We asked
you for your biggest regret as a parent. Here is a selection of readers' tales
of sorrow, embarrassment, time wasted and love left unexpressed.
Also, a psychologist who works with families reveals the top five regrets cited by parents
Also, a psychologist who works with families reveals the top five regrets cited by parents
The
spaghetti incident
Out of all
the hundreds and thousands of things I've done for my kids: lifts, birthday
parties, cooking, cleaning, washing clothes, ironing, parents' evenings,
financial support – the list is endless – why do they always remember the one
bad thing I did as a parent?
Alison
Clink: 'My four children were misbehaving and I’d reached boiling point …'
Fran, right, got 'seconds' of spaghetti.
We all have
our off days – mothers too. When my youngest daughter was three and refusing to
finish her dinner, I picked up her bowl which contained remnants of cold
spaghetti bolognese – realising even as I did it that I'd be the one to clean
up the mess – and placed it upside down on her head. My four children were
misbehaving and I'd reached boiling point. The food was cold and there wasn't
much of it, but this desperate, if relatively mild, act of maternal rage is
brought up regularly in company when my kids want to have a laugh at my
expense.
Over the
years the story has become more and more exaggerated. The bowl has grown
bigger, the spaghetti hotter and more plentiful. This small act of aggression
eclipses everything kind, loving and maternal I've ever done. Maybe it's a
lesson in life – you can lead an exemplary existence but if you put one foot
wrong that's probably what you will be remembered for.
I wish in
retrospect that I'd left the room and counted to 10 instead. But my daughter
appears not to have been too traumatised. Although, come to think of it, she
did grow dreadlocks when she was 18 …
Alison Clink
Christopher
and Harry
My son
Christopher was entirely in thrall to Harry Potter, the boy wizard, and his
epic struggle against "He who must not be named". Over the years, as
each book in the series came out, Christopher would make sure that I read
several chapters to him each bedtime, only agreeing to let me stop reading when
his mum shouted up the stairs that it really was time he went to sleep.
Richard
Salmon with his son Christopher: 'How I wish that Harry, Ron, Hermione and
Dumbledore could once again get together and perfect the ultimate spell that
would bring Christopher and his beautiful smile back to us.'
In the
summer of 2007, Christopher and his mum, Julie, older brother Jonathan and I
were on holiday at Center Parcs in Sherwood Forest when the last in the series,
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, was published. Now 14, Christopher, of
course, had no desire for me to read to him any more and, as I recall, hid
himself away in his chalet room for a day or so and devoured the book in more
or less one sitting.
In February
2009, Christopher fell ill. His condition worsened as the week went on, so we
took him to hospital. On arrival at A&E, Christopher collapsed and had to
be rushed to the crash room. He never recovered and died from a rare
streptococcal infection.
I now
regret not having read that last Harry Potter book to Christopher and how I
wish that Harry, Ron, Hermione and Dumbledore could once again get together and
perfect the ultimate spell that would bring Christopher and his beautiful smile
back to us.
Richard
Salmon
A ruined
Christmas
The family
was sitting at the table, chatting after Sunday dinner, within the Twelve Days
of Christmas. The tree was still twinkling – cards, holly, bells and baubles
everywhere.
"You
don't still believe in Father Christmas, do you?" I said. Without a word,
Elizabeth, the youngest, aged eight, got down from the table and left the room.
After the
washing up, I went to find Elizabeth. She was in her room, decorated with paper
chains from school, snowflakes she had made at Brownies, Christmas cards from
her friends. But the room was bare. She had taken down her decorations and
thrown them in the bin. She was heartbroken, and so was I.
On
Christmas Eve, we still followed the custom of hanging up their stockings, and
putting out sherry for Father Christmas and a carrot for Rudolph. But with
Elizabeth at junior school, her big brother, 11, and her older sister, 13, both
at secondary school, I'd assumed that they or her schoolfriends would have
laughed her out of the idea of Father Christmas by now.
I was wrong
and had carelessly shattered her belief in Father Christmas; the first test of
faith for a child. I hoped and prayed she'd still believe in Jesus and the
reason for Christmas.
Rosemary Brockbank
I wish I'd
had a routine
Two words.
Just a name, but enough to strike terror into the heart of many parents – Gina
Ford. Her methods have won her a loyal following, but others find her slavish
devotion to routine at odds with caring for the tiny alien whirlwind that has
just arrived in their lives. I was firmly in the latter camp. How I wish I'd
listened to Ford.
My son,
Niko, arrived by emergency caesarean on 12 April 2010 and weighed only 5lbs.
From his first day, he struggled to hold up his head, straining his neck,
determined to take in the world around him. The first few days lulled me into a
false sense of security. He slept a lot. Despite the post-op pain, I was happy.
This is easy, I thought.
Then I took
him home.
The
sleepless nights began. It was hard, but don't all parents complain about
sleepless nights? But it was every hour for months on end. Was this normal? So
I did what I always do when I need to learn about something. I bought books.
The author everyone recommended was Gina Ford, the mistress of routine. But I
couldn't understand how you could make a little person adhere to set patterns
and dismissed it.
My son is
nearly three. He's a happy, curious, contented little toddler. He has slept
through the night precisely three times. I'm 40 but look about 10 years older.
How I wish I'd listened to Gina Ford.
Suzanne Lightfoot
Sharing the
love
My
four-year-old grandson clutches my knees and hugs me: "I love you,
Granny." I bend down and put my arms around him: "I love you too,
Ben."
I'm filled
with a depth of emotion that is impossible to put into words because I never
gave my four children what my grandson has just given me.
I never
told them how much I loved them. I was a stay-at-home mum and my husband and I
tried our best to make their lives full of fun and interest. We loved them and
I hope they felt loved but this is my regret: I never put that love into words
to my children.
I love them
still and I hope they still feel loved. I want to hold each one in turn in my
arms and say: "I love you, James; I love you, Jenny; I love you, Naomi; I
love you, Tom." But I think it's probably too late to do what my grandson
has just taught me to do.
Anji
Dawkins
Too much,
too young
I regret
not waking my seven-year-old son to see his dead father before he left the
house 20 years ago. I woke my older son, Robert, who was 12, and we said
goodbye together as the coroner's officer took his body away. But I thought
Andrew was too young.
Glynis
Platt with her sons: 'I regret not waking my seven-year-old son to see his dead
father before he left the house 20 years ago.'
My husband
looked asleep and peaceful then. When I took both boys to see his body at the
funeral parlour, he looked completely different, not like my husband at all.
Andrew has subsequently said that he wished he had seen his father, and I think
he might have coped with his death better if he had.
Glynis Platt
Embarrassing
silence
We are in
the cinema watching a film. My daughter is 11 and I am a relatively old mother,
enjoying this outing hugely. Such a treat, to take your child to see a new film
– we do this often.
However, 20
minutes or so into the showing I am beginning to feel irritated. There is a
gang of teenagers directly in front of us, chatting and laughing loudly. This
continues. I grow yet more annoyed. These young people are not only interfering
with my enjoyment but blatantly breaking cinema rules. I am a secondary school
teacher and the instinct to take action is just too powerful to resist. I lean
forward and say, in lowered tones of course, "Shush! Please be
quiet!"
It works.
The teenagers fall silent and remain so. I am very aware that I could have
fallen foul of the kind of creative verbal abuse only adolescents have the
skill to invent, but no – they obey, clearly cowed by my teacherly authority. I
feel smug.
My daughter
throws me a look that says, "I want you to die, right here and now."
She is mortified beyond endurance and sits rigidly in her seat for the
remainder of the film. Her body language radiates an inarticulate blend of
shame and fury. When it ends, she turns and hisses, "I will never, ever go
to see a film with you ever again."
She is now
21 and has remained true to her word.
Jayne Greenwell
Still my
little boy
I regret
making my son the "big boy" as soon as his sister was born. When she
arrived, my son seemed so big, so grown-up, a real big brother. He was kind and
gentle with her, giving her careful kisses and cuddles. As the elder, I think I
expected too much of him. I expected him to understand that when I needed to
put his sister down for a nap it was easier if he played in the lounge rather
than in the bedroom with me. I forgot that until his sister arrived, he hadn't
had the luxury of having mummy at home. Instead, he was at nursery while I
worked. I forgot that he needed time with mummy too; forgot that everything had
changed for him with his sister's arrival.
Alison
Willis: 'I regret making my son the "big boy" as soon as his sister
was born.'
Now my daughter
is just a bit older than he was then – and she seems so little. I regret that
in my head he became the big boy overnight when really he was still my little
boy.
Alison
Willis
Tales of
the riverbank
I regret
not teaching our boys to fish. My father first took me fishing when I was two.
He taught me respect for and wonder at the natural world and I grew to know his
wisdom through his gentle patience. When my father died, the first book I
turned to was about fishing – The Deepening Pool by Chris Yates – hoping to
secure his presence through familiar stories of barbel and chub.
Our sons
are now 14 and 16 and, as with all teenage boys, they believe that their
father's a fool.
Steve
Brooks regrets not teaching his sons, now 14 and 16, to fish.
They will
never have the opportunity to watch a water vole swim two feet in front of
their wellington boots or marvel at the iridescence of the kingfisher hunting
in the rays of a midsummer sunrise. They won't have a chance to plead for one
last cast in that liminal realm where all possibilities coalesce between
daytime's end and the gathering gloom of night.
These days
we walk the riverbanks of the Peak District. I feed bread to the trout while my
wife and the boys humour me and look on with patronising resignation. I am
entranced by the magic of water. I regret they will never be drawn towards such
mysteries. I regret that, for them, water will always be merely H2O.
Steve
Brooks
A sense of
loss
When my
elder son left for university I set about cleaning and redecorating his
abandoned bedroom. But the makeover only left me grieving for the unholy mess
he used to create.
The
familiar fug of unaired room with top notes of Lynx surrendered to malodorous
gloss paint. I close my eyes to desperately try to recall the old
multi-coloured walls, topped with a nursery frieze of circus elephants marching
incongruously above posters of death metal bands, a dartboard and noticeboards
crammed with ticket stubs for festivals and concerts, party invitations and
photos of drunken, gurning teenagers.
Floor space
that used to be covered in Lego blocks, toys, discarded clothes, odd socks,
and, more recently, crisp packets, cans, empty bottles and laptops is back to
visible carpet. Adrian Mole, Harry Potter and Stephen Fry used to sit amicably
alongside science fiction and college textbooks piled on shelves. Towers of
zombie DVDs, CDs and computer games leant perilously against the chest of
drawers covered in football stickers and cup stains.
Now the
pristine room somehow looks smaller and the self-righteous satisfaction I
should have felt after my hard work is tainted by feelings of guilt and regret
that I didn't photograph his teenage world before the sterile uniformity of
magnolia paint reclaimed it for the rest of the house. Euphoria has
unexpectedly given way to an overwhelming sense of loss for the material
evidence of his childhood, which I have obliterated.
Diane Evans
I cannot
cope
I regret
adopting you. Importing a baby from a distant and troubled country into a
fragile family unit was not a good idea. In retrospect, many years later, it
seems madness.
I chose you
because you seemed likely to be the one who would always be left behind.
You were
the silent one in a room of crying babies; sullen, indifferent and distant.
Even then, at less than a year old, you looked as if you had had enough of
life. Unable to walk or talk, you turned your head to the wall and refused – I
was told – to even cry.
Back home,
slow development became special needs and then, with great speed, dysfunctional
and alarming behaviour. I loved you despite it all, because of it all – at the
expense of the rest of the family who felt excluded and ignored.
You
watched: the rows you had caused, the disruption you created with that blank,
uninterested look I first saw and felt pity for all those years ago. Even now I
don't know what you feel or if you feel anything in return.
Is it
guilt, love or just despair I feel now looking at you? My family is fractured
and despite my indulgent love, my tough love, my frustrated love, I have to
finally admit that my overwhelming feeling is one of regret that we ever met,
that I thought I could give you a better life. At last I have to admit, I
cannot cope.
Anonymous
My choice,
my guilt
On Sunday,
29 February 2004, the best thing ever happened to me – my pride, my reason, my
son was born.
The regret
is: right son, wrong dad.
I feel a
deep sense of guilt and regret that my son has been lumbered with an absent
father because of my poor choice. Anonymous
Not an
optimal time
My biggest
regret was allowing my sons to sell their original die-cast Optimus Prime
Transformers. Now 27 and 29, they've never forgiven me.
Christine Proudlock
I wish I
had iron will
I wish I
had done less ironing. Shell-shocked by a colicky newborn, I was rather
dominated by my then mother-in-law who believed that only women who ironed tea
towels possessed moral fibre. I ironed when I should have slept. I ironed in a
frenzy to keep a semblance of order in the chaos of new motherhood. I ironed in
a desperate and misguided attempt to be a good housewife and mother. I look
back now and cringe.
Fifteen
years later, and the colicky baby is a 6ft-tall charmer of a rugby player. Two
girls followed; they are now 11 and eight. The years passed; a divorce and a
house move. I no longer iron. The flick and hang method produces great results
and most creases vanish with a little body heat.
I wish I
could sit my younger self down with a large gin and tonic and ask: is this what
you would like your children to be doing when they are grown up and have their
own babies?
Unclench,
yield to the chaos.
Aspiring to
fit in with someone else's views of how family and home life should be leads to
unhappiness. My mother-in-law ironed tea towels because she took pleasure in
"things being nice". She is bitterly full of regret at the paths not
taken in life; a stack of precision ironing eases this inner tension. My
version of things being nice is different. It consists of letting go a little,
breathing out, realising that we have so little control in our lives really.
It's just an illusion.
Parents
don't have all the answers; just being human is good enough.
Anonymous
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου