I Love You Doesn’t Mean What You Think
04.08.2025

04.08.2025

Tymur Levitin
Tymur Levitin
Teacher of the Department of Translation. Professional certified translator with experience in translating and teaching English and German. I teach people in 20 countries of the world. My principle in teaching and conducting lessons is to move away from memorizing rules from memory, and, instead, learn to understand the principles of the language and use them in the same way as talking and pronouncing sounds correctly by feeling, and not going over each one in your head all the rules, since there won’t be time for that in real speech. You always need to build on the situation and comfort.
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Author’s Column by Tymur Levitin
Part of the series: 🌸 “The Garden Where Memory Blooms”

🔗 Also available in Ukrainian:
“Черешня цвіте — а дякують не всі”


🏡 A Cherry Tree in My Mother’s Yard

Old and tired, but it still blossoms every year…
Even if no one says thank you.

That’s how the song begins.
Not a hymn. Not a concert hit. A quiet confession — one that isn’t meant to be sung aloud, but rather felt alone.

Because the cherry tree in this song is not just a tree.
It is a mother.
It is time.
It is love that gives without asking — and keeps giving even when no one sees it.


🤍 “Mama, eternal and beloved…”

Mama, mama, eternal and beloved,
Forgive me for not being attentive…
I know you prayed for me —
Day and night, my silver-haired mother.

This is not a pop lyric. It’s a plea.
Not poetic nostalgia. But a grown-up voice, filled with shame and longing.

In this Ukrainian song by Mykhailo Poplavskyi, the singer doesn’t ask to be comforted.
He asks for forgiveness.
Because his mother is still alive — but not for long.


🍒 The Cherry Tree Is a Heart: Still Bearing Fruit, Still Overlooked

Every summer she gives berries to her children,
Even if they don’t thank her.

This line repeats — not because it rhymes, but because it hurts.
How often do we forget to say thank you — to the very people who give us the most?

The mother is the tree.
The house is her garden.
The fruit is her care.
And silence — is our ingratitude.


⚠️ The Most Painful Line:

The cherry tree will wither. The mother will fade.

This is not metaphor.
This is life.

Not about a dead mother. About a living one — who may not bloom next year.
And you will remember too late.
You’ll come — and find a stump.


🧭 What Makes This Song So Powerful?

Because it is still possible.
She is still alive. She is still cooking, still folding your clothes, still watching the clock when you’re late.
And you still haven’t said it.

Not a single “thank you.”


🌱 Memory Blossoms in Everyday Soil

This is not a folk song with embroidered symbols.
The cherry tree is not stylized or sacred.

It’s in the yard.
Behind the house.
Like every mother who gives everything and asks for nothing.


🔄 What Comes Next

This article is the first in a series exploring how songs speak the words we often cannot say.
Next:

  • 🌸 One Tree, Two Voices: Iryna Fedyshyn vs Freestyle — the same “kalyna” in two languages
  • 🕊 White Wings: Love that flew away, and didn’t return (Poplavskyi)
  • 👩‍🦳 Talk to Me, Mama: When it’s already too late (Bykovskyi)
  • 🌻 One Kalyna Behind the Window: Sofiia Rotaru and the soul of a nation in three lines

But today — just call your mom.
Or thank her while she still blooms.


✍️ Author’s Column

Author: Tymur Levitin — founder, director and lead educator at Levitin Language School / Start Language School by Tymur Levitin
© Tymur Levitin

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