In my dreams, I return from Europe to the humid south of China.
I move through bamboo forests, weightless, until I crash into the cold metal frame of a cage.
My mother has been gone for twelve years. She still appears in my dreams.
She is still ill, but alive.
I ask her if she is dead. She says no.
———————
I hold on to these moments. I try to measure them, as if time in dreams could extend a life.
She lives the most ordinary days. Mopping the floor. Celebrating a birthday.
She meets her granddaughter there.
For a long time, these encounters allowed me, after waking, to face the weight of life.
———————
I wake up in Europe, carrying what remains of those dreams.
Mama,
Today was an ordinary day. When I came home, the day was already waiting for me: laundry, toys scattered across the floor, an email still to be written to the insurance company.
It is summer in Europe now, with sixteen hours of daylight, yet I feel I have not received even a moment in return.
Night is slowly coming in. All I want is to put on my red shoes, step outside the door I haven’t opened all day, and feel the evening breeze.














