This work emerged from observations of how inherited cultural norms, particularly stoicism and emotional restraint within East Asian households, can obscure political and ideological divides across generations. The act of cutting and peeling an apple is a quiet, embodied gesture of care familiar across many East Asian households. These domestic acts were materialized into sculptural forms—fruits and vegetables wrapped in shimenawa cords using colors of flowers once cultivated by Japanese American farmers such as geraniums, poppies, and pansies. These objects act as monuments channeling memory, tenderness, and the labor of care. They offer an alternative language of connection that transcends the limitations of speech, inviting reflection on how love, memory, and resistance are carried through everyday acts. Though modest in scale, these monuments carry a quiet, divine presence, with hope that they will offer guidance and care to those who encounter them.