The first time I was admitted to the hospital at age 5, my mother wedged herself between doctors and nurses and would have put on a lab coat and drawn my blood if they let her. And I didn’t put up a fight when she insisted on chaperoning my elementary school trips or walking me to class on my first day of college. I accepted the way she would smear sunscreen all over me at the beach, even well into my teenage years. From an early age, I understood that as her youngest child of four, and the only one to endure a life-threatening condition, she and I would always be bound by love and fear. At 40, I had grown accustomed to my mother’s overprotectiveness. Though I had survived cancer as a young boy, I now risked dying of embarrassment. “My son can’t have spices,” she said, “because of his leukemia.” “My sesame chicken just has an odd pepper flavor.” A 77-year-old Italian-American hairdresser who believed that almost all problems could be solved with a pile of spaghetti and meatballs, she viewed my lack of appetite as a warning flare. “Why aren’t you eating?” my mother said to me, her Yonkers accent blaring into the otherwise hushed Chinese restaurant.
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