Friday, June 5, 2026

Call your mom...

At 8:12 one night, my mom called me while I was standing in my kitchen, exhausted after a long day. I looked at my phone, sighed, and let it ring. I told myself I’d call her back later when I had more energy to talk.

A minute later, a voicemail notification appeared.

I pressed play while my takeout cooled on the counter and rain tapped against my apartment window.

Her voice came through soft and warm, the way it always had.

“Hey honey,” she said. “I turned the porch light on tonight. Just thinking about you and missing your voice a little. Call me when you can.”

Behind her words, I could hear the familiar creak of the kitchen chair from the house I grew up in. For a second, I wasn’t standing in my apartment anymore—I was ten years old again, walking home down Maple Street while the porch light glowed at the end of the driveway like a beacon guiding me home.

When I was a kid, my mother always left that light on for me. She used to tell me, “If you’re ever late, call me at 8:12. I’ll be waiting.”

Back then, 8:12 felt comforting.

As an adult, it somehow became just another time on the clock.

That night, guilt sat heavier than dinner in my stomach. I tried calling her back, but it went straight to voicemail. I promised myself I’d call the next day. I even set a reminder on my phone for 8:10 so I wouldn’t forget again.

The next evening, I was still stuck at work answering emails when the alarm went off. I stepped into the hallway and called her.

She answered quickly.

“Well,” she laughed softly, “this is a nice surprise.”

We talked for only a few minutes. Nothing important, really. She told me the neighbor had adopted a nervous little cat. I told her about a coworker who still prints every email like it’s the 1990s. She joked that she burned a batch of cookies badly enough for the smoke detector to join in.

Ordinary things.

But when we hung up, something in me felt lighter.

So I called again the next night.

And the night after that.

Some conversations lasted two minutes. Some lasted twenty. We talked about grocery lists, old memories, recipes, weather, and tiny pieces of life that normally disappear unnoticed.

One evening she found an old handwritten note from my grandmother tucked inside a cookbook. It said:

“Don’t forget the nutmeg. Small things make all the difference.”

My mom laughed and said maybe that was true about people too.

A few days later, I drove to visit her.

The town looked older somehow, but comforting in the same way old sweaters are comforting. Porch lights glowed all along Maple Street.

When she opened the door, she smiled and announced, “I made apple pie,” like it was the solution to every problem in the world.

Honestly, it kind of was.

We sat at the same kitchen table where I used to do homework as a kid. The same table where I once scratched my initials into the wood and hoped she’d never notice.

I finally asked her if she still turned the porch light on every night at 8:12.

She nodded.

“Your grandmother started that tradition,” she said. “She believed people find their way home through small, faithful things.”

Later, while we sat quietly together, she looked at me and said, “You don’t have to call every night. I don’t want to feel like a responsibility.”

I shook my head.

“You’re not a responsibility,” I told her. “You’re someone I should’ve made more room for a long time ago.”

She reached over and squeezed my hand.

“Then we’ll make room for each other.”

And we did.

Soon, 8:12 became our little ritual.

A tiny lighthouse between two busy lives.

Some nights we missed each other. Some nights one of us forgot. But neither of us kept score.

As my mom liked to say, “We’re people, not clocks.”

One snowy evening, I came home late to another voicemail.

“Hi sweetheart,” she said gently. “I brushed the snow off the porch steps tonight and turned the light on anyway. 8:12 felt a little lonely without your hello. Love you.”

The next morning, I drove straight to her house.

She answered the door wrapped in a blanket, smiling like nothing in the world was wrong.

“I’m okay,” she said before I could ask. “Just slipped in the snow yesterday and scared myself more than anything.”

That afternoon we sat together on the porch wrapped in blankets while the porch light glowed softly against the snow.

“I should’ve called sooner,” I admitted.

She smiled.

“Honey, nobody gets everything right all the time.”

Before I left that weekend, I took a copy of her apple pie recipe home with me. It still had little smudges of cinnamon across the card.

I taped it to my fridge.

Then I bought a small lamp and placed it beside my window.

Now every night at 8:12, I switch it on.

And miles away, my mother turns on her porch light too.

Two small lights glowing in the dark.

A quiet reminder that love doesn’t always arrive in grand gestures.

Sometimes it’s just someone leaving the light on, hoping you’ll call.

No comments:

Post a Comment