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I Was Eight When My Mum Left Home: She Took a Taxi from the Corner and Never Came Back. My Brother W…

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I was eight years old when my mother left our home. She walked down the road, hailed a black cab at the corner and disappeared from our lives. My little brother was only five.

Everything changed in our house after that. My dad began doing things hed never needed to beforewaking up early to make us breakfast, struggling with the washing machine, ironing our school uniforms, awkwardly brushing our hair before sending us off each morning. Id watch him get the measurements wrong for porridge, burn the toast, mix up the colours and whites in the laundry. Yet, he never let us go without. Hed come home, exhausted after his shift, review our homework, sign our reading journals, and prepare packed lunches for the next day.

My mother never came back to visit. Dad never brought another woman home, never once introduced anyone as his partner. We knew he went for evenings out sometimes, returning late on occasion, but his private life existed only beyond our four walls. At home, it was just me and my brother. I never heard him say hed found love again. His routine was work, home, cook, wash up, sleep, repeat.

On weekends, hed take us to the park, strolls by the Thames, or even just wandering around the shops in town, gazing at window displays. He learned to braid my hair, sew buttons back onto shirts, make sandwiches for our school trips. When we needed costumes for plays, hed fashion them out of trading card boxes and old sheets. He never complained. Not once did he say, Thats not my job.

A year ago, my dad passed on. It happened so abruptlyno chance for drawn out farewells. Sorting through his things, I found old notebooks filled with lists of household expenses, reminders of important dates, notes like pay the school fee, buy new shoes, take the girl to the doctor. No love letters, no photographs with another woman, no hint of romance. Just the quiet evidence of a man who lived for his children.

Since hes gone, one question wont let me be: was he ever truly happy? My mother left to chase her own happiness. My father stayed and, it seemed, put his own aside. He never rebuilt a family, never had another home with a partner. He was never anyones priority, except ours.

Now, looking back, I realise I had an extraordinary father. But I also see he was a man who chose solitude so we wouldnt be alone. And that truth is heavy. Because now, with him gone, I wonder if he ever received the love he truly deserved.

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