З життя
I’m 26 Years Old and Haven’t Spoken to My Parents in Five Months—Not Because I Did Anything Illegal or Immoral, But Because I Chose to Leave Home
I was twenty-six when I last spoke with my parents, and it has now been five months. Not because I had done anything unlawful or immoralit was simply because I made the decision to leave home. I had built a career for myself as a business manager and earned my own living, yet I found myself living under conditions more suited to a teenager than a grown woman, subject to constant oversight. My parents had always been deeply religious, and to them, strict supervision was a form of love. To me, it became suffocating.
I wasnt allowed friends outside our neighbourhood. Any outing had to be with them. If a colleague invited me to a birthday gathering, if there was a film night or coffee after work, it was always deemed an inappropriate environment. Even casual conversations with people outside their circle aroused suspicion. My life felt boxed ina picture frame I could not step beyond.
Despite working full-time and collecting my own salary, my finances were still monitored. My wages went into a bank account my mother oversaw. If I wished to buy a blouse, I had to show her first. Should I want to go out after work, I needed to ask permission. If I was ten minutes late, my mobile would ring and my whereabouts demanded. Never, in all my years, had I been allowed to live independently or to make the sort of decisions any adult ought to undertake for themselves.
The final row erupted one rainy Sunday evening. I wanted to go to a colleagues birthday celebration. My father flatly refused, declaring it unsuitable for an unmarried woman. I told him plainly that I was twenty-six, employed, and no longer a child. My mother accused me of changing, of taking the wrong path. The conversation quickly descended into a fierce quarrel. My father bellowed that as long as I lived under his roof, I would abide by his rules. In that moment, I realisedif I stayed, I would lose myself. So, in tears, I retreated to my room, packed a few clothes into a suitcase, and slipped out into the chilly night, leaving home for good.
A colleague kindly offered me her sofa; for five nights, I slept on an inflatable mattress in her lounge. Afterwards, another friend and I decided to find a flat to rent together. We signed a lease and scraped together the basics: an old refrigerator, a small cooker, a mattress, and a plastic table. For the first time, I began to shape my life: arranging my schedule and sorting out bills and expenses. I could return home without trembling, knowing nobody would rifle through my phone or question my every move.
Since that night, my parents have not spoken to me. My mother wrote to me oncesolely to say I was a disappointment and had lost my spiritual way. My father blocked my number. My brothers told me my name is barely mentioned at home anymore. I havent been back.
Each day, I work, pay my rent, buy my food, manage my laundry and tidying. It isnt easy, but at last I feel at peace. I can sit on the settee without worrying Ill be told off. I can play music. I can have a friend round. I can decide for myself when to go to bed. No one counts my money or inspects my clothes.
Five months have passed living like thisindependently, carrying more responsibility, but also discovering a sense of inner freedom. I havent reached out to them, for I know to them, an apology would only mean returning and accepting their way of life again. And I do not want to go back to a life where I had no right to be my own woman.
And yet, each day, the same question circles in my mind: Did I do the right thing in choosing my freedom, or am I truly the wayward daughter they believe me to be?
