“Get up,” I whispered.
The breaking point came when I refused to eat dinner. Not as a protest—just because the knot in my stomach had turned to stone. She looked at the full plate, then at me, and for the first time, her eyes didn't hold judgment. They held something worse: grief.
My mother—proud, stubborn, a woman who had immigrated to this country with two suitcases and a spine of reinforced steel—was on her hands and knees.
That was twelve years ago. My mother still has her steel spine. But now I know: true strength is not standing tall. It is kneeling when love demands it, and rising again together.
She finally looked up. Her mascara was ruined. Her dignity was intact. “I will try harder,” she said. “I cannot promise perfection. But I can promise I will never make you carry my fears on your back again.”
I slid off the bed and knelt in front of her. We stayed there, foreheads almost touching, two women on the floor of a rented apartment, breathing the same small air. I took her hands. They were trembling.
“No,” she said, not lifting her head. “I need to remember what it feels like to kneel. Because for years, I made you kneel with my words. You don't do that to someone you love. You don't make them bow.”