Amy Grant's Heartfelt Mother's Day Reminder to Ask More Questions
If you’ve ever stood in the kitchen with your mom, meaning to ask her something real, only to get pulled away by a ringing phone, a load of laundry or a child needing help with homework, Amy Grant’s words may stop you in your tracks. As Mother’s Day approaches, the beloved singer is sharing a gentle, heartfelt reminder that the people we love aren’t guaranteed to be at our table next year, and the questions we mean to ask have a way of going unasked until it’s too late.
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The regret so many of us quietly carry
In a recent conversation about family and what truly matters, Grant looked back on her relationship with her own mother and admitted something that resonates deeply with adult daughters everywhere.
“I wish I had asked my mother more questions,” Grant said. “I wish I had asked her what her life was like in her 40s. I wish I had, but I was so busy.”
It’s the kind of sentence that lands differently depending on where you are in life. For some women, it’s a tender ache. For others, it’s a wake-up call. Either way, it’s a feeling so many of us know, that lingering wish we’d slowed down sooner, leaned in closer, asked the deeper questions before the chance slipped quietly away.
The gift of the circle
Grant’s reflection didn’t come from nowhere. It grew out of a stretch when her family’s future together looked uncertain—a season that shifted how everyone she loved chose to show up for one another.
“We gather Thanksgiving and Easter, all of us,” she said. “We sit down and we always look around the circle and go, there’s no guarantee that it will be the same circle the next time we’re together, and so let’s just be grateful for the gift of each other today.”
Most of us don’t do this. We tend to assume the circle will hol—that the same chairs will be filled next year, that the same jokes will land, that the same person will carve the turkey or pour the coffee. That assumption is comforting. It’s also why so many women end up echoing Grant’s regret.
A reminder worth carrying past the holiday
It’s easy to read a quote like Grant’s, nod and move on. It’s harder to let it actually change a Sunday phone call, a holiday gathering or a quiet Tuesday afternoon with someone you love.
But the invitation is open—not just to families facing a hard diagnosis, but to all of us. Ask the questions. Make time differently. Look around the circle and let yourself be grateful for exactly who is in it today.
This Mother’s Day, Grant’s reflection feels less like a celebrity sound bite and more like a gentle nudge toward the kind of presence that, decades from now, we’ll be so glad we practiced.
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This story was originally published May 8, 2026 at 5:30 PM.