Grazia (UK)

Womb with a view: ‘I am glad my mother left me as a toddler’

Every week, a woman reflects on motherhood – whether she has children or not

- by kim willis

idon’t remember Mum leaving. Not the day she left, when I was two, nor the days or weeks after. I have no recalled memories of my parents ever being together. As far as I ever knew, Mum had her own house and I lived with my siblings, Tammi and Jae, and Dad, while my sister Pip, who lived in a residentia­l home for the blind, would stay with us at weekends. We were happy. I was happy.

But as those closest to me can attest, the abandonmen­t issues that stemmed from that moment have affected my behaviour deeply, doing their best to sabotage relationsh­ips throughout my life.

The year I was born, we moved from Surrey to the Isle of Wight so my dad Bryan could run a sailing school. My parents had been together 10 years. Mum had worked in secretaria­l roles before having kids. My siblings and I thought our house by the sea was brilliant but, as I learned later, my mum Sue grew increasing­ly isolated and unhappy.

With the benefit of hindsight, I can see that Dad was a wonderful father but a terrible husband. With 50-odd people coming and going every week (the sailing school was run from the house), Mum felt like the hired help, not enjoying her marriage or motherhood.

In March 1985, when I was just about to turn three and my siblings Pip, Jae and Tammi were seven, eight and nine respective­ly, unable to articulate her feelings, Mum wrote Dad a note and left.

I don’t know what the note said. But Dad later told me he lay awake that first night waiting for us to come into his room crying, but it took a week for any of us to ask where Mum was. That’s how chaotic the house was – there were just so many people there. Whether Tam and Jae did indeed know Mum had gone and internalis­ed their pain, I don’t know. I don’t know if there were tears but I don’t think so. I just don’t remember anything about this time on a conscious level – the impact for me really came later. Dad wasn’t angry, he was heartbroke­n, but blamed himself for not being a better husband.

Even though I don’t remember much about the time, there was always a feeling of ‘oddness’. That when I went to friends’ houses, there were two parents. Or if not a dad, then a mother – always there, fussing over them.

Mine lived in Dorset and I saw her for occasional weekends and holidays. She was my fun, mischievou­s, part-time parent. Dad juggled running his business with parenting demands. He was attentive, if a little madcap. He arranged with my school that he’d pick me up a few hours later than home time so that he could work longer. He had a secretary who was more likely to bandage my grazed knees than he was, but he’d also leap into action if I asked for a treasure hunt or when it was time for a bedtime story, a ritual we never missed.

While my sisters and brother have told me that he was so lost in his grief that he didn’t notice they were skipping school or hanging out with unsavoury characters, I was younger and much less aware. From where I stood, Dad was my hero.

For a long time, life was relatively untroubled – but in my late teens, when my brother’s first son reached the age I was when Mum left, it really hit me. As he waddled about, all adorable and vulnerable, my heart hurt. How could I have been so insignific­ant to my own mother that she could have left me? I resented her. By now Mum lived in Jersey and I lived with friends. When she visited, although we got on well, I felt agitated. If she so much as offered advice on how to do the washing up, inside I’d be screaming, ‘ You have no right to tell me what to do!’ Instead, I processed (or didn’t process) my feelings the only way I knew how – partying hard.

I was always the most drunk person at the party, always the loudest and most reckless. I wasn’t very good at female friendship­s back then and felt more comfortabl­e in the company of men. I drew boyfriends close then pushed them away, leaving them first before they had a chance to leave me. I sabotaged relationsh­ips with perfectly lovely guys to protect myself from

the hurt of them leaving me. I was fiercely independen­t and the thought of relying on anyone else scared me.

I met my partner Gaz when I was 26. His first gift was a box of novelty plasters because I’d mentioned I was clumsy – an unintentio­nal metaphor for the healing he’d do. I adored him and wanted our relationsh­ip to go the distance, which is why I couldn’t understand my behaviour – I kept pushing him away, yet I was needy. I feared that I was unlovable and would eventually be abandoned and sought out evidence that would confirm that fear. I caused arguments to test him, looking to prove my insecuriti­es right. Then I’d cry and feel vulnerable and terrified that I’d succeed.

We observed that I was like the tide, pushing and pulling, while he was a rock.

In an attempt to get to the root of the problem I tried therapy, which addressed my fear of abandonmen­t and my need to test those closest to me to see if they might leave too.

My therapist encouraged me to ask Mum the questions I needed answers to – why she left, how she could leave us kids, where she went, how often we saw her. She told me she left because Dad was driving her insane. She thought stability for us was more important than taking us with her. That the stability of the house we were familiar with was better than going to stay at her friend’s.

As I listened to Mum, I was not surprised she was unhappy. I realised that she was just another human trying to figure out her own issues. She knew leaving was controvers­ial, that she’d be judged, that if any of us turned out badly, the finger of blame would be pointed at her.

I grew to feel protective of Mum. I didn’t want people to judge her. She left because she was extremely unhappy in her marriage and because life had become chaotic. Once she left she was able to be a better mother to us. I didn’t have to grow up in an unhappy household and I was grateful to Mum for preventing that. I became glad she had left.

While her style of mothering may not fit in with society’s mould, she taught me a valuable lesson: we all have a responsibi­lity to put our own happiness first.

I don’t want children, but I don’t believe this is related to my childhood. Financiall­y, environmen­tally and in order to pursue all our other dreams, Gaz and I have decided it isn’t the path for us.

Women are burdened by too many ‘shoulds’. But should Mum have stayed, foregoing her own happiness to ensure it was our mother who picked us up from school? Some might argue yes, but not me. In the decades since Mum left, equality between the sexes has made great leaps in many areas. Yet the stigma around mothers leaving their children prevails.

My relationsh­ip with Mum now is wonderful, and I bloody love her. She visits often and is a constant support. We email each other every day for a catch-up. She is one of my favourite people and closest friends. Acceptance and forgivenes­s is key to happiness and I’m proud to call her my mum.

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 ??  ?? Kim with her mother in 1983; and in 2013 (below left)
Kim with her mother in 1983; and in 2013 (below left)
 ??  ?? Kim as a toddler with Sue in 1984, and the pair with sister Tammi in 2016 (below left)
Kim as a toddler with Sue in 1984, and the pair with sister Tammi in 2016 (below left)
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