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“‘The moment I retired, the problems began’: How aging exposes the loneliness that’s piled up over the years”.
I am sixtyseven, and for the first time in my life I feel as if I have slipped out of existence: not for my children, not for my grandchildren, not for my former husband, and certainly not for the world at large.
My body is still here. I walk down the High Street, pop into the chemist, buy a loaf of bread, sweep the patio that runs beneath my kitchen window. Yet inside me a hollow keeps growing each morning now that I no longer race to a job, now that no one rings my mobile asking, Mum, how are you?
I live alone. I have been doing that for years. My children are grown, each with their own families, and they live in other towns: my son, Thomas, in Manchester, and my daughter, Ethel, in Bristol. My grandchildren are getting older and I barely know them. I dont see them heading off to school, I dont knit scarves for them, I dont whisper bedtime stories. I have never once been invited to their homes. Not even once.
One afternoon I asked Ethel,
Why wont you have me over? I could look after the little ones
She answered, her voice calm but cold,
Mum, you know my husband cant stand you. Youre always meddling and you have your own way of doing things
The words hit me like a punch to the gut. I felt humiliated, angry, wounded. I wasnt trying to impose; I only wanted to be near. The message was unmistakable: Youre not welcome. Neither by my children nor by my grandchildren. It was as if I had been erased. Even my exhusband, who lives in a nearby village, never finds the time to see me. Once a year he sends a brief, chilly Christmas text, as if it were a favour.
When I retired I thought, finally some time for me. I would start knitting, take morning walks, join that painting class Ive always dreamed of. But instead of joy, anxiety crept in.
First came strange symptoms: heart palpitations, dizziness, an overwhelming fear of dying. I saw several doctors. They ran tests, an ECG, MRIs everything came back normal. Then one doctor said,
Madam, this is emotional. You need someone to talk to, to socialise. Youre very lonely.
That was worse than any diagnosis, because there is no pill that cures loneliness.
Sometimes I go to the supermarket just to hear the cashassistants voice. Other times I sit on a park bench with a book, pretending to read, hoping someone will come over. People are always in a hurry. Everyone has somewhere to be. And I simply exist. I breathe. I remember.
What did I do wrong? Why has my family drifted away? I raised them alone. Their father died when they were young. I worked double shifts, cooked, ironed their uniforms, cared for them when they were ill. I didnt drink, I didnt go out. I gave everything I had.
Now I feel like a surplus.
Was I too strict? Too authoritarian? I only wanted the best for them. I wanted them to grow into good, responsible people. I kept them away from bad influences. In the end I was left on my own.
Im not looking for pity. I just want to know: was I truly a bad mother? Or is this simply the pace of modern lifemortgages, afterschool clubs, endless raceswhere there is no room left for an elderly woman?
Someone suggests,
Find a partner. Sign up to a dating site.
But I cant. I dont trust easily. After decades of solitude I no longer have the strength to open up, to fall in love, to let a stranger into my life. My health isnt what it used to be.
I cant work either. At least when I did, there was a group: chatter, laughter. Now there is only silence. A silence so heavy that sometimes I turn the TV on just to hear voices.
I wonder: if I vanished, would anyone notice? Not my children, not my exhusband, not the neighbour on the third floor. That thought fills me with dread.
Then I take a deep breath, get up, brew a cup of tea in the kitchen and tell myself: perhaps tomorrow will be better. Perhaps someone will remember. Perhaps a phone call. A letter. Perhaps I still count for something.
As long as there is hope, I will keep on living.
