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I Was Nineteen When I Left Home: After a Bitter Family Row, I Chased My Dreams of Administration Ins…

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I was nineteen when I finally left home, mate. It wasnt some peaceful goodbyeit was a proper row. I told my mum I wanted to study business admin because I didnt want to spend my life scrubbing other peoples clothes and houses like she did. She yelled at me, said I was nobody to have such big dreams, and told me I should keep quiet, that women in our family have always lived that way, and I wouldnt be any different. That day, I shoved my clothes into a bag and ended up crashing at my mate Emilys place.

Those first few months were hellish. I was kipping on an airbed in the living room, working part-time as a cleaning lady in offices, and studying in the evenings. No one handed me anything. Mum didnt help with transport, didnt give me a single meal, not even a lift to the library. When I called her, she was cold as anything, just said, You decided to leavesort yourself out.

When I turned twenty-one, I finished my business admin course all by myself. Went to graduation alone. No one clapped for me, no family taking photos. After that, I landed my first job at a tiny firmwages were rubbish, but it was mine. Started paying rent, doing my own shopping, waking up every morning on my own terms, not relying on anyone. Meanwhile, mum went round telling people Id left because I was stubborn, probably hopping jobs out of pride.

Years passed. I grew up, toughened up. Stopped calling her. Stopped sharing any of my problems. Learned how to celebrate on my own, cry on my own, cope on my own. When I switched jobs and started earning a bit more, I didnt tell her. When I rented my first flat alonekept it to myself. She only knew the basics: that I was alive, really.

Just a few days ago, Im twenty-seven now, I was at work when her name popped up on my mobile. Took me a while to decide if Id answer. When I called back, the first thing I heard was her crying. She said she was in hospital, some major health issue had come up. Sitting alone on a bench, she realised everything shed done. Said, Love, I failed as a mum. I let you go when you needed me most. Made you feel small.

I stayed quiet. Asked her why now? Why not back then, when I was sleeping on floors? Why not when I walked home late at night because I couldnt afford the bus? Why not when I cried in the work loos because I didnt have enough for groceries? She didnt have a proper answerjust kept saying she was sorry.

She asked if I could visit her that weekend. I hung up and just stared at my computer screen, couldnt bring myself to do any work. Didnt sleep at all that night. Kept thinking about that frightened nineteen-year-old girl who left home and never looked back. Thought of all the things I had to figure out alone, no guidance, no support, no mum.

In the end, I didnt go. I wrote her a long message. Told her I appreciated what she said but her apology was too late for the version of me who needed her most. That Id learned to live without her hugs, her voice, her support. Maybe one day, well talk in peace, but right now, the pain is still too raw.

She just replied, I understand.

And in that moment, I felt something strange inside. Not relief, not peace. Just the realisation that some forgiveness comes when theres nothing left to fix, only memories of what got broken.

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