“I’m beginning to realise that there are parts of myself that I’ve ignored – perhaps even purposefully – since I was your age. It feels a bit like I’m sleepwalking through life: I know what I’m doing but there’s a filter meaning my senses are a bit numb while I’m doing it.Colours are muted. Sounds are muffled. Touch feels mitten-stifled.”
I’ve been trying to work out how I’ve got here and I’ve been thinking a lot about when I met your Dad. You know we met at university – during my first few weeks in fact. Dad was interesting and clever and he made me laugh. It turned out he liked me a lot and we got together. He was my first and only boyfriend and I adored the idea of him fancying me.
I wasn’t a very confident person while I was at university and I’ve told myself that's the reason I spent the rest of my time there living very safely. Although I hung out with my gay (and newly out) flatmate drinking Lambrini and Pink Zin, I didn’t seek to meet new people and I never tried to grow my confidence so I could build friendships beyond a handful of people I met in my first year.
If I was introduced to any lesbians or bisexual women then I wasn’t aware of it but I did have crushes on a few of my female course mates. But throughout the whole time I was in a committed relationship with Dad so my label was “straight”.
Straight in more ways than one I suppose. I was focused on my studies. I didn’t party. Didn’t join clubs. Didn’t experiment. Didn’t make stupid mistakes. Didn’t have any of those “one-to-tell-the-grandkids” experiences.
I did not make the most of that time in my life. I regret that I lived so small as a student. And that I have done so ever since.
"Nobody has stopped me finding out what I like, or what or who I’m interested in, but nobody has encouraged me to ask either. I don’t want that for you. I want you to be curious, to ask questions and to be brave enough to do what’s right for you. Even if it’s hard, feels selfish, or hurts people you love."
Why am I thinking about all this now? I think it’s connected to my hormones changing but I suppose it’s been bubbling away under the surface for a long time. Until now though, I’ve been able to shove my intrigue about women aside. I’ve been busy with my career and I’ve been busy being your mum and I enjoy and cherish both of those things.
But there’s also the fact that, quite honestly, my feelings are excruciatingly inconvenient. If I acted on them without speaking to Dad first I would hurt him and perhaps change the shape of our family which would be painful for all four of us. But I also think that withholding such strong feelings would be a form of self-betrayal.
So last night I finally spoke to Dad. I told him how much it bothers me that I don’t feel I know who I am as a person, as a woman, as an identity separate from him.
I explained as best as I could. I told him that although I love him and the family that we’ve created, I’m also afraid of not fully knowing who I am. I'm scared I’ll realise in my 60s that I’ve spent my life comfortably married to a man I love but am not in love with. A man that I’m affectionate with but not attracted to.
Dad listened. He held my hand. He said he wants me to be happy, and that if I needed to explore my sexuality he is ok with that. He loves me and our life and so he suggested consensual non-monogamy as a way for me to figure some things out.
I didn’t expect that. I don’t really know what to do with that freedom.
I do know that your Dad is a very special person and that I chose an exceptional man to raise you with.
This is nobody’s fault. Nobody has stopped me finding out more about what I like, or what or who I’m interested in, but nobody has encouraged me to ask either. I don’t want that for you.
I never want you to feel trapped in a life you feel you’re supposed to want but don’t. I want you to be curious, to ask questions and to be brave enough to do what’s right for you and your long-term happiness. Even if it’s hard, feels selfish, or hurts people you love. I want you to forge a life that feels true to you. That’s what I’m trying to do. As Glennan Doyle says, “the call of motherhood is to become a model, not a martyr.”
I might not show you this letter today or tomorrow or even next year – you’re both a little too young to understand – but I had to get this out of my brain and onto paper while it’s fresh in my mind.
I want to live a life without regrets. I want to live a bigger, fuller, more vibrant life. And I want you both to live the biggest, the fullest and the most vibrant lives possible.
Here’s to bravery. Here’s to living a full life.
Mum.x
This is the first one!
Thank you for reading! Merry Christmas! 🎄