My story of becoming Emma whilst navigating the ups and downs of life. Including (but, not limited to!) being a mum, living with depression and anxiety and becoming a young widow at the age of 39. A real rollercoaster of a ride!
Wow. It’s taken me a few days to process what’s happened.
I am now a published author. I held a book launch for family and friends. My book is on sale worldwide.
And that’s why, despite being a writer, this is one the shortest blog posts I’ve ever written. Because I still don’t really have the words to explain what this means to me. They’ll come in time, I have no doubt about that. There’s so much I want to share about this whole process.
But for now. I just want to say thank you to the following:
All at Softwood Books for helping me with my vision and bringing this to life.
Sheryl Findlay for your guidance, love, and support during our life coaching sessions while I was writing this.
Everyone who has read my blogs, followed our story, and provided that virtual support.
Finally. My family, friends, colleagues, and all who have supported me and my daughter since 2020. There are far too many to name individually, but you know who you are.
For anyone who would like to buy a copy of Is Daddy Going to Be OK?, the links to various retailers are below:
I cannot believe that somehow we’ve made it to five years of living without you. The memory of 19th April 2020 and the weeks leading up to it will never leave me. It still feels beyond surreal. I suspect it always will.
I want to start by saying I’m sorry I lost your wedding ring in 2023. To this day I don’t know how or where that happened. I certainly didn’t anticipate going viral on social media because of it though. But that’s what I’ve learnt these past five years. Expect the unexpected. Don’t try to plan too much. I live in hope that one day I might be reunited with the ring. You were always a blinking nightmare with it anyway, it’s a wonder you hadn’t lost it in the near 15 years you wore it! But I don’t feel losing it diminishes our marriage or the love we had. Your dad said “The ring is in your heart. The band is only a symbol” and he was right. I stopped wearing my engagement and wedding rings relatively soon after you died, there was no big ceremony about it. It was just my hands were so dry after all the washing and the anti-bac I was using. I wore your ashes ring on that finger for a long time, but gradually moved that too. It’s funny the things we do subconsciously.
Anyway. I don’t know the last time I wrote to you. I talk to you a lot of the time though. Heck. Sometimes I even shout at you. Usually at Christmas when I’m lugging the 4,000 boxes in and out of the loft. But throughout the year too. I’ll often pop to the Memorial Bench to get your opinion on things. Fortunate really that nobody can listen to those chats. And I’ve not yet been struck down by lightening so I’ll assume you’re ok with everything. But there’s some things that I’ve never said out loud. Or written. Today feels like the most apposite day to say them.
I know that we spoke to you via Skype on the day you died. I’ve always wondered if you could hear us on that day. I pray you could. I pray that you heard me telling you how much you were loved by so many people. How proud everyone was of you. That you heard me apologise that I couldn’t have kept you safe from the virus. Granted, as time has gone by I’ve accepted that I did all I could to get you the medical help and intervention that you needed. I wasn’t in control of you falling ill, to this day I have no idea where you contracted it from. How COVID-19 entered our world and stole you from us. I don’t think about it anymore, it ate away at me for so long but there really is nothing I could have done that would have changed it. I wish with everything I have that I could have done but this was out of my power.
When I made the announcements via message and on social media that you’d died, I said you’d lost your battle. But the truth is you didn’t lose a battle. You were fighting an enemy that didn’t play fair. Because that virus was indiscriminate with its victims. It just took whoever it wanted to. And I know that you battled so very, very hard Charlie. You fought it for four weeks from coming down with your temperature. You gave it everything you had. You tried to come home to us. But in the end, it was just too strong. One thing you weren’t though was weak. Not at all. I know you mustered all the strength you had to walk down the stairs to the waiting ambulance. I know you did this for our little girl. For her to not see you being carried out of our house. Thank you for doing this for her. I will be eternally grateful that her last image of seeing her father physically is of him having his head held high and showing strength. She needed that to help carry her through.
I’m so very proud of how she’s coped with losing you Charlie. I know you would be too. I’m not entirely sure where I would be without her. It’s dubious I’d still be standing. She’s been absolutely incredible. No 10-year-old child should have gone through what she has. She shouldn’t be growing up without her father. But she’s adjusted. Or should that be adjusting? I don’t know if she’ll ever really come to terms with it, how can she? You are going to miss so many special and important occasions, I know that she will be missing you and thinking of you on each and every one of them. As will I. As will so many other people.
It makes my heart swell at how loved you still are. How I still get messages from people that something they’ve done has made them think of you. Even people who may have only met you once or twice. Your impact and legacy on the world hasn’t been forgotten. I doubt it ever will be. I said I didn’t want you to be a number or statistic of the pandemic, it’s not been easy but somehow through my writing and all the fundraising we’ve done, you’re not. Five years on and people still talk about you. That’s pretty good going don’t you think?
By no means am I taking full credit for this. Family and friends continue to keep your memory alive. They, like me, go to your Memorial Bench for a chat. They leave you cans of beer (I do wonder if this is why a bin was mysteriously put up next to the bench last year!) They still share photos and memories of you. The community that came together at last year’s CharlieFest said it all. The people in that room were there because of you. I might have organised it, but they were there because of you. I doubt you’d have ever expected it. If anyone could have told you what was going to happen following your death, I’m pretty sure you’d have said “give over” and rolled your eyes. You always were so humble and unassuming. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not turning you into a saint and saying you were perfect, I’ve not gone delusional in my grief, but you were a good man. A decent human being.
It’s why I struggled for so long with why you were chosen as a victim of that virus. Why so many good people lost their lives as a result of it. I know you’d have said that it was your time (yes, I do remember that heated discussion just a few weeks before you fell ill about losing people ahead of their time!) but it still didn’t make sense. But that’s the thing with death isn’t it? I think of some of the other losses I’ve experienced since you died, none of them have really made sense. Another COVID-19 death, a tragic accident, a symptomless condition. All young people. All people taken too soon. Yes, you may eye roll at that statement, but to my mind they were. I like to think that you’re up there having a beer or a glass of red with them. Probably despairing at me a tad with one of them. But I also hope that you’ve managed to have a cuddle with your nanny. Family and friends were always so important to you, I can’t imagine that has changed.
You’d have been so grateful and appreciative for the family and friends who have helped hold us up since your death. The kindness that has been shown to us. I suspect you’d have been as surprised as I was at the people who did show up for us, the people who didn’t know how to support us, the people who are no longer in our lives as predominantly and the new people who have come in. I’m so sorry I couldn’t keep all the relationships the same as when you were alive. But this was something else that was outside of my control. I know people needed me to be but I was never the villain in this story, I was simply heartbroken and lost. A woman trying to find her way in her new life, one that she should never have been living. A woman simply trying to do the right thing by you and her daughter. I had no energy to give to other people. I had no fight left in me. It became easier to let people go than have to explain myself or fight for them to stay.
You see for so long Charlie, I was simply trying to survive. I had to focus on our daughter. Not even me so much. Her. She was and is my number one priority. We didn’t really live. We just went through the motions. We had to put all our efforts into survival. It sounds remarkably simple to put that in words. To say all we had to do was survive. But it wasn’t. It really bloody wasn’t. It was the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do. I wish someone could have given me a manual. Who knows whether I’d have believed it or paid attention to it, however. You know me. Always know best right?
Yet I haven’t really known best. I haven’t really known how to climb and survive this insurmountable grief mountain. I’d never been an adult without you. I hadn’t anticipated needing to become one at the age of 39. I don’t know whether I’ve done everything right these past five years. Yet I know I wouldn’t change anything I’ve done though. Because every decision I’ve made, l’ve done so with the emotions and information I had available at the time. Overthinking has probably become my trademark, but sometimes I have just had to trust my gut. Without overthinking. I did it the day you died when I was given the heartbreaking decision of saying goodbye to you in person but only if I then isolated away from our daughter. That was a split second gut decision. I know you’d have agreed it was the right one to stay with her and not see you. So I have tried to remember that. I regularly ask myself “what would Charlie say?” and “what would Charlie do?” when I face tricky situations. I try to listen to you still, you’ve become that voice in my head now that I look to for guidance.
As I write this, I can see the look on your face and the sarcastic “hmmm, really?” Okay. I admit. I didn’t ask myself what you would do when I chose the kitchen and conservatory floors, I know you’d have hated them! I also didn’t ask myself what you’d have done when booking six Jason Donovan gigs on the same tour. “It’s the same setlist Em, it’s the same show, what is the point?” might have been the polite version of what you’d have said. But I’ve very much needed these dates these past few months, I underestimated just how hard the fifth anniversary was going to hit me. I hope you don’t begrudge me the things that make me smile and bring me joy, it’s all part of discovering me and who I am. I feel the same about the people who are in my life now, I hope you don’t begrudge me moving forwards and making new friends. That you appreciate what they’ve offered me, what they’ve taught me and introduced me to. The juxtaposition that people have come into my life only because you’re no longer in it messes with my head at times. I often wonder what you would think of them. I’m sure you’d approve. But most of all, I hope you don’t begrudge me living again. It’s taken me such a long time to be able to do so. I truly do feel that you’d want me to do this. You wouldn’t have wanted your death to be the thing that destroyed me or our daughter, of that I’m sure.
It’s why I’ve tried to be brave and push myself out of my comfort zone. Our trip to the West Coast of the USA last year is a prime example of that and also showed how much of a part of our lives you continue to be. You and I had always planned that trip for my 40th and so we finally did it. The guide on the boat when whale watching asked who had good karma because of the incredible pods of orcas we were seeing. I don’t believe it was karma. I believe it was you. To show how proud of us you were for making that trip. The trip to Crystal River and swimming with the manatees when we went to Florida in 2022 that you’d always wanted to do. I owe it to you to do these things. To do the things you’d always wanted to do (within reason though obviously!)
But just on the living again. I’m sorry that I haven’t been as frugal as you probably would have wanted me to be. That I’ve made crazy decisions. But Charlie, for such a long time, I was so scared. Scared to not do things. Scared to not seize opportunities. Scared of my life ending too. Scared to say no to things. Scared to say no to people in case something happened to them. But my fear is slowly abating now. I don’t know if it will ever completely go, but it’s definitely abating. For the first time in about five years, I feel as though I’m on an even keel again. That I’m actually in control. I can’t promise there won’t still be the odd crazy decision, but I think I’m likely to be more measured about things now. Maybe. Possibly. Hopefully.
I don’t really know what is going to come next. At times the scriptwriters seem to be having a bit of a laugh when it comes to my story. But I think you’d like the person I’m becoming. The version of Emma in her 40s is very different to the version of her in her 20s and 30s. She’s probably the person you always wanted her to be. It’s ironic that I’ve probably only become this person because of all I’ve gone through these past five years. Of what I’ve learnt about me. But I think you’d quite like that in a way, it shows the impact you’re still having. And I hope you’ll continue to watch over us. That you’ll continue to make your presence felt. For everyone who knew and loved you. I’m not the only one who has felt you still around, an energy and a soul as great as yours was always going to leave a mark on this world.
What I do know is that we’re entering a period of change. Her first lead role in a show. GCSEs. Leaving school. Where we’ll live. Possibly moving house. My career. It all feels pretty daunting to be making these decisions without you. To be second guessing myself that I’m doing “the right thing.” But we’re back to that trusting of the gut again aren’t we? I have to trust myself that I know what is best for Team Charlesworth. Both as individuals and as a team. And if I get it wrong? Well, then we’ll just learn. You once found a quote you liked that included the line “you will never lose, you will either win or learn.” That’s how I have to look at life now. We’ve already lost so much, something good and positive has got to come out of it for both her and I now. We need to start winning. So, I need to grasp life with both hands and learn from it. It’s simply all I can do. It’s all any of us can do really.
I don’t know when I’ll next write to you Charlie. But that doesn’t mean I won’t be thinking of you. That you won’t still be a massive part of my life. Of our daughter’s life. Photos of you are still up at home. That won’t ever change. I promise you that. But I do need to continue being just Emma now. I need to not be Charlie and Emma. It’s time. You understand that. I know you do. I know how proud of me you are for all I’ve done to get me to this point. The hours I’ve spent in therapy. The tears I’ve shed. The trauma I’ve processed. The clawing myself back from rock bottom. Thank you for loving me and giving me the strength I needed to be able to do all of this without you. To work out a way of living as a young widow and solo parent. I wouldn’t be the woman I am now without all you taught me and the love you gave me for two decades.
Two years ago, to mark Children’s Grief Awareness Week, I wrote a blog because the phrase “children are resilient” had been playing heavily on my mind. I felt it was clouding our view of how children who have been bereaved are treated. One of the points I raised that seemed to resonate the most with people was this: Needing help doesn’t mean she’s not resilient, that she’s mad, that she can’t cope or that she’s weird. It just means she’s human and vulnerable.
A lot has happened since I wrote that blog, but as I sit here today, on the first day of Children’s Grief Awareness Week 2024, there’s a new thought that is playing heavily on my mind. The fact that my daughter won’t ever really remember a life without grief in it. She won’t ever really remember her mum when she wasn’t grieving. Imagine that. Growing up with grief being part of your everyday life. I hesitate to use the word normal, because that is different for all of us, but ultimately grief, trauma and sadness are part of my daughter’s normal and have been since she was 10 years old. It breaks my heart beyond all belief that her innocence and childhood were snatched from her so cruelly.
Yet when I started thinking about this a bit more, I started thinking about the theme of this awareness week. #BuildingHope. Hope is probably the most pertinent word in my family. It’s the word I have tattooed on my wrist in my late husband’s handwriting. It’s part of my daughter’s name. And the fact that this grief awareness week begins on 18th November is also something that feels pertinent for me. 18th November 1993 is the date that I first really became aware of death and grief. These two things put together are why I knew I needed to write.
I’ve never really spoken about the fact that I too went through grief as a child. Mainly because in 1993, mental health or speaking about your emotions and feelings weren’t really considered. And certainly not for a child. But more than that. As the years have gone by, I have never really felt it was my story to tell. Yes, my family and friends at the time knew about it. It crops up in conversation with people to this day at times. But I haven’t publicly talked about it. I’ve had numerous different bouts of counselling over the years, but it’s never been a topic of discussion, there’s always been what I’ve felt are more pressing things to talk about. Yet recently I’ve stopped to think about how that day itself, the immediate aftermath and the bereavement I went through, haunts me and continues to affect me to this day. I suspect it always will. It’s a part of who I am. Because it is a part of my story. Whether I talk about it publicly or not.
It almost feels a bizarre coincidence in a way that both mine and my daughter’s first real memory and experience of death happened in what were fundamentally national tragedies. That we’ve both had to deal with death against a backdrop of news headlines and TV images. Such completely and utterly different circumstances, but the similarities are there, nonetheless. I was 12 years old. She was 10 years old. Having to adjust to a new reality without someone they loved in it. Becoming acutely aware from a young age that death can happen to anyone. It’s not just old people who die. Being aware of your own mortality before you’re even a teenager. It’s a lot to have to come to terms with.
I think this is what has led me to the realisation about my daughter having grief in her life forever. And I also think this is part of why I have so vehemently pushed her to talk about her grief. To have counselling. To try to help her process and make sense of the trauma she went through. The secondary losses she has faced. The future she faces growing up without her father. I want to do all I can to help her manage this unfathomable loss. To have it be a part of her story but not her whole story. To help her grow around it.
Whenever I talk about her and what she’s faced in my blogs, I always, always check she is comfortable with what I’m going to write. Because ultimately her experience is her story. There are some things which are just too personal to both of us to ever share. I won’t talk about them. I respect her views. Yet when I spoke about this blog, I could see the progress she’s made since that blog two years ago. The little bits of her life she is more comfortable for me to talk about now.
Shortly after I wrote my blog in 2022, my daughter and I joined Winston’s Wish Ambassador Molly for an Instagram Live together with Grace Lee, Director of Marketing and Communications for Winston’s Wish. The concept was for young people to talk directly and openly about their bereavements and grief. It was a classic case of Instagram vs. reality, in the 10 minutes before we went live, my daughter and I had some minor disagreements, she was stroppy with me, I was conscious of time so was blunt back and then the second we went live we switched on the consummate professional act! But as I sat there listening to Molly and then my own daughter, I was struck by just how astute they both were and how much they understood the impact that their bereavements had had on them. My daughter said things about grief that I’d never heard her say before. There were some real lump in the throat moments for me. I’d have never anticipated quite what was going to come our way just a few months later.
Because it was in February 2023 that I took my daughter to our doctor to get her referred for counselling. Her grief had manifested itself into anxiety. And it was becoming more and more difficult to manage. I’d had an inkling that this might happen the day of her great-grandmother’s funeral in January 2022, it was at the same crematorium as her dad’s funeral, she had to face all his family and by the time we got to the evening, she was shaking on the bathroom floor and vomiting. She couldn’t go back to school the next day. The anxiety and the stress that day caused for her was simply too much for her to deal with. It was another loss for her to have to process.
But by 2023, her anxiety had got to the point where she couldn’t leave the house in the morning for school without eight different alarms. Each of which to tell her it was time to do something else, be that go in the bathroom, get dressed or have breakfast. It felt unsustainable. Any change to that routine, a few minutes lost here and there was enough to cause a meltdown. There were days she didn’t even make it into school. She simply couldn’t process change. Everything had to be regimented. I watched as she withdrew into herself more. We argued more because I couldn’t really understand what she was going through. Because I didn’t understand just how crippling her anxiety had become. Just how hard her life was. Until she started her counselling, all I could do was love her and watch her suffer as she tried to make sense in her mind of why she was like this. As she tried to answer the question she posed herself “why am I like this?” It was, quite simply, heartbreaking to watch.
She was nervous about the counselling. She didn’t really know what she’d say. But as I sat on the stairs and listened to her first session, I could hear her talking. I was astonished quite how much the counsellor got her to say. After that I didn’t listen to her sessions, they were personal to her and I knew if there was a major concern, the counsellor would contact me. But for someone who was such a sceptic, these sessions helped her. Even she would admit this. Just last week, she commented on how she only has one alarm now and it goes off 35 minutes later than it did last year. This might sound small to someone who has never experienced anxiety, but to her it’s massive.
And while a lot of her anxiety has dissipated, it is still there. I don’t doubt it always will be to an extent. It’s part of her grief. We have found ways to help her manage it, but if things come at her left field, they do still cause her to feel anxious or to panic. She will openly admit she has trust issues. She struggles to let people in. She has abandonment issues. I don’t doubt that as she gets older, she will need therapy again. Because at different points in her life, she is going to need help to process her emotions. It’s a fact of her life.
And she’s also had to live with my grief being a fact of her life for the last four years. The fact I find myself crying anywhere, a supermarket, the theatre, in the car, the cinema… the list is endless. We recently went to see Paddington in Peru (I cried!) and on the drive home, we saw an ambulance with its blue lights on. No siren, just lights on. My daughter started making the sound of a siren, I laughed and said, “why are you being an ambulance?” To which she simply said “I know you don’t like seeing the blue lights without the sirens. It’s hard for you so I thought I’d add them.” Deep breath moment for me. The realisation that things like that are on her mind. How acutely aware she is of how I feel and my triggers. Three years ago, she was interviewed as part of a study on childhood bereavement, they asked her how her mum was coping. “She keeps herself busy and doesn’t sit still, because if she stops, she’ll have to think about what’s happened to us and she doesn’t want to do that.” Another deep breath moment. Because there are times her emotional intelligence is off the scale. But this also breaks my heart. She shouldn’t have had to become this astute. She shouldn’t have had to live with grief becoming a part of her world at such a young age that she’s been able to gain this understanding.
Her understanding, vulnerability and honesty are just some of her qualities that I am most proud of. I do believe she’s growing up with an empathy that she wouldn’t have if she hadn’t experienced the loss of her father and watched her mother grieving. She knows this herself. Towards the end of last year, she and I had a conversation in what is known as the “Jac McDonald’s” (mainly because this is where we ate before going to see Jac Yarrow on more than one occasion.) And while I’d rather not be having a deep and meaningful over a Big Mac, sometimes you just have to go with the flow of the conversation. She told me that she wouldn’t necessarily change what has happened to her. I was quizzical over this but the way she responded again just made me so proud. Her rationale was that she likes the person she is now, and she doesn’t know if she would be this person if she hadn’t gone through everything she has. Another deep breath moment for me. There is no real response to that. Without question, she will never cease to amaze me with how she has approached everything and the way she now reflects on her life.
Recently she and a friend went to their first gig without a parent. No way would she have been able to do this last year. And while I was a tad neurotic, when I got the text message from her to tell me they’d found their seats, had bought some merchandise and what time they’d worked out they’d need to go to the toilet before the main act, I breathed a sigh of relief. She’s got this was my overarching feeling. And as her friend’s mum and I waited in the venue for the gig to finish, I listened to the lyrics of one of the songs. The words that Henry Moodie sang felt like the perfect way to sum up my daughter’s response to grief and anxiety:
I’ve learned to live with my anxieties
‘Cause I’ve got some bad emotions
It’s just a part of life, it doesn’t mean I’m broken
At the worst of times, I tell myself to breathe
Count to three, wait and see that I’ll be okay
‘Cause I’ve got some bad emotions
Took a minute, but I’m finding ways of coping.
Anyone who is parenting a child who is bereaved wants to make it better for them. Anyone who has experienced childhood bereavement wants to feel better. Wonders when the grief and the pain might go away. Yet, as I’ve come to realise it doesn’t ever go away. But by talking about it and hopefully breaking some taboos, we can become more understanding of the impact, find techniques for coping and learn ways to support.
#BuildingHope is this year’s theme, and I cannot think of anything that is more fitting. It sounds clichéd. It sounds trite. But speaking as a mother who has watched her child ride the grief rollercoaster these last four years, I do truly believe that building and offering hope to those also experiencing this is one of the most powerful things we can do.
Three years ago today, 23 March 2020, the UK was put into its first lockdown.
It is a day that will be forever imprinted on my mind. Just 24 hours prior to that, Mr C had noticed a raised temperature and our journey with covid had begun.
I was honoured to be asked to author a blog for Widowed and Young to tell my story and what it’s been like for so many people over the last three years and you can read this blog at this link.
I was then humbled when the Metro online also featured this article, it is slightly different but focusing on the same timeframe. You can read this article at this link.
Today is a day for reflecting. For thinking about those we’ve lost and my thoughts are with everyone that has experience of what it was like to be bereaved during the pandemic and to be widowed young.
Recently, someone shared a video in the Widowed and Young group on Facebook of an interview which Martin Lewis had done a few years ago. In it, he spoke about the death of his mother and how that had affected his life. There was one phrase that really hit me “that was the end of my childhood.” I was sat in the car park of our local Dunelm at the time of watching and it just made me sob. And made me think about my own child. It made me realise something that I’d not really thought about before. I’m the mother of a child whose childhood ended at the age of 10.
Because it really did. Yes, I’ve done my very best to keep things as “normal” for her as possible. Yes, I’ve managed to make it possible for her to keep doing a number of things she did before the death of her father. But the simple fact is, she has been exposed to the harshest of realities. She grew up, essentially, overnight. She lost a parent. One half of the team that had been keeping her safe and protecting her for 10 years disappeared. The person who had got her up every day. Her hero. She lost him. In the most surreal of times.
Of all the people who are grieving the loss of my late husband, it is my child that my heart breaks for the most. Even more so than for my own loss. Because as I look at it, I was fortunate enough to have known him since I was 15 years old. I’d been in a relationship with him since I was 18. He’d been in my life for over 20 years. I have so many memories of him. I had so many experiences with him. We’d done so much together. All that potential has been stolen from our daughter. She no longer has a future with her father. Studies have been done as to what age children start having memories from, and the general consensus is that it’s around seven years old. That means she has just three years of memories with her dad. And they’re meant to last her a lifetime. Except they won’t. Because it’s only natural that other things will come into her brain and start to replace them. Yes, she’ll remember things (I’m not saying she won’t) but if I was to sit here now and talk to you about my life between the ages of seven and 10, how much can I really remember? Not a huge amount.
I listen to her say that when she’s 20, her dad will have been dead half her lifetime. I watched her sleep in my bed for 18 months after he was rushed to ITU because she was so terrified that something was going to go happen to me too. I watched her completely struggle with Christmas last year, because the magic of it had gone (her first year of not believing) and the reality of her dad not being here at Christmas was too much for her. These little things remind me that she is actually still a child. A child in pain. But when I think back to that Martin Lewis interview, there is so much of her that I’ve seen that feels as though her childhood is over.
When she’s been sent messages that, in my opinion, should never have been sent to a child, she was the one who wanted to write the responses. She didn’t want me step in and deal with them for her. And respond she did, in the most eloquent and articulate of ways. I was so, so proud of her. But at the same time, my heart broke that tiny bit more, because I knew I hadn’t been able to stop the hurt she was feeling because of it. I knew I couldn’t make it better for her. My role as her mother is, and always will be, to protect her and try to stop heartbreak. I spoke in my blog on Mothering Sunday last year about how much of a fierce Mama Bear I’ve become. But over the last year, I’ve had to make sure I don’t unleash the Mama Bear too often, because my daughter has become more ready to take on the next battle herself. Partly this is due to her age, and the transition to secondary school, but also when your heart has been broken in the way hers has, you’re not really afraid to take on the world. You’re not really afraid of anymore hurt because, to a certain extent, it feels inconsequential compared to what you’ve gone through.
She’s also become so very much more adult like in her interactions with me. I still have to remind her on a regular basis that she is a child, and needs to do as she’s asked, but the crux of the matter is that she has had to step up these last two years. She was the only person in the house with me for such a long time after my late husband died. She has had to physically help me get up off the floor. She has watched her mother fall apart and break on more than one occasion. She has been the one to frequently see my tears and ask “why are you crying mummy, what can I do to help?” She is the one who has given me pep talks and reality checks when the going has got really tough. She has, to a certain extent, become a carer for me. Not out of choice, but because she is the only one living with me 24/7 and seeing the pain I’ve been living with. She is the one who has stepped up to do chores to get pocket money and sell her decoupage items so that she can save money to buy me presents for Mothering Sunday, Christmas and my birthday. This was pretty much dealt with for the first year, but she now feels it’s not fair on my sister or my mother to buy presents on her behalf anymore. She feels a responsibility. A responsibility to not only look after her mother, but to provide for her when needed too. All this at the age of 12. It’s no wonder that I feel that I’m a mother to a child whose childhood has ended.
I look back at my own childhood. To a certain degree, I wonder if this is what my mother felt after the breakdown of her marriage. Because I know that I had to step up then too. I helped look after my sister, so my mother was able to do things. Not least of which was doing three jobs. I don’t know the full financial implications and arrangements following my parent’s divorce, I didn’t need to at the time, I was a child after all, but I do know that my mother did three jobs so that she was able to continue to treat us. She wanted us to be able to go on holiday or to concerts (she possibly regrets that now though given my Jason Donovan and my sister’s Boyzone obsessions!!) I will always be beyond grateful to my mother for everything she sacrificed and did for us when we were growing up.
I can’t help but wonder what it must have been like for her when she had to watch her eldest child tell her child that her father was going to die. Heartbroken and helpless is all I can assume. Because I don’t think there ever really comes a time when your child is not your baby. I say to my own daughter that she’s my baby and she responds with “I’m not a baby.” No. She isn’t. But she is my baby. And she always will be. My mother would probably tell you that I’m her baby. Over the past two years, I’ve watched her try to do more and more for me. Despite me saying “I’m nearly 40 / I’m in my 40s / I can do it myself.” She felt helpless for so long because of the restrictions in place, that I suspect there’s an element that now she can help, it helps her to help me. She gets cross when I don’t wash my car, so takes it off my drive and does it for me. She’ll turn up with my stepdad when he mows the lawn to do some gardening for me. When my washing machine broke earlier this year and the repair took longer than anticipated, she did all our washing. And would regularly bring it back ironed. She’ll cook us dinner if I’ve got a particularly hectic schedule. She helps out with my daughter and our puppy so that I’m able to go to the office or have nights out. Put simply. I would not have been able to achieve or do half as much as I have without her since I became a solo parent.
And this is against a backdrop of some fractious times. It hasn’t always been plain sailing between my mother and me. There may well be other challenges in the future. But it comes back to a mother’s love and what being a mother means to you no matter what the circumstances are surrounding the relationship. My late husband hadn’t spoken to his mother for many years before he died, and neither had I, but I will still acknowledge the pain she must feel. It’s why I’ve made sure I’ve sent her copies of photos, newspaper and magazine articles, in the same way I have for his father and his sisters, because, at the end of the day, she is a mother who has lost her child. She in return has written to tell me how proud she is of her son and to thank me for all I have done to keep his memory alive and to honour him. She will always be his mother. His death won’t that change that.
I can’t begin to comprehend and don’t claim to know what it must feel like to lose your child. I realised recently that my own daughter is now the age my cousin was when she died, and I felt like the rug had been pulled out from under me. Because I simply can’t imagine how I’d feel if my daughter’s life ended now. It goes against the natural order of things. When you become a mother, it isn’t something that you ever contemplate. I know from my own experience that I hadn’t expected to feel the unconditional love I do for my daughter, but I also know that I hadn’t expected the constant fear and worry that goes with being a mother. There is nothing I wouldn’t do in order to protect my daughter. From anyone and anything. And the knowledge that I can’t actually protect her from everything is heartbreaking.
But I also know that because of everything she’s gone, and continues to go through, she’s growing up with a very realistic outlook on the world. And maybe that isn’t such a bad thing. I recently came across the Facebook post my late husband posted on Mothering Sunday 2019. It came after a particularly trying weekend. He said:
“You are a fantastic mother, so, if nothing else, take from today that achieving that accolade is not purely down to making your child happy. It is about teaching, guiding, encouraging and sometimes pushing your child to understand what it is to show compassion, kindness, respect and love, even if it, at times, feels like it is at the sacrifice of those things for yourself. This is why you are a great mother and why one day, you will reap the benefit of the seeds you sowed.”
I’ve had to continue to teach my daughter compassion, kindness, respect and love in a way that I know he wouldn’t have anticipated when he made that post in 2019. I’ve sacrificed so very much of myself these last two years since he came down with his temperature on Mothering Sunday 2020. I’d do it all again in a heartbeat, because that is my role as a mother. But as I sit here now, I know that I can start to give a little bit of attention back to me because of the amazing person my daughter is becoming. I can’t properly articulate just how proud of her how I am. In the same way, my late husband’s mother is proud of her son. In the same way that my mother is proud of me. I have a child who makes me beyond proud. Every single day.
I know that she won’t let the death of her father beat her. When I watched the Martin Lewis interview and how he credited some of his success to the loss of his mother, I envisage in years to come hearing my daughter say something similar. She tries every single day to better herself. She has the steely determination of her father. She shows so much dedication to music, drama and theatrics, I’d put money on me one day watching her on a West End or Broadway stage. And whatever her future brings, I know that when I watch her achieve, I won’t feel the heartbreak anymore that her childhood ended so young. I’ll just feel enormous pride that the experience and hurt didn’t define her. That she used her experience to help her become the person she wanted to be. And as her mother, I won’t be able to ask for anything more.