I Sold My House So My Granddaughter Could Have Her
A Life Built on Love and Loss
“My name is Martha. I’m 72 years old.” I built my life around love — as a wife, mother, and grandmother.
I married young, but tragedy struck early.
My husband, Bill, died in a factory accident, leaving me with a four-year-old daughter, Angela.
I worked as a librarian for forty years, stretched every dollar, and raised Angela with love and sacrifice.
A Grandmother’s Devotion
When Angela had her daughter Riley, I became a second mother. I helped raise her, patched scraped knees, and made Halloween costumes from old curtains.
After Angela died suddenly from a brain aneurysm, I became Riley’s guardian.
“She needed me. So I became her guardian, her rock, her safe place.” We were everything to each other.
A Painful Betrayal
Riley grew up, got engaged, and dreamed of a grand wedding.
She came to me overwhelmed, crying, “Just one perfect day.
That’s all I’ve ever wanted.” To give her that dream, I sold my house and sent her the money.
But when the invitations went out, mine never came. Riley told me, “No adults over sixty-five. We just want a certain vibe. Fun, energetic, not… boring.” I quietly withdrew — and reclaimed the money I’d paid directly to vendors.
A Redemption
Later, Riley appeared at my door, devastated. “I forgot who raised me,” she wept. She begged me to still walk her down the aisle.
I agreed — but this time, “we do it together.” The wedding was simple, held behind the library I once worked at. No designer gown, no vineyard, just joy. And as she walked down the aisle, Riley said aloud, “This is the woman who saved me. More than once.”