I’m My Parents’ Only Worry is a reflective memoir written from the space between cultures, generations, and expectations. Born in China and now living in Europe, the author traces a life shaped by family duty, illness, migration, marriage, and the quiet pressure placed on an only child.
Through deeply personal experiences—studying abroad, navigating Chinese marriage norms, confronting chronic illness, observing second-generation immigrants, and questioning inheritance and parenthood—the book explores how cultural systems shape choice long before we are aware of them. Rather than rejecting family or tradition, the author examines how freedom can be cultivated within responsibility, through balance, clarity, and self-understanding.
Blending literary nonfiction with philosophical insight and life reflection, this book speaks to those who carry invisible weight: immigrants between worlds, children shaped by parental hope, and adults learning to live honestly without abandoning where they come from. It offers no formulas—only perspective, empathy, and the quiet courage to choose one’s own way.