After my husband passed away, I was left to sort through his things. I found a garage door opener in his car, even though we didn’t have a garage that required one. Curious, I drove around our neighborhood, clicking the opener as I went. It worked at a garage on the corner of the street. My heart raced as the door slowly lifted and I saw… Stacks of wooden crates neatly arranged inside. Dust floated in the air, illuminated by a single shaft of sunlight from a cracked window.
I stepped inside, hesitant yet compelled, and noticed each crate had a label—dates spanning years, some from before I even met my husband. I pried open the nearest one. Inside, I found old photographs, journals, and keepsakes. They weren’t just his—they belonged to people in the neighborhood. Each crate seemed to hold memories that someone else had lost. A faded wedding veil, a child’s stuffed animal, handwritten letters tied in ribbon.
Tears welled in my eyes as I realized what this secret place was: my husband had been quietly collecting and safeguarding the forgotten treasures of others, returning them whenever he could. He never spoke of it, never sought recognition. It was his quiet way of keeping pieces of people’s lives alive.
In that moment, I felt closer to him than ever before. I decided to continue his secret mission. Every week, I would bring a crate to someone who had once lost what was inside. And when I saw the joy on their faces, I understood—my husband hadn’t left me alone. He had left me a purpose.