I’m 74, living in a nursing home my own grandson dumped me in after tricking me into selling my house for his “girlfriend’s surgery.” When I suddenly inherited a fortune years later and he came crawling back for “his share,” I handed him $50 and a message written across the bills that forced him to choose: a year working as a low-paid caregiver… or lose every penny forever.My name is Gloria, I’m 74 years old, widowed for more than 20 years, and I never thought I would be telling this story about my own grandson. I raised Todd from the time he was 12, after his mother died bringing him into the world and his father disappeared into casinos and cheap motels.
I worked nights at a laundromat and cleaned offices on weekends so there would always be food, school clothes, and a warm bed waiting for him. “Todd’s my second chance at family,” I told my friend. “He’s my everything.”Todd’s mother, my daughter Elaine, never got to hold him, never even opened her eyes after the doctors pulled him out. His father, Wayne, showed up to the funeral late, reeking of smoke and bad liquor, asking more about insurance money than about his own son.After that, he drifted away like a stain in a cheap shirt, harder to see but never really gone. So when Todd’s behavior got wilder at twelve, when the school called about fights and stolen phones, the judge looked at me and asked, “Look, he needs help. Will you take him home and raise him properly?”I said yes without even thinking. I moved Todd into my late husband’s house, the little brick place with the peeling white fence, and tried to give him the kind of steady life I had never really known myself. I cooked real dinners, checked his homework, sat up on the couch whenever he missed curfew. I went to every parent-teacher meeting, every game, even when he only rode the bench.