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The Son Planned to Send His Mother Back to the Nursing Home. Then He Peeked Inside Her Box Before Leaving.

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The son wished to send his mother back to the care home. He glanced at the box before leaving.

After her husbands passing, Agnes sold her countryside cottage, invested in a flat for her son and his family, and moved in with them. For as long as she had strength, she cared for the house and her grandchildren. She was the heart of their home.

Her son and daughter-in-law worked, and Agnes took the little ones to nursery, then later to school and after-school clubs. She cooked and cleaned. The chores never weighed on herif anything, they made her happy. After all, the family needed her. But years slipped by. The grandchildren grew and “flew the nest,” and the old womans health began to fail. She tried washing dishes, but the plates slipped from her frail hands and shattered.

She poured herself some soup but couldnt lift the bowlit spilled. She woke at night for water, her shuffling steps disturbing her daughter-in-laws sleep. No one spoke to her anymore. Who would want to chat with an old woman? Her daughter-in-law snapped at her, calling her dead weight. What fault was it of hers? Old age is no picnic. Agnes had no choice but to endure.

Her son decided to move her into a care home.

“At least shell have company,” he told himself, easing his guilt. That morning, as he climbed into the car, Agnes remembered her box.

“Edward, fetch my box. Ive forgotten it,” she murmured timidly.
“What box?” Edward asked.
“My treasures,” she replied, describing the simple wooden chest. Edward fetched it. The old woman clutched it to her chest, her face softening.

“Mum, whats inside?” She opened it.

A lock of her own hair and a milk tooth. The man stepped back from the car and sat on the curb. He stayed there a long while, remembering his childhood, how his mother had always been thereholding him, shielding him, never leaving him without comfort.

“Edward, are we going?” His mother stepped out of the car and moved toward him.

“No, Mum,” he said, voice thick. “Were not going anywhere. Youre staying home.”

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