I was a grieving child trying to buy dignity for a grave I could barely look at. The stolen bouquet in my hands felt like proof of my failure, until the florist met my fear with tenderness instead of punishment. Her quiet invitation to return every Sunday became a lifeline, a rhythm of color and care that softened years of loneliness and loss.
A decade later, I walked back into her shop not as a desperate child, but as a bride. She didn’t recognize me until I told her who I was, and why I had come. In that moment, her eyes filled with tears, as if time folded in on itself. She crafted my wedding bouquet and a smaller one for my mother’s grave, freely given. At dawn, laying those flowers down, I realized: some gifts outlive the moment—they teach you how to live.