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An amused daughter has shared all the bizarre items her mom sent her back home with on the train.
Moms never stop worrying about their children no matter how old they get, and one daughter has proven this theory right by the gifts she sends her daughter home with.
Marie-Claire Wood, 26, an actor, lives in London but visits her family regularly 84 miles away in Salisbury.
Hilarious footage of the daughter’s eclectic gifts from her mother, Theresa, she had to carry back on a train amassed 43,200 views on TikTok.

@marieclairewood/@marieclairewood
Wood told Newsweek: “We’ve had arguments as I’m leaving where I’ve refused to carry certain things all the way home. This time I managed to convince her I didn’t need to carry a Tupperware with half a portion of crumble in it!
“Despite my protestations I don’t think I’ve ever made it back to London with less than two bags worth of goodies—some better than others (the half-eaten croissant for example).
“I’m very grateful—even if I get very strange looks on the train.”
Wood moved to London to go to acting school, a 1-hour, 30-minute journey via railway, though the train journey is often plagued with delays and cancellations making it all the more difficult to transport heavy bags and her mom’s gifts.
In the TikTok, Wood showcased and rated her amusing gifts.
The first one which had to be placed next to her in its own seat was a huge plant
In the image overlay, she wrote: “Super cute, but might be dying,” she rated it 9/10.
Next up, she shared a vintage rounders set which she rewarded 8/10.
She said: “Fun, but I only have five mates so we need a rival team.”

@marieclairewood/@marieclairewood
The third present was a punnet of loose tomatoes and peaches—which she said were completely loose and therefore unprotected.
The fresh fruit were received a harsher 7/10 rating as the daughter feared they could be crushed by a rounders bat.
Wood’s next gift was a brick of salted butter.
She said: “Love butter but it’s very sunny, so a melt risk,” and gave it a 7/10.
Her next item received a sterling rating of 11/10—a 500ml bottle of fancy Italian olive oil.
“Ah yes take me to the Italian countryside,” said Wood.
However, her next gift, a day old half eaten croissant, received a terrible review—1/10.
Her mom Theresa packed her up with another half eaten baked good—but this time a loaf of bread they shared for lunch.

@marieclairewood/@marieclairewood
“I don’t need all this at all but thanks I guess, 3/10,” said Wood.
The mom also packed more lunch leftovers with a bag of salad gaining a 4/10 rating.
“Its already been cut and now its mushed at the bottom of [the] bag under a loaf, why.”
Next in Wood’s bag of goodies was a pack of smoked salmon gaining top marks, 10/10.
She said: “Yummy and I cannot afford this. Big yay.”
Theresa also gifted her with some wearable goods—some leaf-shaped gold earrings on a stick with and embroidered cloth bag with more jewelry inside—she rated the present 12/10.
Finally, for the most upmarket present the mom packed her daughter with a half-eaten pot of caviar, gaining a score of 7/10.
She said: “Simultaneously bouji and stinky. Thank you but I’m not sure this goes with my regular diet of pasta bake.”
The amused daughter revealed usually her mom gifts her bags full of vegetables she and her dad have grown in their allotment that she cannot eat all herself, meaning her housemates reap the reward of sharing muddy potatoes and cabbages.
She said: “It’s incredibly sweet of her and shows that she still worries that I’m eating all my vegetables in my 20s.
“The harvest was bad this year after a very wet winter so instead she’s taken to gifting me the most random assortment of items.”
The video received numerous comments, with one person writing: “Knew this was going to be chaotic good when it started with a plant the size of a toddler,” while another said: “Definitely is random.”
Uncommon Knowledge
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
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