I came home after a snowfall and saw my elderly neighbor struggling to clear her driveway.
She looked exhausted.
When I told my husband, he simply said, “I’ll be doing that from now on.”
And so, for four winters,
we quietly shoveled her long, icy drive before work, never announcing it.
One January morning, she finally caught us.
I expected scolding, but instead she smiled and said, “Looks like you two finally got caught red-handed.
Come inside—I’ve got banana bread.” That day, Mrs. Felicita “Feli” Aguilar went from being “our neighbor” to family.
We didn’t just shovel after that.
My husband mowed her lawn,
I brought her soup, and she taught our daughter piano. She gave us little gifts in return—jam, scarves, even her late husband’s record player.
Then one day, she left us a note: “Please don’t sell the house until you talk to me.” Soon after, she left to visit her estranged son.
Weeks later, her granddaughter called: Feli had suffered a stroke on the flight.
We flew out to see her, and though frail, she smiled when she saw us. That reunion softened years of distance—her son finally hugged her for the first time in over a decade.
Two months later, Feli passed away. To our shock, she left her house to us.
But instead of keeping it, we worked with her family to sell it and share the proceeds.
What we did keep was the record player—and the lessons she gave us: small kindnesses carry people farther than you think.
Now, every Saturday, we play jazz on her record player while making pancakes.
And when it snows?
We still shovel driveways in silence.
Because sometimes the smallest acts leave the deepest legacy.