Uncooked Boys And The Burnt Truth

When I asked my daughter what she wanted for dinner, she said with a straight face, โ€œUncooked boys.โ€ Took me a second, but I was relieved when I figured out she meant โ€œuncooked bao,โ€ those fluffy little Chinese buns she saw once on a YouTube short. She couldnโ€™t remember the name, and her pronunciation needed work, but the determination in her eyes was clear.

I laughed so hard I nearly dropped the frying pan. โ€œAlright, Chef Lia,โ€ I said, ruffling her hair, โ€œLetโ€™s make some bao.โ€ She clapped like sheโ€™d just won a game show.

To be honest, I had no idea how to make them. But after a quick Google search and a trip to the Asian market, we were stocked. Flour, yeast, pork belly, scallions, hoisin sauce. It became our Saturday project.

As we kneaded dough on the kitchen counter, Lia asked me, โ€œDaddy, why donโ€™t you ever cook with someone else? Like a wife?โ€ The question hung in the air longer than the scent of soy sauce.

โ€œBecause,โ€ I replied, โ€œsome things take time. Like bao.โ€

She didnโ€™t push. Thatโ€™s one of the things I loved about her. Curious, but not nosy. Observant, but kind. At eight years old, she was wiser than most adults I knew.

Her mom, Vanessa, and I had split up when Lia was just a toddler. No big drama. Just two people who didnโ€™t fit the way they thought they would. She moved to Arizona, and I stayed in Oregon with Lia full-time. We kept things peaceful for our daughter, and Lia adjusted like a champ.

But lately, sheโ€™d been asking more questions. About love. About women. About the stuff that made her scrunch her nose and say, โ€œEw, but also hmm.โ€

I figured the bao moment was just a sign that my little girl was growing, noticing the empty seat at the table, and wondering if itโ€™d ever be filled again.

Two weeks later, Lia handed me her iPad. โ€œCan we go here?โ€ she asked. On the screen was a picture of a food festival downtown. โ€œThey have bao AND dancing noodles!โ€

So we went. We stood in line for 40 minutes just to get Lia her dream bao. As she bit into the bun and gave me a thumbs up with a greasy hand, I noticed a woman behind us struggling to keep her toddler from running into the noodle dancers.

I smiled and offered to hold her spot. She smiled back. We got to talking. Her name was Lillian. She was warm, funny, a little chaotic, and had the same kind of laugh as Liaโ€”loud and unbothered.

We shared a bench while the kids got free stickers from a booth. She told me she was recently divorced, just moved back in with her mom for a while. I told her about my bao-chef daughter and how I hadnโ€™t dated in over three years.

โ€œWell,โ€ she said, tucking a stray curl behind her ear, โ€œyour daughterโ€™s got good taste. Bao are the gateway to healing.โ€

I laughed. She wrote her number on the back of a soy sauce packet and said, โ€œOnly text if you want to.โ€

I didnโ€™t text her that night. Or the next.

I waited until the following week, when Lia said, โ€œYou smiled a lot that day, Daddy. Was it the bao or the lady?โ€

So I texted. And Lillian replied instantly.

We started slow. Coffee at first. Then walks with the kids. A couple movie nights, board games. We were careful, deliberate. Lia liked her. So did I.

But hereโ€™s where the twist came.

Three months in, Vanessa called. โ€œIโ€™m thinking of moving back,โ€ she said. โ€œTo be closer to Lia. Iโ€™ve been offered a transfer. Same job, better hours.โ€

I froze. This was the woman whoโ€™d left because she said she โ€œwasnโ€™t cut out for motherhood full-time.โ€ Now she wanted to come back?

Lia was thrilled. โ€œCan I see Mom more now?โ€

Of course I said yes. What else could I say? She deserved her mother.

Vanessa moved into a small apartment just ten minutes away. Suddenly, I wasnโ€™t the only parent picking Lia up from school. I wasnโ€™t the only one she whispered secrets to at bedtime.

And slowly, I noticed a change. Lia became quieter around me. I thought maybe she was just adjusting. Until one evening, as I was helping her with homework, she asked, โ€œAre you mad at Mommy?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ I said, confused.

โ€œShe said youโ€™d be mad she came back. That youโ€™d hate her being close.โ€

I stared at her, then gently took her pencil from her hand. โ€œSweetie, Iโ€™m not mad. I just want you to be happy. Always.โ€

But inside, something cracked.

I didnโ€™t hate Vanessa. But I didnโ€™t trust her either. And now she was here, shifting the family dynamic, and possibly confusing Lia in ways I hadnโ€™t prepared for.

Worse, Lillian noticed.

โ€œYouโ€™ve been distant lately,โ€ she said as we shared a plate of dumplings one night after the kids were asleep.

โ€œIโ€™ve just had a lot on my mind,โ€ I admitted.

She nodded, but her eyes searched mine. โ€œYouโ€™re not over your ex, are you?โ€

I shook my head. โ€œItโ€™s not about that. Iโ€™m just trying to make sure Liaโ€™s okay. Everythingโ€™s changed again.โ€

She reached across the table and squeezed my hand. โ€œThat little girl is more resilient than you think. But you? You need to stop waiting for the perfect moment. There isnโ€™t one.โ€

That night, I realized Iโ€™d been so scared of hurting Liaโ€”or making a wrong stepโ€”that Iโ€™d put my own life on pause.

Then came another twist.

Lia got sick. Not terribly, just a week-long fever and chills. Vanessa stayed over one night to help, sleeping on the couch.

In the early morning, I overheard Lia mumble in her sleep, โ€œPlease donโ€™t go again, Mommy.โ€

I closed my eyes and let the weight of that sentence settle.

Later, Vanessa and I had coffee in the kitchen.

โ€œI didnโ€™t come back to confuse her,โ€ she said, staring into her mug. โ€œI came back because I finally feel ready to be her mom. I know I messed up. I know I left you alone.โ€

I didnโ€™t interrupt.

โ€œIโ€™m not asking for anything,โ€ she added. โ€œJust a chance to be better.โ€

I nodded. โ€œThatโ€™s all you can ask for.โ€

Then I did something I hadnโ€™t expectedโ€”I thanked her.

For coming back. For being brave enough to try again.

A few weeks later, Lia was better. School resumed. Life returned to a new version of normal.

One evening, as we folded laundry, Lia said, โ€œI want two homes now. One with you, one with Mommy. Is that okay?โ€

I kissed her forehead. โ€œItโ€™s more than okay.โ€

Things shifted after that. Not in a dramatic way, just gently.

Vanessa and I co-parented better than we ever partnered. Lillian stayed. She didnโ€™t run when things got complicated. Instead, she blended inโ€”like scallions in a good dumpling.

One day, Lia handed me a hand-drawn picture. It showed four stick figures: me, her, Vanessa, and Lillian. Sheโ€™d written โ€œMy Peopleโ€ on top.

I framed it.

A year later, we all went to that same food festival again. Bao, noodles, laughter. Lia sat between Lillian and Vanessa, holding both their hands.

I realized something then.

Family isnโ€™t about perfect timing, or flawless decisions. Itโ€™s about choosing each otherโ€”again and againโ€”even when things get messy. Especially then.

And love? Itโ€™s not a clean-cut fairytale. Itโ€™s bao doughโ€”sticky, stretchy, needing patience and heat to rise.

That night, as I tucked Lia into bed, she whispered, โ€œThis is my favorite life.โ€

Mine too, kid.

So, to anyone out there afraid to start againโ€”whether in love, parenting, or just lifeโ€”know this:

There is no perfect time. Just people worth the effort.

And sometimes, all it takes is a misunderstood dinner request to change everything.

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