Stories: PLEASE DON’T COME TODAY

Every Sunday, my mom sent the same message to the family group chat:

“Dinner at 6. Bring Tupperware.”

It was her thing. Her ritual. No matter how busy we were, no matter what was going on, Sunday dinners happened.

So when I woke up and saw a message from her at 10 a.m. that said:

“PLEASE DON’T COME TODAY,”

I knew something was wrong.

No emoji. No explanation.

I texted her immediately. Is everything okay?

She read it.

No reply.

Five minutes later, my brother texted me: I called Mom but she doesn’t pick up. Have you talked to her?

My stomach dropped.

We didn’t waste time. We both rushed to her house.

I got there first.

The curtains were drawn. The house was quiet.

I knocked.

Nothing.

I used my spare key and pushed the door open, my heart pounding in my ears.

“Mom?” I called out.

No answer.

I rushed through the hallway toward the kitchen—

And stopped.

She was sitting at the table.

Alive.

But pale. Still. Quiet.

For a split second, fear froze me in place.

Then she looked up.

“Oh,” she said softly. “You came.”

I ran to her. “Mom, what’s wrong? Why didn’t you answer?”

She hesitated, then gave a small, tired smile.

“I didn’t want you to see me like this.”

My brother burst in behind me, equally panicked.

“What do you mean?” I asked.

She looked around the kitchen.

The counters were bare. No food cooking. No pots. No smell of her usual Sunday meals.

“I… couldn’t do it today,” she admitted. “My hands were shaking too much this morning. I dropped a plate and just sat down and… couldn’t get back up.”

We both went quiet.

“I didn’t want you to worry,” she added. “So I told you not to come.”

I swallowed hard.

“All these years,” my brother said softly, “you never missed a Sunday.”

She nodded.

“I didn’t want to break the tradition.”

I looked at her—really looked—and for the first time, I saw it.

The exhaustion. The age she never let show.

I gently took her hand.

“Then we’ll change the tradition,” I said.

That afternoon, instead of leaving, we stayed.

We ordered takeout. Set the table ourselves. Brought out containers—just like always.

Only this time, she didn’t cook.

She rested.

And as we sat there together, laughing and sharing food, I realized something.

It was never about the dinner.

It was about her making sure we showed up.

Now it was our turn.

And we weren’t going anywhere.

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