English Short Stories

The Language He Didn’t Know

The Language He Didn’t Know

A mother and teenage son sitting together at a kitchen table with aloo parathas, warm lighting, family moral story about understanding your parents better.
Reading Time: 2 minutes

Arjun slammed his bedroom door. Again.

His mother had said no to the gaming tournament. Just like that. No explanation. No understanding. He was seventeen—old enough to make his own decisions. But his mother, Deepa, still treated him like a child.

She knocked softly. “Beta, can we talk?”

“Nothing to talk about,” he said through the door.

The next morning, his mother asked him to help her at the market. Arjun wanted to refuse, but something in her voice made him say yes.

At the vegetable stand, she moved slowly between the tomatoes and onions. An old woman came up to her—someone Arjun didn’t know. “Deepa! How is your son? Still studying hard?”

His mother smiled. “He is. Very clever. But stubborn like his father.” She paused. “He wanted to go to a tournament last week. I said no.”

The old woman nodded. “And he is angry?”

“Very angry,” his mother said quietly. “He doesn’t understand why I worry.”

Arjun felt something shift in his chest. She was worried? He had thought she was just being controlling.

That evening, his mother made his favourite—aloo parathas with extra ghee. They ate in silence. Then she spoke.

“When your father was your age, he wanted to be a musician. A drummer. He was very talented.” She smiled at the memory. “His father said no. Said it was not a real career. Your father was angry, like you are now.”

Arjun listened.

“He never played again. Not seriously. Now he is a good accountant. A good father. But sometimes I see him watching drummers on the phone, and I know he is thinking about what he gave up.” She looked at him. “I said no to your tournament because I worry you will be hurt. But I think now… I am also worried about something else.”

“What?” Arjun asked quietly.

“That you will be angry with me forever for the things I said no to. And you won’t understand until you are older, until you have your own son, that I was trying to protect you. Not control you.” Her voice cracked slightly. “But maybe protection and control look the same to a child.”

Arjun didn’t know what to say. He had never thought of his mother as someone who had fears, who made mistakes, who worried about being remembered as the woman who always said no.

“I am sorry I didn’t listen to you,” she continued. “But I also cannot be sorry for trying to keep you safe. Those two things are both true.”

After she left the room, Arjun sat alone. His anger hadn’t disappeared. But it had changed shape. It was smaller now. Softer.

The next week, his mother surprised him. “You can go to the tournament. But you will train safely. And you will tell me when you are scared.”

Arjun hugged her then. Not because she said yes. But because for the first time, he understood that she was scared too.

📖 STORY IN BRIEF
Arjun is angry at his mother for saying no to a gaming tournament, thinking she is controlling him. When she shares the story of his father's lost dream, he realizes her fear comes from love. Understanding his mother doesn't mean agreeing with her—it means seeing the person behind the rules.
💡 THE LESSON INSIDE
Parents are not tyrants—they are people who have lived longer and carry fears you cannot yet see. Understanding them doesn't mean you have to agree with them. It means seeing that their no comes from love, even when their love feels like a cage.
✨ Words Worth Keeping
Stubborn
unwilling to change your mind or accept someone else's ideas, even when they might be right.
Protect
to keep someone safe from harm or danger, sometimes without them even knowing it.
Understand
to see why someone did something, even if you don't agree with it.
🌱 Phrases to Remember
Change shape
to become different in form or feeling, to transform slowly.
Look the same
to appear identical on the surface, even though the reasons inside are very different.
Carry fears
to hold worry inside you that others don't see.
📚 Quick Glossary
Beta
a warm, affectionate Hindi word that means "son" or "child." Used by Indian parents and elders to show love and closeness.
Aloo parathas
a traditional Indian flatbread stuffed with spiced potato filling, often made with ghee. A comfort food that shows love through cooking.
Ghee
clarified butter used in Indian cooking, known for its rich flavour and the care it takes to make. Often associated with home and comfort.
🎬 See It in Action
1

His mother's no had always felt like punishment, but now he saw it was fear.

2

When parents seem controlling, sometimes they are just scared of losing you.

3

Understanding your parents means seeing their mistakes and their love at the same time.

🗣️ Say It Right
StubbornSTUB-orn
TournamentTUR-nuh-ment

Stories you may like...

What story will you get?

Finding your next story...

Learn something new

Featured Vocabulary
Instrument
a tool or device used for a specific purpose
Literary Term
Beta
a warm, affectionate Hindi word that means "son" or "child." Used by Indian parents and elders to show…
Idiomatic Expression
Give yourself permission
to consciously allow yourself to do something you have been holding back — often rest, enjoyment, or stepping…
Speech & Pronunciation
Departure
Phonetic: dih-PAR-chur

Sign up to my newsletter

A story for every mood: