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A Mother’s Fierce, Extravagant Love (Encore)

2025/5/7
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Modern Love

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Genevieve Kingston
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Yogita Singh Dave
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Genevieve Kingston: 我母亲在临终前为我和哥哥准备了两个盒子,里面装着她为我们未来人生不同阶段准备的礼物和信件,这些礼物和信件跨越了时空,让我在成长的过程中,即使在她去世后,也能感受到她深沉的爱和无微不至的关怀。这些信件和礼物不仅仅是物品,更是她对我的爱和期盼的载体,它们陪伴我走过人生的每一个重要时刻,给予我力量和慰藉。每当我打开盒子,仿佛就能和她进行一次跨越时空的对话,感受到她依然存在于我的生命中。 在母亲去世后,父亲也离开了人世,这让我更加珍惜母亲留下的这些珍贵的礼物和信件。它们成为了我与母亲之间情感联系的纽带,让我在面对人生的挑战和迷茫时,能够获得力量和指引。这些礼物和信件不仅仅是物质上的馈赠,更是精神上的慰藉,它们让我感受到母亲依然陪伴在我的身边,给予我无私的爱和支持。 Yogita Singh Dave: 疫情期间,我和儿子Vedant的交流减少了,为了增进母子间的感情,我选择和他一起做饭。在共同烹饪的过程中,我们不仅分享了美味的食物,更重要的是,我们彼此敞开心扉,分享了彼此的感受和想法。做饭的过程成为了我们沟通的桥梁,让我们重新建立了联系,增进了彼此的理解和感情。通过一起做饭,我不仅教会了儿子一些烹饪技巧,更重要的是,我向他表达了我的爱和关怀,也让他感受到家庭的温暖和亲情的重要性。 在与儿子的相处中,我意识到,亲子关系需要用心经营,需要彼此理解和包容。而烹饪不仅是一种技能,更是一种表达爱意的方式,它能够拉近彼此的距离,增进彼此的感情。通过一起做饭,我和儿子不仅创造了美好的回忆,更重要的是,我们彼此的心灵得到了沟通和连接。

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Have you ever gotten sick on a very expensive, very non-refundable family trip? Amazon One Medical has 24/7 virtual care so you can get help no matter where you are. And with Amazon Pharmacy, your meds can get delivered right to your hotel, fast. It's kind of like the room service of medical care. Thanks to Amazon, healthcare just got less painful.

Hey everyone, it's Anna. Before we start, the Modern Love team wants to hear from you for our Father's Day episode. We're looking for stories about a moment your dad opened up to you emotionally. Where were you? What did he say? And how did you react? And if you're a dad, we're curious how you're trying to show emotion and vulnerability to your kids. What do you do? Does it feel easy? Hard? And how did your dad shape your approach to being a father?

Record your stories as a voice memo and email them to modernlovepodcast at nytimes.com, and we may use them on the show. Check out our show notes for tips on how to submit. Once again, we're looking for stories about a moment your dad opened up to you, or if you're a father, how you're trying to show emotion and vulnerability to your kids. Send us a voice memo to modernlovepodcast at nytimes.com. We can't wait to hear from you.

All right, let's start the show. Hi, Mom. What are you up to right now? I'm sitting actually in your bedroom. In my bedroom? Your childhood bedroom. I'm looking at your little...

I didn't know that you worked in there. I talked to my mom a lot.

She's the person I call when I'm facing a big decision, or when a guy I'm seeing makes me feel bad, or when I just need someone to tell me I don't have food poisoning, even though I did just eat some sushi I left down on the counter. I guess I don't have to call her for any of these things. It's more that I just really want to talk to her. I feel like I need to hear her voice. Okay, bye mom, I love you. Bye, and I love you too.

From The New York Times, I'm Anna Martin. This is Modern Love, and this Sunday is Mother's Day. So we went back into our archives for inspiration, and we found an episode from a few years back that we really think is worth revisiting. It's about the miraculous lengths one mother went to to make sure her children would feel her love, even after she was gone. ♪

It's an essay that feels like a love letter, from daughter to mother and from mother to daughter. And it makes me think about calling my own mom, how just by picking up for whatever it is, big or small, she's showing me how much she loves me. It also reminds me how lucky I am that she's there to answer. Coming up in just a moment, Genevieve Kingston's essay, She Put Her Unspent Love in a Cardboard Box, read by Julia Whalen. Stay with us.

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In the back of my closet is a small cardboard chest with brass handles and latches. It has followed me to every new address. An old sticker on the bottom says it was purchased at Ross for $26.99. Now there are only three things in the bottom. Three wrapped presents marked in my mother's tidy cursive. Engagement, wedding, and first baby. My mother was always prepared.

She ran a small nutritional beverage company with my father in Santa Rosa, California while raising my older brother and me. By day, she made marketing slogans, distribution strategies, five-year plans. By night, bubble baths, pillow forts, bedtime stories. She and I had the same February birthday. Each year, my parents arranged elaborate parties.

She once spent a week making a school of origami fish to swim through tissue paper seaweed across the ceiling of our dining room. And then when I was three, she learned she had advanced breast cancer. She immediately began to prepare by researching every available treatment: conventional, alternative, Hail Mary. She flooded her body with chemotherapy and carrot juice. She would sit for hours at our long oval dining table.

Her straight dark hair tied back, surrounded by piles of paper, studying dense technical paragraphs. Medical research, my father said, as he shepherded me from the room. She was always looking for a way to survive. When I was seven, the materials on the dining table began to change. Wrapping paper and ribbons took the place of her highlighted pages as she worked busily under the dark fuzz of her shorn head.

Scissors swished through gift wrap, paper creased under her fingers, ribbon cut to length with one snip. Knots came together with a tiny creak, swish, crease, snip, creak. She was assembling two gift boxes, one for my brother and one for me. There was a rhythm in the room. She bent closer and closer to write the labels as her vision began to fail, a result of the cancer having spread to her brain.

She packed presents and letters for the milestones of our lives she knew she would miss. Driver's license, graduation, and every birthday until the age of 30. When the boxes were full, my father carried them up to our rooms. She died 10 days before our shared birthday. That morning, when I turned 12 and she would have turned 49, I woke up early. The box sat three steps from the foot of my bed.

Just as my mother had shown me, I lifted the latches and opened it. Neat rows of brightly wrapped presents glowed like the spring tulips that were just coming up in the front yard. I opened the package marked "12th Birthday" and found a little ring with an amethyst at its center. A white card curling around the present read, "I always wanted a birthstone ring when I was a little girl."

Your granny finally bought me one, and I loved it more than I can say. I hope you like it too. Happy birthday, darling girl. Love, your mommy." I slid the ring on and traced her writing with my fingertip. Her words, written to bridge the gap between us, cut through space and time.

When I got my first period and couldn't bring myself to talk to my father about it, a four-page letter from my mother, marked first period, laid out practical advice. Take time to make friends with yourself. Take time to learn what interests you, what your opinions and feelings are. Find your own sense of the world and which values you hold most dear.

As I read, I wanted to fall through the white, lightly textured page and into her arms. Year after year, my mother traveled forward in time to meet me, in a little package with a pink ribbon and a little white note card. Happy 15th. Happy 16th. Congratulations on your driver's license. You're a college girl. Happy 21st. Happy birthday, darling girl. Love, your mommy.

Each time I opened the box, I could, for the briefest moment, inhabit a shared reality, something she imagined for us many years ago. It was like a half-remembered scent, the first notes of a familiar song, each time a tiny glimpse of her. When I was a child, opening the next package felt like a treasure hunt. As I grew older, it began to feel like something far more fundamental, like air or community.

Something like prayer. Her messages met me like guideposts in a dark forest. If her words couldn't point the way, at least they offered the comfort of knowing someone had been there before. A decade after I lost my mother, my father followed suddenly. She had spent years preparing her exit, but with him, I blinked and he was gone. The morning of his memorial, the box stared back at me with nothing to say.

There was no letter for this. My father left no clues or letters. The only parenting I would have from 22 on was in the box. When I hit 30, the nearly empty box sat in my Brooklyn apartment, clashing with the furniture. Only three packages remained, engagement, wedding, first baby. The problem was, I didn't know if any of those things would happen. I didn't know if I would choose them.

I didn't know if I ever wanted to get married, but I had been living with someone for three years, and whatever advice my mother had about committed, loving relationships, I wanted it. Now, I felt 12 again and rebellious as I pulled out the thick envelope marked engagement. My fingertips felt cold as I opened it. It read,

My dearest little girl, of course you aren't so little anymore as you read this, but you are little as I write. You are only seven, and I am facing the terrible sadness that you will be growing up without me. With the smooth pages crinkled in my grip, I found her hopes for what my marriage might look like. She wrote, A true marriage is a marriage of what is most sacred in both of you.

I didn't know if I was capable of loving detachment. There was no detachment in the love that made the box, and no detachment in the love that opened it.

She wrote, "I'm so sorry to be leaving you. Please forgive me. I know a box of letters and tokens can't begin to take my place, but I wanted so badly to do something to ease your way through the future. Love, Your Mommy." For 20 years, I have pulled mothering from the box, but I don't know if the next 20 will include the milestones she planned for me.

I often wish I could lift the latches, jump inside and ask her which path I should walk and how I will recognize it. I want to ask if the life I'm carving for myself looks anything like she would have hoped. But I know this time travel only works one way. After I read the engagement letter, I put it back with its unopened present and closed the box. Those three final secrets will remain secrets for now.

Maybe I'll open them tomorrow, or in 10 years, or 20. There's comfort in knowing there's a little left in the box. My mother's gifts, her letters, are a constant reminder that I have already been given what every child, what every human needs. I have been fiercely, extravagantly, wildly loved.

After the break, a tiny love story. These are mini modern love essays, a hundred words or less. And this one's by a mother trying to connect with her teenage son. Plus, we get to hear his surprisingly thoughtful reaction. Stay with us.

Have you ever gotten sick on a very expensive, very non-refundable family trip? Amazon One Medical has 24/7 virtual care so you can get help no matter where you are. And with Amazon Pharmacy, your meds can get delivered right to your hotel, fast. It's kind of like the room service of medical care. Thanks to Amazon, healthcare just got less painful. Support for this podcast comes from Estee Lauder.

They really duped beauty sleep. Estee Lauder's Advanced Night Repair Serum helps your skin look like it got eight hours of beauty sleep, even if you didn't. In just one sleep, see immediate radiance and a reduction in fine lines. It really is beauty sleep in a bottle. Get ready to glow with Advanced Night Repair Serum at EsteeLauder.com. Friends don't love friends, but it's a good beauty sleep dupe. All right, whenever you're ready. Okay.

Hi, this is Yogita Singh Dave and this is my tiny love story. I wrote this in December 2020, nine months into the pandemic. My 14-year-old Vedant dwells in a dungeon under my bedroom. Through the muffled cadence of his voice, I deduce if he's in virtual school or playing an online game. Thrice a day, he comes up for air asking, "What's there to eat?"

We used to talk a lot on our car rides about life and feelings. Now we have nowhere to go. For the holidays, I make him my sous chef. Slicing a butternut squash, my knife slips. He takes my bleeding finger in his hand and blows a kiss. Food and excuse, we talk about feelings again. Hey. Hey, Vedant. What's up?

Nothing much. So your mom wrote this story when you were 14, but it's been two years now. So are you 16? Yeah, I am.

Do you have any early memories of cooking with your mom when you were younger? Yeah, actually, I do remember we would make rotis sometimes. These are like bread balls, things like that. And I definitely remember sometimes in the kitchen, I would help like make them in balls and flatten them with a rolling pin. So fun. But I also remember that I was very particular. Like I didn't want to get any of the dough like stuck to my hands. And getting the dough stuck to my hands was just the most annoying feeling. Yeah.

And I remember I would like immediately rush to the sink and try and wash the dough off my fingers. Why did you want to be cooking with your mom? What was fun about it?

I don't know, just the whole like feeling of finishing something from start to finish and what looks like nothing at first, you cook it together, you put oil, you know, you might put it on the pan and all of a sudden it turns from just like random ingredients to like a really tasty dish. So I feel like it's just a great opportunity for us to make some good food and I guess just talk to each other, you know, vent out our feelings and have a good conversation. Yeah.

Do you think you'll ever become a better cook than her? No, I don't think so. She set the standard far too high. Vedant, could we actually talk to your mom for a minute? Yeah, sure. I can get her really quick. Cool. Thanks. Hey, Yogita, how are you? Hi, Anna. I'm good. How are you? I'm great. I just had a lovely chat with Vedant. Oh, that's awesome.

So, Yogat, your story is about your relationship with your son, Vedant, and how cooking has strengthened it. When you were a kid, did you cook with your parents?

- I didn't. I didn't cook at all because I grew up in India and we have house help there to help cook and clean and do a lot of the household chores. So I would say I grew up pretty spoiled in that manner, but cooking is a very integral part of just the Indian culture.

And a lot of the way that you manifest your love for your children is through cooking. I've seen my mom do it for me, but I wasn't really required to be a part of the process. She's done it for me, and I feel I'm just passing on what I learned from her to my kids, my way of passing on my love. So if you weren't as involved in the kitchen when you were growing up, how did you learn how to cook? Because I knew that coming to America...

I would have to find my independence. So first I started with Indian cooking because I could always call my mom and ask her, "Hey, how do you make this?"

And a lot of times her answers would be, oh, I just eyeballed this and eyeballed that. I'm like, it's not going to work. You have to tell me teaspoon, how much, half a cup. Classic mom intuition. Exactly, right? And I'm like, no, that's not how I'm going to learn.

So I kind of found out the secret ingredients that she would use, but then I would go to a recipe book and kind of find out the proportions of it all. It sounds kind of daunting, though. I mean, speaking for myself, my mom is Chinese. She's an incredible cook. So is my grandma. And I haven't quite hit...

The point where I've really delved in to making these dishes because it feels really intimidating. And I'm just curious, was it important to you to cook with Fidant from a young age? I think as he started getting older, I realized that...

One day he's going to fly away. He's going to be going to college. And when he looks back at the days that he spent at home, what are some memories that I can give him? It's almost dinner time right now, actually. It's like close to 6 p.m. when we're talking. What are you making tonight?

Tonight, my mom is here from India. So she's the one cooking for us. She is making matar paneer for us. It's an Indian dish with cheese and peas. So this just goes in circles, right? Wow. I really wish I could come over for dinner right now. I'm getting so hungry. Come on over. Okay.

Thank you so much for talking to me today, Yogita. Thank you so much.

The Modern Love theme music is by Dan Powell. Original music in this episode by Marion Lozano. Digital production by Mahima Chablani. And a special thanks to Ryan Wegner. The Modern Love column is edited by Daniel Jones. Mia Lee is the editor of Modern Love Projects. If you want to submit an essay or a tiny love story to The New York Times, we have the instructions in our show notes. I'm Anna Martin. Thanks for listening. ♪

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