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TANYA, HAVE YOU LOST YOUR MIND?! YOU’RE FORTY-FIVE! YOUR SON’S AN ADULT SERVING IN THE ARMY, AND NOW…

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DIARY ENTRY

Am I losing my mind? Im forty-five! My son is a grown man serving in the army! And here I am, bringing home a baby? With a whole list of diagnoses, no less? Ill be an old woman by the time he starts school! Hell wear me out and send me to an early grave.

I folded the tiny babygrows in silence, listening to my oldest friend, Jane, fret in my kitchen.

Laura, please Wake up! We were supposed to move to Italy together! We promised wed finally live for ourselves. Youve only just escaped that alcoholic ex and learned how to breathe again. Why are you doing this to yourself? Its cerebral palsy. He has a hole in his heart. Youre signing away your life, Laura!

I zipped up the bag and finally looked at her. My eyes must have revealed my exhaustion, but also my resolve.

Jane, I saw him. At the childrens home, when our volunteer group was dropping off nappies. He was lying alone in the cornernot even crying, just staring at the ceiling. He had these eyes, Jane… The eyes of someone whos already seen it all and accepted it. I knew if I walked out, Id never breathe easy again.

The little boy was called Jamie. He was eight months old.

His mother left him at the hospital. Hopeless, the doctors said. Wont last long.

I brought him home.

Janes prophecy of misery began to come true. Jamie hardly slept. He screamed with pain, his little limbs wracked by spasms. I taught myself to give massages, injections, even feed him through a tube. I resigned from my good job at the bank and started working from home as a remote accountant for pennies.

People avoided me. Shes lost it, the neighbours whispered. Playing the saint for attention.

My sonthe one in the armycouldnt understand either.

Mum, whats this? he asked, eyeing the crippled child in the cot. Youre going to spend everything on him now? What about my wedding? You promised to help!

James, the wedding can wait. Life cant.

Five years passed.

I agedgrey streaks in my hair and deep lines around my eyes. My back hurt from carrying Jamie. But Jamie was living.

Defying expectations, he never became an empty shell. I took him to every therapy and rehabilitation centre I could. I sold the allotment, the car, all my jewellery.

Every day it was physiotherapy, the pool, speech therapy.

Ma-ma, he said for the first time at age three. I sobbed into his warm little head. That word was worth more than any fortune.

At five, he started to crawl.

At seven, he stood with support.

The doctors could only shake their heads. A miracle.

But I knew it wasnt. It was brutal, grinding workand love. That sort of love that shifts mountains.

Betrayal and reward.

At ten, Jamie needed a major operation on his legshis only hope of walking. The cost was astronomical.

I turned to my son, James. Hed gotten on his feet and was running his own garage.

James, could you help me? Ill pay you back. Ill sell the flat, well move into a bedsit.

James stared at me coldly. Mum, I have my own plans. Im building a house. You chose this burden, not me. I told you so. Im not giving you anything.

I stumbled out of his house barely able to stand. I sat on a bench in the park, drained of everythingstrength, hope.

A man approached. He was limping, leaning on a stick.

Are you alright, love? he asked gently.

Thats how I met Colin, a retired sappers sergeant whod served in the army. Somehow, I poured out everythingabout Jamie, the operation, even about James.

Colin listened quietly.

Ill help, he said. Ive got some savings put away, meant for my funeral, I suppose. What good are they to me? Im on my ownno wife, never had children. That lad needs to walk.

Colin gave us the money. No contracts, no strings.

Jamie had the surgery.

The year of rehab that followed was gruelling. Colin moved in with us; together, it was easier to manage Jamies wheelchair and therapy. Colin became the father Jamie had never hadhe built handmade equipment for Jamie, taught him chess, and told him stories of his days in the forces.

And then, one day, Jamie walked.

Wobbly, with a walking frame, his legs braced by heavy callipersbut he walked.

Look, Dad Colin! Im walking! he cried.

Colin and I stood in the corridor, clutching each others handstwo tired, battered, but joyful people whod achieved the impossible.

Another ten years have flown by.

Jamies now twenty, and though he walks with a stick, he walks. Hes studying computer science nowa bright, kind young man with those same wise eyes.

James, my eldest, never quite found happiness in his grand house. His marriage broke, the children grew wild. He rings sometimes, complaining about life, but never visitsits too awkward, I suppose.

Colin and I live quietly.

Recently, we finally made it to Italy. The three of us. Jamie paid for ithed earned a tidy sum developing an app.

Mum, Dad, these are for you, he said, passing us the tickets. You gave me legs so I could stand. I want to give you the world.

We sat together in a little Roman café, drinking coffee. Jane saw our picture onlineme with my grey hair, but laughing, the two men embracing me, one old, one young.

She left a comment: Turns out, Laura, you were right. Youre not an old biddy. Youre the most alive of us all.

Moral:

Sometimes the thing that seems like a burden is really our set of wings. Were scared of hardships, afraid to let go of our comforts, and call it common sense. But real meaning isnt in peace and sunshine holidaysits in being needed, loving so much you make miracles.

Dont be afraid to love difficult people or make uncomfortable choices. Because, in the end, what well regret most is passing by someones hour of need, not that we got tired.

Have you ever known a story where adopting a child brought more family than blood ever could?

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