What children remember is not always the sacrifice itself, but the meaning behind it. They remember a parent working late, missing comforts, pushing through exhaustion or putting family needs ahead of personal desires. They may not have understood it at the time, but later they recognize the shape of devotion.
This memory can be tender and complicated. Some children feel deep gratitude. Others feel guilt, or sadness, or the weight of realizing how much their parents carried silently. But even when unspoken, sacrifice becomes part of the story children tell themselves about where they came from and who loved them enough to endure.