“This story begins when I was a child: I was born poor. Often we hadn’t
enough to eat. Whenever we had some food, Mother often gave me her portion of rice”.
While she was transferring her rice into my bowl, she would say “Eat
this rice, son! I’m not hungry.” This was Mother’s First Lie. As I grew,
Mother gave up her spare time to fish in a river near our house; she
hoped that from the fish she caught, she could give me a little bit more
nutritious food for my growth. Once she had caught just two fish, she would make a fish soup.
While I was eating the soup, my mother would sit beside me and eat what
was still left on the bone of the fish I had eaten; my heart was touched
when I saw it. Once I gave the other fish to her on my chopstick but
she immediately refused it and said, “Eat this fish, son! I don’t really
like fish.” This was Mother’s Second Lie.
Then, in order to fund my education, Mother went to a Match Factory to
bring home some used matchboxes, which she filled with fresh
matchsticks. This helped her get some money to cover our needs. One
wintry night I awoke to find Mother filling the matchboxes by
candlelight. So I said, “Mother, go to sleep; it’s late: you can
continue working tomorrow morning.” Mother smiled and said “Go to sleep,
son! I’m not tired.” This was Mother’s Third Lie.
When I had to sit my Final Examination, Mother accompanied me. After
dawn, Mother waited for me for hours in the heat of the sun. When the
bell rang, I ran to meet her. Mother embraced me and poured me a glass
of tea that she had prepared in a thermos. The tea was not as strong as
my Mother’s love, Seeing Mother covered with perspiration; I at once
gave her my glass and asked her to drink too. Mother said “Drink, son!
I’m not thirsty!” This was Mother’s Fourth Lie.
After Father’s death, Mother had to play the role of a single parent.
She held on to her former job; she had to fund our needs alone. Our
family’s life was more complicated. We suffered from starvation. Seeing
our family’s condition worsening, my kind Uncle who lived near my house
came to help us solve our problems big and small. Our other neighbors
saw that we were poverty stricken so they often advised my mother to
marry again. But Mother refused to remarry saying “I don’t need love.”
This was Mother’s Fifth Lie.
After I had finished my studies and gotten a job, it was time for my old
Mother to retire but she carried on going to the market every morning
just to sell a few vegetables. I kept sending her money but she was
steadfast and even sent the money back to me. She said, “I have enough
money.” That was Mother’s Sixth Lie.
I continued my part-time studies for my Master’s Degree. Funded by the
American Corporation for which I worked, I succeeded in my studies. With
a big jump in my salary, I decided to bring Mother to enjoy life in
America but Mother didn’t want to bother her son; she said to me “I’m
not used to high living.” That was Mother’s Seventh Lie.
In her dotage, Mother was attacked by cancer and had to be hospitalized.
Now living far across the ocean, I went home to visit Mother who was
bedridden after an operation. Mother tried to smile but I was
heartbroken because she was so thin and feeble but Mother said, “Don’t
cry, son! I’m not in pain.”
That was Mother’s Eighth Lie. Telling me this, her eighth lie, she died.
YES, MY MOTHER WAS AN ANGEL!
“M” is for the Million things she gave me,
“O” means Only that she’s growing old,
“T” is for the Tears she shed to save me,
“H” is for her Heart of gold,
“E” is for her Eyes with love-light shining in them,
“R” means Right, and right she’ll always be.
Put them together, they spell out “MOTHER”; a word that means the world to me.