If you’d like, I can also help you titled Mother’s Lesson featuring a character named Mitsuko. Just let me know.
That is —the waiting game of empathy.
Curious, Mitsuko unwrapped the package to find a small, exquisite wooden box adorned with delicate cherry blossoms. She lifted the lid, and a faint scent of incense wafted out. Inside, she found a note written on a piece of rice paper: Mother-s Lesson - Mitsuko
Mitsuki smiled, a faint blush coloring her cheeks. “Yes, the crane that tried to fly higher than the bamboo, only to break its own wings.” If you’d like, I can also help you
Mitsuko is a widow. Her husband, a soldier, never returned home. She is left to raise three children alone: two sons and a young daughter. The protagonist of our lesson is her eldest son, Kenji, a boy of about ten years old who is perpetually angry at the world—and specifically angry at his mother. Curious, Mitsuko unwrapped the package to find a