He Was Never Good With Dates…

He was never good with dates. Birthdays, anniversaries, Valentine’s Day—none of them seemed to stay in his mind no matter how many times I reminded him. Every year I would try anyway, setting the table carefully, lighting candles, cooking his favorite meal, convincing myself that maybe this time would be different. And every year, somewhere between the main course and dessert, he would pause, look at me with sudden panic, and say the same words: “Oh no… was that today?”

I used to react badly to it. Sometimes I snapped. Sometimes I let silence do the damage instead. And once, in a moment I regret more than I can say, I compared him to another man—my friend’s husband, the one who never forgot anything, who brought home flowers without a reason and planned trips like it was effortless. I asked my husband why he couldn’t be more like that. I still remember how his expression changed in that moment, like something quietly broke inside him even if he didn’t say it out loud.

Then he died, and everything I thought mattered disappeared with him. The house became too quiet, the calendar became meaningless, and the dates I used to care about stopped feeling important at all. Our anniversary passed without me noticing. My birthday came and went without candles, without dinner, without anything at all. Time didn’t feel structured anymore—it just drifted.

A few weeks after my birthday, there was a knock at the door. A lawyer stood outside with a flower delivery man beside him. The lawyer asked if I was Mrs. Carter, then told me my husband had left something behind for me. The delivery man handed me a bouquet of daisies and wildflowers—simple, familiar, the kind I used to pick and place in jars on our kitchen table without thinking twice. My hands shook before I even fully understood why.

The lawyer explained quietly that my husband had arranged for those flowers to be delivered every year on my birthday—for the next ten years. He had set it up long before he got sick, long before I even knew to look for something like this. I sat down without realizing I was falling, holding the bouquet like it was the only solid thing left in the world. I used to think he never remembered the important days. But standing there, crying and laughing at the same time, I finally understood: he hadn’t forgotten them at all. He had just chosen a different way to keep remembering me.

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