans, I will hold them so very tight.

Love,

Your secret granddaughter