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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Lifestyle
Anonymous

A letter to… my son, who is not my son

Baby and mother
‘I loved you from the first feeling of the weight of you in my arms.’ Image posed by models. Composite: Sarah Habershon/Getty

My commitment to you began when you were three weeks old. I said then it was for life, but nobody believed me. Why would they? I was 23, dating a 20-year-old man who was the lone parent of a tiny baby.

People presumed that your teenage mother would want you back. I shielded her from family criticism, from the judgment of people who said that a child should be with his mother, no matter how young the mother, no matter how unwanted that child.

In the absence that became permanent, I insisted that she was right to walk away, if she wanted to; that no mother should have to raise a child she felt unable to care for and did not love.

But I loved you. I loved you from the first feeling of the weight of you in my arms, your first smile. My beautiful, laughing, golden child. I supported your dad to be the father I knew he could be. People said I was wonderful, caring for a child that was not mine. But I was not wonderful, because you were mine. Who else’s could you have been?

You were two when your dad left me. I had no rights. I became a weekend parent. Your world turned upside down. You screamed when I left the room; I even had to take you to the toilet with me. I would sneak out of the house, rather than face goodbyes. It took me two years to feel able to introduce you to my new partner.

I was so worried that you would feel displaced that you were six years old before I felt able to have another child. I still remember your shout of delight when I told you that you were going to have a brother. All my anxieties were unfounded; you were – and still are – a wonderful big brother to both my other children.

People thought that the way I felt about you would change once I became a “real” mother; but I had become a real mother the moment I took you on.

You are a teenager now. You have decided to call me by my name, rather than “Mum”. It felt like a slap. You said it just felt right. “No problem, whatever feels right to you,” I said. That was a lie.

I worry that, as you get older, you will turn your affections to the mother who gave birth to you. It’s so natural to want to seek out your origins. I worry that you will cast me aside. I fear it because you hold part of my heart and you always have.

With all my love, always, your mother.

• We will pay £25 for every letter we publish. Email family@theguardian.com including your address and phone number. We are able to reply only to those whose contributions we are going to use.

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