Vietnam.vn - Nền tảng quảng bá Việt Nam

Small lamp by the window

(GLO)- My husband received the decision to transfer his job on a morning at the end of May, when the fog was still covering the familiar slopes of the mountain town of Pleiku. The news that he had to go to Quy Nhon under the merger of two provinces was not surprising.

Báo Gia LaiBáo Gia Lai21/07/2025

We had mentally prepared ourselves for a few months. I smiled and encouraged: The seaside town is beautiful, and it’s not too far away. Then you and the baby will have the opportunity to go swimming more often. I said that but my heart was still restless and anxious, even though I couldn’t name or grasp what it was.

At 2am on Monday morning, my husband started packing things up. Although he tried to be gentle so as not to wake me and my baby, I couldn’t sleep all night, so when I heard his footsteps, I woke up too. It was the rainy season in Pleiku, and the weather was starting to get cold…

2.jpg
Painting by artist Pham Thanh Diep

He went down to the seaside town, starting a new rhythm of life. Quy Nhon - a place with blue sea and golden sunshine, a place people often call "the city of poetry". We had been to Quy Nhon a few times, on family trips, walking along Eo Gio and feeling light-hearted. But now thinking about that place, I feel a distance that is not only geographical. Because the farthest space, sometimes is not from the mountain to the sea, but from habit to nostalgia. I still go to the market and cook regularly as before, still tell my children to study carefully, still wait for video calls every night. Some days he is busy working overtime until late at noon and still hasn't had time to eat anything, other days he is busy entertaining guests. I just text him briefly - Remember to take care of your health, come back to me and the children on the weekend.

I told him so, but I don't know if it was for him or me to comfort myself.

Every morning, after taking my child to school, I stop by the coffee shop on the corner where the old apple tree casts its shade across the street, where my husband and I used to sit and drink water, watching the hustle and bustle of people every morning. Now I sit alone, looking into the distance, imagining the windy Quy Nhon and him. Hundreds of questions run through my brain… Life without my husband passes by with small but persistent gaps. Habits that seemed normal suddenly become an inconsolable nostalgia. The whole house seems to grow larger and colder every night. I know my husband and I are not alone. Many families share the same situation as mine: “wife in one place, husband in another”. My sister also had to change her young daughter’s school, away from her husband and eldest son, to go to the coastal city for work…

People often call it a mission, an adjustment of the system, a change. I understand. And I support it. And then I encourage myself that everything will be fine, I will gradually adapt. But I also know that it will take a long time for me to get used to the loneliness, especially in the season of windy afternoons.

Pleiku has been raining more these days. The camellia tree in front of the gate has bloomed a batch of purple-white flowers and then started to shed its leaves. I sit and make tea, remembering the sound of him waking up my child to go to school every morning, remembering the way he drove me down Phu Dong slope every weekend. Now, I walk alone and the slope seems to have lengthened.

I don’t count the days you left, I only count the times you said, “I’ll finish the meeting early tomorrow, I’ll probably come back soon.” My child and I are still here - in the small house at the end of the alley, where the afternoon breezes seem to carry the scent of the sea and the taste of nostalgia. I’m still here, like a small lamp by the window, silently waiting for the morning.

Source: https://baogialai.com.vn/ngon-den-nho-ben-khung-cua-post560947.html


Comment (0)

No data
No data

Same tag

Same category

Lost in cloud hunting in Ta Xua
There is a hill of purple Sim flowers in the sky of Son La
Lantern - A Mid-Autumn Festival gift in memory
Tò he – from a childhood gift to a million-dollar work of art

Same author

Heritage

;

Figure

;

Enterprise

;

No videos available

News

;

Political System

;

Destination

;

Product

;