A Bouquet for My Mother
When I was twelve, I used to take flowers from a small shop down the street and place them on my mother’s grave.
She had died the year before, and my father worked long hours, too tired to notice how often I slipped out. I had no money. But bringing flowers to her made me feel close to her—as if something beautiful could still connect us.
One afternoon, the shop owner caught me.
I stood there holding a few roses, my heart racing.
I expected anger. Maybe worse.
But instead, the woman—around her fifties, with gentle, tired eyes—said,
“If they’re for your mother, take them properly. She deserves better than stolen flowers.”
I stared at her, confused.
“You’re… not mad?”
She shook her head.
“No. Just come through the front door next time.”
From then on, everything changed.
Every week after school, I visited the shop. I would wipe my shoes before entering and quietly tell her which flowers I thought my mother would like—lilies, tulips, sometimes daisies.
She never asked for money.
Sometimes she’d smile and say,
“Your mother had good taste,”
and add an extra flower.
Those afternoons became my safe place.
The shop smelled like fresh earth and sunlight—a space where life kept growing, even when grief felt heavy.
She never asked for anything in return.
She simply gave.
Ten years later, I returned.
I had moved away, gone to college, and built a life—but I never forgot her.
This time, I came back for my wedding.
I walked into the same shop.
It looked older now, smaller. The sign had faded, but the scent was unchanged.
She stood behind the counter, her hair now silver.
She didn’t recognize me.
“I’d like a bouquet,” I said. “For my wedding.”
Her face lit up.
“Congratulations, dear. What kind?”
“Daisies,” I answered immediately.
As she wrapped them, I spoke softly.
“You once let a little girl take flowers without paying. They were for her mother’s grave.”
Her hands stopped.
She looked up slowly.
“That was you?”
I nodded.
Her eyes filled with tears.
“I knew your mother,” she said quietly. “And your grandmother too. They were kind to me when I first opened this shop.”
She gently touched the daisies.
“Your mother came every Sunday. She always chose daisies—said they reminded her of home.”
My throat tightened.
I had never known that.
“She must have passed that love to you,” she said. “And now… you’re starting your own life.”
She finished the bouquet, tying it with a white ribbon.
“No charge,” she said with a soft smile. “For old times.”
But this time, I placed money on the counter.
“No,” I said gently. “Now it’s my turn.”
She smiled warmly.
“Your mother would be proud.”
Outside, sunlight fell across the daisies in my hands.
I paused, breathing in their soft scent.
For the first time in years, the pain felt lighter.
Instead, there was warmth—like my mother was still with me.
And I understood something.
Kindness doesn’t just heal in the moment.
Sometimes, it quietly grows… waiting years to bloom again.
Just like those daisies I once thought I had taken—
but were always given with love.
