يحاول ذهب - حر
My mother, the family's memory-keeper
June 07, 2025
|Mint Mumbai
Sometimes I wonder if my mother, the dancer, did not dream of the life not led. I might be the writer, but she's the storyteller
After a great-aunt died, my mother read a little tribute I wrote for her and said wistfully, "You're the writer in the family. Perhaps you'll write something like that for me after I am gone. Why don't you write it now so I can read it?"
I rolled my eyes and said, "The feeling won't come now."
In the last few weeks as my mother struggles with a slew of sudden health issues, the feeling still hasn't "come" but when I see her lying in a hospital bed, confused and shrunken, I feel perilously close to it.
I didn't grow up in a family that said "I love you" easily. That was too western, like in a Hollywood movie. "Have you eaten?" is the way we said "I love you." When I lived in America, my mother would call and ask if I had eaten. Sometimes I made up dishes to avoid telling her I had cereal for dinner because I had been too tired to cook. It was a love lie.
Years later when I returned to India, a middle-aged man, my mother still decided the household's daily menu. She watched cooking shows on television and wrote down recipes "in rough" on pieces of scrap paper. The ones that got passing grade were transferred to her "fair" recipe book. At dinner, if we failed to appreciate the dish adequately, she would be miffed. Just as she showed love through food, she expected to be shown love through our appreciation of it. In her own ill health though, she is liberated from the need for such niceties. After my sister made chocolate pudding for her, she asked grumpily, "Is this pumpkin?"
هذه القصة من طبعة June 07, 2025 من Mint Mumbai.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Mint Mumbai
Mint Mumbai
'Chips require long-term plan'
India needs long-term, step-by-step ecosystem-building, alongside sustained investment in research and development (R&D), to achieve semiconductor capabilities, essential for a major global economy given silicon chips' role in the information age, according to economist and Niti Aayog member Arvind Virmani.
1 mins
January 23, 2026
Mint Mumbai
EU halts GSP export benefits; ‘Chips require long-term plan’
The European Union (EU) has suspended export benefits to sectors such as textiles and plastics under a preferential scheme for India and two other countries from 1 January, a move that will impact the country’s shipment to the 27-nation bloc.
1 mins
January 23, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Banks renew push to unsecured loans
India's banks are cautiously reopening the tap on unsecured lending, as policy rate cuts drive margin pressure and risks stay largely under control.
3 mins
January 23, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Carmakers on edge as date with CAFE-III draws close
Carmakers are staring at a compliance window of less than 15 months to start getting close to stringent upcoming emission targets that are expected to come into effect from April 2027.
2 mins
January 23, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Global PE giants eye IPL champions RCB
Blackstone, Temasek weigh bids; deal may value RCB at $1.4-1.8 bn
2 mins
January 23, 2026
Mint Mumbai
BUDGET TO KEEP FISC STEADY AMID GLOBAL STORM
The Union Budget for FY27 is being formulated against the backdrop of some positive surprises, despite a highly volatile and uncertain global environment.
3 mins
January 23, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Govt may raise allocation for power distribution reforms
Revamped Distribution Sector Scheme is likely to get ₹18,000 crore in the FY27 budget
2 mins
January 23, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Pet care startups eye users to compete with FMCG giants
Direct-to-consumer (D2C) pet care brands are leaning on subscription models to lock in customers, betting that repeat purchases can help them counter the scale and distribution advantage of India's largest packaged consumer goods players as the niche segment heats up.
2 mins
January 23, 2026
Mint Mumbai
IT majors face weak FY26 despite Q3 earnings beats
Four top IT services firms are heading into Q4 with weaker full-year trajectories than last year
3 mins
January 23, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Here's how to build an education fund in a high-inflation economy
With education inflation running at 10-12% annually, far outpacing CPI, parents must rethink savings strategies
4 mins
January 23, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

