When my father passed away three years ago, the only things of his I could hold onto were a few photos, an old wristwatch, and a collection of his silk ties. He was the kind of man who wore a tie every single day, even on Sundays. Each color and pattern told a story — the navy one he wore to my graduation, the maroon one from his first date with my mom, and the golden striped one from the last family picture we took together.
After months of grieving, I decided to turn his ties into something meaningful — a skirt. I wanted to carry a piece of him with me wherever I went. It took me two weeks to stitch it together. Every cut, every seam was done with care. When it was finished, it wasn’t just clothing; it was a memory I could wear.
My stepmom, however, didn’t see it that way.
She married my dad a year before he died. We were never close — she always treated my dad’s past as if it were an obstacle to her happiness. She couldn’t stand the reminders of him that weren’t hers to begin with.
The day she saw me wearing the skirt, her expression turned sour.
“Why are you parading around in those old ties?” she snapped.
“Because they were Dad’s,” I replied softly.
Her jaw tightened. “You need to stop living in the past. It’s pathetic.”
That evening, I hung the skirt in my closet before leaving for work. When I came home, the closet door was open, and the skirt — the one thing that truly connected me to my father — was in shreds.
I didn’t need to ask who did it. The pieces were stuffed into a trash bag beside the washing machine, soaking wet and tangled with bleach.
I felt something inside me crack — not just grief, but fury. I couldn’t even bring myself to speak to her. She had destroyed something irreplaceable, not out of ignorance, but pure cruelty.
That night, as I lay in bed crying, I heard a loud crash from downstairs. My stepmom had been using the same bleach she used on my skirt to “deep clean” the living room carpet — except she hadn’t realized the windows were closed, and the fumes had become overpowering. She slipped on the wet floor and twisted her ankle badly, knocking over a vase and cutting her arm in the process.
The paramedics came and took her to the hospital. She was fine — just shaken, embarrassed, and limping for weeks.
When she came back, she didn’t speak to me for days. But she also never touched another one of my things again.
Sometimes, I think karma doesn’t need to strike hard — it just needs to remind people that cruelty doesn’t go unnoticed.
I later took what was left of my dad’s ties and sewed a small patchwork pillow instead. It sits on my bed now — torn, imperfect, but whole in its own way. Just like me.
And every time I look at it, I’m reminded that love survives destruction — and that karma, no matter how quietly it arrives, always finds the door.
