 Hello! It's Mother's Day and I'm back with my world-renowned Karma Sutra specialist mother and I'm asking her the questions I've always wanted to you. Who's your favourite? There's three of us. Me. No, out of me and the boys. Me. It's a terrible answer. Parents always have a favourite. And it's clearly not you darling. When did you have your first kiss? Oh, I was in college. I was in my second year. It was with the stupidest boy I have ever known. He was a typical kind of guy that you fall in love with when you're in second year of university. He was tall. He had lush black hair. He was so good looking. His vocabulary was limited to one word. Heavy. If you said let's go to the movies today, he'd be like heavy. I had Chinese food today. Heavy. I thought I was going to be with him forever. Within two days I'd be like okay enough. Was there ever a time that you didn't like me? You loved me but you didn't like me. Always times. Regularly that I don't like you. No, be honest. But there are. There are regular times that I don't like you when we have a fight and you say certain things till we clear it up and then I like you again. But yeah. It's so rude. You don't like me those times either. You love me but you don't like me either. I'm allowed to say that. Why am I not allowed to say that? Because you're the mother. Which rulebook does it say that the mother always has to like her children? That the mother's rulebook. If you're afraid of becoming your mother, are you afraid of me becoming you? I think if you become me, it'll be the best moment of your life. Was I an accident? You were the most delightful surprise. So yes, I was an accident. That's great. It's all in the words, right? If you were my age, do you think we would be friends? I would like to think so. I think you are the kindest and the most loving person that I know. You are the most loyal friend. Hope that you would have me as your friend. Oh, that's so cute. We would be friends. Okay. What's one thing you wish you could change about yourself? I wish I could have learned to be more comfortable about myself, more self-assured, sooner in life, spent so much of my life being so insecure about myself. What I thought were my faults and my shortcomings, which I know now that they're not, they're my strengths, but I wish I could have known that earlier. And the last one, what is your biggest life lesson you've learned becoming a mother? That it is really, really difficult to make sure that your children are happy with you. They will always find a way of saying how you were wrong. It's not true. Everything I do with you. Okay. That concludes our Mother's Day special edition chat. What is this now? Say that again. Okay. I make it succinct. Succinct. Succinct. Succinct. Succinct. Who says succinct? The word is succinct. That concludes our Mother's Day special edition conversation.