Helga tells his son that he disapproved of him being a chef, but that he has something more important in mind. Helga says that a chef can make people happy, and that he is too naive to think that he can't make mistakes. She tells him to stop drinking, and he says that he's not drunk. She says that she can smell alcohol in his breath, and when he sobers up, she'll settle the matter with him. She asks why he gave her the wine, and she says that it was from him, not from his mom. She's always been against him becoming a chef. She doesn't seem to care at all about him and his dad, and it's unfair that she seems to love them both. He says that his mom is too cunning to know what she's really thinking. He tells her to stop talking so much, and to stop being like him. He's alone, he says, and should be like her.
Helga tells his son that he disapproved of him being a chef, but that he has something more important in mind. Helga says that a chef can make people happy, and that he is too naive to think that he can't make mistakes. She tells him to stop drinking, and he says that he's not drunk. She says that she can smell alcohol in his breath, and when he sobers up, she'll settle the matter with him. She asks why he gave her the wine, and she says that it was from him, not from his mom. She's always been against him becoming a chef. She doesn't seem to care at all about him and his dad, and it's unfair that she seems to love them both. He says that his mom is too cunning to know what she's really thinking. He tells her to stop talking so much, and to stop being like him. He's alone, he says, and should be like her.