Stepping onto familiar homeland, opening the door to home, the noisy firecrackers and the laughter of neighbors instantly fill my ears. Another Spring Festival has arrived, and I have returned to this place that I hold in my soul. Every household’s red lanterns and festive couplets seem to be telling stories of reunion and hopes for the new year. However, for those of us who have been working away from home for years and are finally back, behind this lively scene often hides an indescribable heaviness and bittersweetness. I still remember last year's Spring Festival, rushing on the last train back home, opening the door to see my mother’s stooped figure busy in the kitchen. Her increasingly gray hair looked especially striking under the dim yellow light. This year, when I saw her again, I noticed a few more strands of white hair, and the wrinkles on her face had deepened. Although my father always smiles and says “It’s good to be back,” the fatigue in his eyes and the slight trembling of his hands when he helps me with food during meals are impossible to miss. All year round, I work hard outside, dreaming of returning home in finery, giving my parents a decent and stable old age. But reality is like a cold splash of water, soaking those eager hopes to the bone. The company’s projects are not progressing smoothly, performance pressure follows me like a shadow, and every day from dawn to late at night, I’m either fighting with numbers in a cubicle or racing against time on the road. The missed calls from my parents on my phone increase, and every time I see them, my heart feels tightly clenched by something. When I call back, they always casually say, “It’s nothing, just asking if you’ve eaten. If work is busy, no need to call back all the time.” Hearing “If work is busy, no need to call back,” it stings like a needle in my ears. I keep wondering—are they sick but too afraid to tell me? Is there an urgent matter at home that they’re afraid will delay my work, so they bear it alone? Last month, my mother casually mentioned during a phone call that she was going to the hospital for a check-up. When I asked a few questions, she said it was just minor. At that moment, I desperately wished I could appear beside her immediately, accompany her to the hospital, hold her hand, and tell her I’m here for everything. But I can’t. I’m trapped in this steel jungle, earning just a meager salary, almost losing the courage to go home and visit. Sometimes, late at night, lying in bed at home, hearing faint sounds from my parents’ room, images from my childhood flash before my eyes: my father riding an old bicycle, taking me to the market in town; my mother preparing my favorite meals in advance. Back then, home was so close, and my parents’ love was so intense and direct. Now, although I am at home, I feel as if there’s an invisible wall between me and my parents—an unfulfilled promise, an unspoken guilt. Money is really hard to earn. Those goals I once thought could be easily achieved now seem like illusions. Over these years of wandering, I’ve learned to calculate costs, assess risks, put on a brave face, but I’ve never learned how to balance career and family. When the firecrackers outside explode deafeningly during the New Year, and relatives and friends gather around, I can only face my parents with an empty heart. Spring Festival is a time when thousands of lights gather in reunion, but I am exhausted from the hustle, ashamed to face my parents with my meager income, and heartbroken with guilt. This pain is not pretentious; as a child, I feel helpless in the face of my parents’ aging, and overwhelmed by my inability to repay them. Perhaps, this heaviness will become my motivation to move forward in the future. But I don’t know—before the next reunion, what more can I do for them to slightly make up for this deep sense of guilt in my heart?
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The weight in my heart at the end of the year
Stepping onto familiar homeland, opening the door to home, the noisy firecrackers and the laughter of neighbors instantly fill my ears. Another Spring Festival has arrived, and I have returned to this place that I hold in my soul. Every household’s red lanterns and festive couplets seem to be telling stories of reunion and hopes for the new year. However, for those of us who have been working away from home for years and are finally back, behind this lively scene often hides an indescribable heaviness and bittersweetness.
I still remember last year's Spring Festival, rushing on the last train back home, opening the door to see my mother’s stooped figure busy in the kitchen. Her increasingly gray hair looked especially striking under the dim yellow light. This year, when I saw her again, I noticed a few more strands of white hair, and the wrinkles on her face had deepened. Although my father always smiles and says “It’s good to be back,” the fatigue in his eyes and the slight trembling of his hands when he helps me with food during meals are impossible to miss.
All year round, I work hard outside, dreaming of returning home in finery, giving my parents a decent and stable old age. But reality is like a cold splash of water, soaking those eager hopes to the bone. The company’s projects are not progressing smoothly, performance pressure follows me like a shadow, and every day from dawn to late at night, I’m either fighting with numbers in a cubicle or racing against time on the road. The missed calls from my parents on my phone increase, and every time I see them, my heart feels tightly clenched by something. When I call back, they always casually say, “It’s nothing, just asking if you’ve eaten. If work is busy, no need to call back all the time.”
Hearing “If work is busy, no need to call back,” it stings like a needle in my ears. I keep wondering—are they sick but too afraid to tell me? Is there an urgent matter at home that they’re afraid will delay my work, so they bear it alone? Last month, my mother casually mentioned during a phone call that she was going to the hospital for a check-up. When I asked a few questions, she said it was just minor. At that moment, I desperately wished I could appear beside her immediately, accompany her to the hospital, hold her hand, and tell her I’m here for everything. But I can’t. I’m trapped in this steel jungle, earning just a meager salary, almost losing the courage to go home and visit.
Sometimes, late at night, lying in bed at home, hearing faint sounds from my parents’ room, images from my childhood flash before my eyes: my father riding an old bicycle, taking me to the market in town; my mother preparing my favorite meals in advance. Back then, home was so close, and my parents’ love was so intense and direct. Now, although I am at home, I feel as if there’s an invisible wall between me and my parents—an unfulfilled promise, an unspoken guilt.
Money is really hard to earn. Those goals I once thought could be easily achieved now seem like illusions. Over these years of wandering, I’ve learned to calculate costs, assess risks, put on a brave face, but I’ve never learned how to balance career and family. When the firecrackers outside explode deafeningly during the New Year, and relatives and friends gather around, I can only face my parents with an empty heart.
Spring Festival is a time when thousands of lights gather in reunion, but I am exhausted from the hustle, ashamed to face my parents with my meager income, and heartbroken with guilt. This pain is not pretentious; as a child, I feel helpless in the face of my parents’ aging, and overwhelmed by my inability to repay them. Perhaps, this heaviness will become my motivation to move forward in the future. But I don’t know—before the next reunion, what more can I do for them to slightly make up for this deep sense of guilt in my heart?