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At 65, I Realized the True Horror Isn’t Being Alone—It’s Begging Your Kids for a Call, Knowing You’re a Burden to Them

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**Diary Entry 4th May**

At sixty-five, I realised the greatest fear isnt being aloneits begging your own children for a phone call, knowing youre nothing but a burden.

*Mum, hiI need your help, urgent.*

My sons voice down the line had the dull impatience of a man speaking to an inconvenient colleague, not his mother.

Margaret froze mid-reach for the telly remote, the evening news forgotten. *Christopher, hellowhats happened?*

*Nothings happened,* he exhaled sharply. *JustEmma and I snagged a last-minute holiday. Flights tomorrow. No one can take Duke. Youll have him, yeah?*

Duke. A slobbering Great Dane whod occupy more space in her modest flat than her late husbands old sideboard.

*How long?* she asked, already knowing.

*A week. Maybe two. Depends.* His tone turned wheedling. *Mum, come on. Kennels are crueltyyou know how sensitive he is.*

She glanced at her freshly upholstered sofasix months of scrimping, denying herself little luxuries. Duke would shred it in days.

*Chris, Ive only just redone the place*

*Redone what?* Irritation crackled through. *New curtains?*

*Dukes trained, just keep up his walks. Look, Emmas callingsuitcases wont pack themselves. Well drop him in an hour.*

The line went dead.

No *how are you?* No mention of her birthday last week. Sixty-five. Shed waited all day in her best dress, made her signature trifle. Theyd promised to visit. Christopher texted last minute: *Happy bday! Swamped at work.* Eleanor didnt even bother.

And today*urgent help.*

Margaret sank onto the sofa. It wasnt the dog. It wasnt the ruined upholstery.

It was the humiliating weight of being reduced to a function. Free dog-minder. Emergency service. Last resort.

She remembered dreaming, years ago, of the day theyd no longer need her. Now she knew true terror wasnt silenceit was waiting for the phone to ring, knowing youre wanted only when useful.

Begging for scraps of attention, bartered with your own dignity.

An hour later, the doorbell chimed. Christopher stood there, Dukes lead in hand. The dog barrelled past, muddy paws stamping fresh trails on her clean floors.

*Heres his food, toys. Walks thrice dailyyou remember. Gotta dash or well miss the flight!* He pecked her cheek, shoved the lead into her hands, and vanished.

Margaret stood in the hall. Duke was already sniffing at the armchair. Thenthe unmistakable rip of fabric.

She eyed the phone. Maybe call Eleanor? But her finger hovered. Eleanor hadnt rung in a month. *Busy with her own life.*

For the first time, the old ache of resentment didnt come. Insteadsomething colder. Clearer.

*Enough.*

Morning dawned with Duke leaping onto her bed, leaving saucer-sized prints on the duvet. The lounge sofa bore three new gashes. Her prized fernfive years of nurturinglay uprooted, leaves chewed.

Margaret gulped valerian straight from the bottle and dialled. Christopher answered on the fourth ring, sea waves and Emmas laughter in the background.

*Mum? Were brilliantseas glorious!*

*Christopherthe dog. Hes destroying the flat.*

*What? He never*

*He has. I cant manage him.*

A pause. Then, icy: *Christ, Mumwere in Majorca. Want us to fly back over *your* tantrum? Selfish much?*

*Selfish.* The word knocked her breathless. *Her*whod lived for them.

She called Eleanor next. *Mum, *urgent*?* her daughter clipped. *Im in a meeting.*

*Your brother left his deranged dog*

*He *asked* you,* Eleanor sighed. *Youre retiredwhats the fuss? Just *walk* the bloody thing.*

The call ended.

*Family.* A hollow word. It meant a group who remembered you only when they needed somethingand called you *selfish* when you couldnt oblige.

That evening, Mrs. Whittaker from downstairs pounded on her door. *Margaret! That beasts been howling for hours! Ill call the police!*

Duke barked cheerfully behind her.

Margaret shut the door. Looked at the shredded sofa. The silent phone. Something hardened inside.

She clipped on Dukes lead. *Walk time.*

In the park, the dog yanked her along, each tug echoing her childrens words: *Selfish. Free time. Cant you help?*

Then*Maggie! Is that you?*

Lillian, her old colleaguevibrant in a silk scarf, fresh from Zumba. *Off to Ibiza next week! Girls trip. When did *you* last holiday?*

Margaret couldnt recall. Holidays meant babysitting grandkids, tending their needs.

*You look exhausted,* Lillian said gently. *Stop carrying their burdens. Or youll spend your best years minding their pets while life passes you by.*

*Passes you by.*

The phrase detonated in her chest. Margaret stopped dead.

She looked at Duke. At her chapped hands gripping the lead. At the grey sky.

*No more.*

Back home, she Googled *best dog hotel London.* The first link gleamed with promises of spa treatments, gourmet meals, private play yards. Prices that made her gasp.

She dialled. *Id like to book your premier suite. For a Great Dane. Two weeks. Charge everything to *this* card.*

She scribbled Christophers details in the *owner* field. Paid the deposit from her coat fund. *Best money Ive ever spent.*

At the hotel, a cheerful attendant took Dukes lead. *Well send daily updates to the owner!*

Home again, Margaret sipped tea amidst the wreckage and texted both children:

*Duke is safe. At The Barkley Suites. All enquiries to his owner.*

Thenshe silenced her phone.

It buzzed within minutes. *Christopher calling.* Then Eleanor: *Mum, explain this NOW.*

She turned up the telly. Let them panic. Let them rage. Let them learn.

Two days later, her door shuddered under furious knocking.

Christopher and Eleanor stood there, tanned but furious. Holidays clearly cut short.

*Have you lost your *mind*?* Christopher roared. *That hotel charged us *£2000*!*

*Hello, darlings,* Margaret said mildly. *Shoes off, pleasenew floors.*

Their confusion at her calm was almost comical. They stepped inside. Christopher gaped at the ruined sofa.

*See this?* he jabbed at it. **This* is Duke?*

*No,* Margaret corrected. *This is the consequence of *your* choices. Heres the reupholstery billand a new fern.*

*Youre *billing* me?*

*Should I not?* Her voice was steel. *I owe you *nothing*, Christopher. Just as you owe me. Unless youve come to repay the hotel deposit?*

Eleanor tried mediating. *Mum, were *family**

*Family doesnt call you *selfish* for refusing to be used.*

Christopher flushed purple. *I wont pay a *penny*!*

*Fine,* she said. *Ill sell the cottage.*

Their faces drained. The cottage*their* weekend getaway, where shed spent summers weeding while they barbecued.

*You *cant*!* Eleanor shrieked.

*Deeds are in my name,* Margaret shrugged. *Childhoods over, darling. The proceeds will cover my damagesand maybe a trip to Ibiza. Lillian says its lovely.*

They stared at her as if she were a stranger.

A week later, Christopher transferred every penny. No apologies. No calls.

Margaret didnt care. She dragged out her barely-used suitcase and dialled Lillian.

*Still got space on that girls trip?*

**Lesson learned:** Fear isnt solitudeits realising youve spent decades being an afterthought. But its never too late to choose yourself

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