When children find success and settle into luxurious city apartments, they often begin to view their parents’ old-fashioned ways and simple lifestyle as ‘backward.’ Amit, too, disliked his mother’s home-cooked meals and her old-fashioned style. But one day, when he opened that final parcel his mother had sent… the walls of his lavish home echoed with his screams.
Amit had become a prominent and successful businessman in the city. He and his wife, Shalini, led a modern, high-profile lifestyle; everything in their home was branded and expensive.
One day, an elderly courier arrived at the door of Amit’s luxurious apartment. He was carrying an old steel container, wrapped in cloth and tied with string. When Amit took the container, he saw his name scrawled on it in his mother’s shaky handwriting.
As soon as Shalini saw the container, she wrinkled her nose in distaste. ‘Oh, Amit! Your mother… I’ve told her so many times that everything is available in the city. She’s sent that same old container again? It completely ruins the look of our dining table. And look, it even smells of oil or ghee—it’ll ruin my expensive sofa!’
Amit agreed with his wife. Annoyed, he said, ‘Yeah, I’ve explained to Mom so many times that I don’t like these rustic things anymore. Our standards have changed. I wonder when people from the village will ever wise up.’
Without even opening it, Amit tossed the container into a corner of the kitchen, treating it like junk. When his mother called that evening, Amit spoke to her with utter indifference.
‘Son… did you get the parcel? I sent those handmade laddus you love and that special ghee you used to enjoy so much as a child,’ his mother asked in a frail voice.” “Yes, Ma, I got it. But why do you worry unnecessarily? Everything is available here. Next time, don’t send this sort of junk; there’s no space to keep it here,” Amit said angrily and hung up without listening to his mother. She tried to say something, but the call had already been disconnected.
A week passed. Amit was busy with work. One morning, he received a call from a neighbor in the village.
“Amit bhai… come to the village immediately. Your mother… is no more. She passed away last night due to a heart attack.”
Upon hearing this, the mobile phone slipped from Amit’s hands. Distraught, he rushed to the village with Shalini. His mother’s last rites were performed, and a pall of gloom hung over the house. When Amit entered his mother’s empty room, he found a diary resting atop the wardrobe.
With trembling hands, Amit opened the diary. Inside, his mother had written her final words:
“My dear son Amit… the doctor has told me that my illness is in its final stage and I have very little time left. I know you no longer care for my belongings, my way of life, or the food I cook. You have become a big man now; you have a certain standard. But a mother’s heart wouldn’t listen. Using the last of my savings, I prepared that pure ghee and those laddus. Son, please—as the last wish of your uneducated mother—do taste them just once. After this, I will never trouble you again…”
Reading this felt like a thunderbolt striking Amit’s heart. He broke down and wept bitterly. He instantly remembered the container he had dismissed as ‘junk’ and tossed into a corner of the kitchen.
Upon returning to the city, he rushed straight to the kitchen. He picked up that old container, tore away the cloth wrapping, and opened the lid. Inside the box, resting atop the laddus and the jar of ghee, was a small envelope containing the last letter written by his mother’s own hand:
“My son, at the bottom of this box lies a small bundle containing my gold bangles. I am leaving these bangles for your wife, Shalini. Amit, the box may have been old, but a mother’s love never grows old.”
Amit clutched the box to his chest and sat on the kitchen floor, sobbing uncontrollably. Standing at the doorway, Shalini wept, realizing her mistake. Today, Amit had a luxurious home, cars, and branded possessions… but that fragrance and that motherly love—which he had once rejected because of an old box—were gone forever.
“The value of things lies not in their packaging or outward appearance, but in the sentiment of the person giving them. Never weigh a parent’s love or the taste of their cooking on the scales of modernity; for when they are gone, all the wealth in the world loses its luster.”
Friends, the simplicity of our parents is far more precious than our own success. Please, never hurt your parents’ feelings.