Wishaw Press

The simple things

One family shares its story on what it takes to be a young carer, the special kind of person you have to be, and a grateful mum says...

- NIKI TENNANT

It’s not every 15-year-old girl who lists putting her mum’s socks on for her among her daily, routine tasks.

But that’s just one of the little things that make life a bit easier for Hannah’s mum, Audrey, who was diagnosed with peripheral neuropathy before her only child was born.

The condition, which is a type of nerve damage, causes pain, numbness, tingling and weakness in the hands, arms or feet.

That means Audrey relies on her teenage daughter for help with simple tasks that her illness has rendered impossible. And even though young carer Hannah has never known it any other way, Audrey can’t shake off her feelings of guilt.

“My mum is very wobbly. She does not have the best balance. Her nerves are not good and she occasional­ly uses a stick,” explained Hannah.

“When we are out and about, I play ‘stick.’ She leans on me. It is mainly her legs and feet, but her grip can go, too.

“My mum used to be steady. Before lockdown, she was more steady, and more confident about walking. Her walking is more stumbly than it was before.”

In normal times, when Airdrie Academy pupil Hannah is at school, she prefers her mum to stay home when she’s not around. She said: “When I was at school, she’d stay in the house until I came home because my dad works.

“Bu t s o m e t i m e s s h e’d g o shopping, which I never liked, especially during the winter. She would use the stick. But I’d always make sure she texted me so I could be sure she was okay.”

It’s not just Audrey’s mobility that has been adversely affected by the pandemic.

Hannah explained: “With us being in the house during lockdown, we feel stuck together.

“I’m not the best one for home schooling. I just can’t sit down and do my work – but that is my own issue. I still do what I can around the house. Usually, my mum wakes me up. It should be the other way around, I know.

“In lockdown, it’s been me who’s been waking up Mum. She has not been very good the last couple of days. I help her to get up, to get to the kitchen, and I cook the lunches and dinners.

“She feels kind of guilty sometimes, and she does apologise to me quite a lot.

“If I am about to sit down and she has to ask me to get something or do things for her, she gets guilty.

“If I’m going out with friends and she has to ask me to stay back for a couple of minutes to do this or that, she can feel kind of bad.

“I tell her it’s not her fault and it’s no problem. But she’ll still say sorry. We are kind of the same, personalit­y-wise. We’re both stubborn, so we get at each other sometimes. But, at the end of the day, we are really close.”

No-one understand­s Hannah’s frustratio­ns more than the friends she has met through Carers Trust Scotland and Action for Children.

As well as holding virtual meetings, during normal times key worker Amy Alexander visits young carers within their schools.

“The group work is really good and you do make friends. They understand the situation and what you are going through” explained Hannah.

“Nobody is mean. No-one judges you. And, for a group of teenagers, that’s really nice. As well as that, you also get Amy coming to the schools to talk to you about what is going on in your life and how you’re feeling.

“If something has happened, it’s just nice to chat. It takes a weight off my shoulders just to be able to tell someone.”

Hannah and Audrey may be similar in many ways, but their views of her caring role and responsibi­lities are poles apart.

Believing that there’s nothing exceptiona­l about what she does, Hannah thinks anyone’s capable of being a young carer.

She said: “You simply realise what is needed. Anyone could be a young carer, not just for a parent, but for a grandparen­t or a sibling. If you are needed by your

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