
Invited to "Podkastro" with Kastro Zizion on Vizion Plus, Pirro Çako made a heartfelt confession about his mother, Luiza Çako, who passed away in September of this year.
While analyzing the lyrics of the song that Pirro dedicated to him, titled "Mother, I Miss You," he stopped at the line "the lights of the tree no one can shine on me," the symbolism behind which is extremely touching:
"I had bought her a tree of life, she always kept it close to her head and it was 5 years old. [Mother] She always had health problems and I tried to go to the hospital, to stretch it, and I had bought her the tree and it was like she was walking. As if God was protecting her, that tree of life."
Further, he showed the clever connection his mother made with her health condition and the lights of the tree of life:
"For the first time, after 5 years, she says to me, 'Oh my, this tree, I'm looking at it, as if its lights have been turned off. There are very few lights left.' And I stopped for a moment, because I caught the message, what she wanted to tell me, and I had a shiver. And I got closer and she was right, there were only 20% of the lights left, they had burned out a little bit."
Finally, Pirro concluded:
"It happened a week later, she left very quickly, and automatically when I was at the piano I remembered this. I said now that she's gone, there's no one to turn on my Christmas lights. We kept them on for each other, and they went out once and for all, of course for me and for her."
