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I Fell for the Neighbour Next Door. My Son Refuses to Acknowledge Me.

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What are you doing, Mum? Have you gone mad? my son shouted, his face as red as a beet. You with the neighbour? That odd old man over the fence?

I stood in the kitchen, a tea towel still clutched in my hand, caught off guard by his outburst. I could only tell him Id been seeing MrMartin, that wed been chatting for months, that I felt comfortable with him, that I think I was falling in love.

My dads been in his grave for less than three years! my boy yelled. How can you?

A knot tightened in my stomach. I wanted to sit down, but he was already marching toward the front door.

Dont call me. I dont want to see you, he snapped, slamming the door so hard the windows rattled.

Silence fell.

I was left alone, but it wasnt the familiar, quiet loneliness Id grown accustomed to over the years. It was a hollow void where the man Id birthed, raised and loved lived. I hadnt done anything wrong, had I? I hadnt chased love; it had drifted in quietly over the garden fence, over shared teas, over laughter among the roses. And now my own son declared I was no longer his mother.

Do I really have no right to be happy?

I didnt close my eyes that night. I lay awake, staring at the ceiling, hearing his voice echo: I dont want to see you. Those words cut deeper than anything else Id endured. Even my husbands funeral hadnt torn me so. His death was tragic, but natural. This this felt like a rope snapping between parent and child.

Martin sent me a message the next morning. Thinking of you. Im here if you want to talk. I didnt reply. Guilt gnawed at me, not because of him but because of my son. I felt as if Id done something irreversible.

All day I drifted through the house like a ghost. Family photos on the mantel, mugs stamped Best Grandmother, the grandchildrens drawings taped to the fridge each reminded me of a life that once felt solid. I was a mother, a grandmother, a wife. Now I felt selfish.

In the evening my daughter Emily arrived, bearing a slice of cake and a jug of raspberry juice, just as she always did. She sat down, met my eyes and said, I heard what happened.

I nodded, trying not to crumble.

What do you think about it? I asked quietly.

She shrugged. Honestly? Im not sure. Dad was a wonderful man. Its hard to picture you with anyone else. But youre not a young girl anymore. You deserve affection, closeness. She hesitated. Just understand Kieran. He lives in his memories.

Im living day by day, I replied. And its terribly lonely.

She looked at me for a long moment, then gently squeezed my hand. I dont know what to say, Mum, but Im with you.

Her words were a bandage. They didnt heal the wound, but they gave me strength to rise the next morning and head out to the garden, as I always did.

Martin was waiting at the gate, his awkward smile and a thermos of tea in hand. May I have a minute? he asked.

I nodded. He took the bench beside me. Im sorry everythings fallen apart, he whispered. I never wanted to cause you trouble.

Its not your fault, I said. Its just maybe Im not entitled to these things.

Martins gaze grew solemn, a seriousness Id never seen in him before. Dont say that. You have a right. I do too. For years we both did what was expected. Perhaps its time to do something our way?

Warmth rose in my throat. I said nothing, but I didnt run. I stayed. I let us sit together in a silence that soothed rather than hurt.

Three weeks passed. Kieran didnt call, didnt text. The grandchildren were silent. It was as if someone had cut away the whole tapestry of my life with a pair of shears. The ache was constant, yet I began learning how to breathe again.

Martin and I met almost daily. Nothing grand tea on the bench, simple chats, the occasional grocery run. Yet it was enough to remind me I was alive, that someone saw me, not as a widow or a granny, but as a woman.

One afternoon, returning from the greengrocer, I saw my sons car parked outside our house. My heart stopped. For a moment I thought of turning back, hiding, pretending I wasnt there. Instead I walked straight in.

Kieran sat at the kitchen table, the childrens toys absent. I came to tell you I think I went too far, he said without looking up. Im still struggling to accept it.

I faced him. I dont expect you to accept it. I just ask you not to reject me.

He was silent for a while. You know how much I loved Dad.

I know. I loved him too. Hes gone, and Im still here. I dont want to die while Im still living.

At last he met my eyes. Anger, pain, and a flicker of understanding shone there. Itll be hard for me.

Itll be hard for me too, I replied. But I wont stop loving you just because you cant agree with me.

He stood, came over and gave me a brief hug. No words, just that small gesture, and it was enough for a start.

Im still not sure if I made the right choice. Love doesnt wait for everyone to be ready, but when it arrives you have to take it even if it means someone turns their back, even if it hurts. Only then can you feel truly alive again.

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