February 13, 2024

Popo Hasn’t Given Up on Pressuring Us to Have a Baby Yet

By Huina Zheng
Photo by Kawê Rodrigues on Pexels.com

Popo is relentless again. She calls Yong daily, asking why fate dealt her a son who forgets her sacrifices. She raised him alone, yet he’s blind to her yearning for grandkids—a stark contrast to her friends, all grandparents, while she, nearing 60, has none. I suggest to Yong she’s guilt-tripping him, painting herself the victim for his childlessness. But secretly, I question if this trait plagues all Chinese parents. In the family WeChat group, Popo’s a different person, avoiding complaints about Yong. She talks about brewing soups, typical in Guangdong, especially now as autumn dries the air. She fondly recalls making snow pear and Fritillaria pork bone soup thrice weekly before Yong’s marriage—but I don’t like its peculiar sweet-salty mix, Yong tells me. I’m not a fan of clashing tastes—mango chili repels me, and Korean Stir-Fried Rice Cakes are just bearable. I try to endear myself to Popo, knowing she likely blames me for our childless four years. Truth be told, I’m not ready for motherhood’s weight. So, I express eagerness to sample her famed soup and Coca-Cola chicken wings on our next Shenzhen trip, tactfully delayed to dodge her scolding. By noon, I’m reviving last night’s rice into a makeshift fried dish. My fingers betray my veggie-deficient diet. My go-to’s are instant noodles, microwaved sweet potatoes, or this quick fried rice—easy lunches for my solo workdays at home, saving real cooking for Yong’s return. I muse over Popo’s potential judgments. Does our casual approach to food render me an unworthy wife and mother? Or does my divergence from her traditional maternal mold make me the allure that captured Yong? I share on WeChat about my childhood staple—Mom’s lean meat and veggie porridge, and she would cook it most days throughout the year because she loves the symphony of soft grains, tender meat, and crisp veggies. I coax Yong into the chat, hoping to diffuse the mother-son strain. He’s bitter, remembering his solitary, impoverished childhood, and vows not to subject a child to our unstable finances. The old belief—more kids, more fortune—still prevails among the older generation, I tell him, wondering if childless couples indeed live blissfully, as some claim, if I should prep garlic pork ribs, or just fry some frozen chicken, waiting in the freezer.

 

About the Author

Huina ZhengHuina Zheng, a Distinction MA in English Studies holder, works as a college essay coach. She’s also an editor at Bewildering Stories. Her stories have been published in Baltimore Review, Variant Literature, Midway Journal, and others. Her work has received nominations twice for both the Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net. She resides in Guangzhou, China with her husband and daughter.

Related Flash
white bread on white ceramic plate beside clear drinking glass

Elegy of an Eating Disorder

By Lindsey

“When you return to university, to that house that sits on the hill, you resume the painful life you left behind in the spring.”
glass container filled with ice

Eulogy in Pigtown

By Craig Kirchner

“Sober Monday mornings we discussed Kafka, Sartre, and you. Champagne on ice in case you visited, knowing you wouldn’t. In between sets you read poems.”

selective focus photography of yellow petaled flowers

The Foal

By Lorette C. Luzajic

“I did everything they told me, but still, I got smaller. And everything hurt, even the sunlight on my skin. I didn’t tell anyone what was going on in inside of me, how lonely it felt to know you were going to die when you were just a colt yourself.”

Pin It on Pinterest

Your Impossible Voice
Huina Zheng
white bread on white ceramic plate beside clear drinking glass
glass container filled with ice
selective focus photography of yellow petaled flowers
Share This