By KATE LEAVER
This one goes out to my mama. The woman who taught me to love.
My mama has cared for me her whole life. When the time comes, it will be my pleasure to care for her.
I’m holding my mum’s hands, which makes the whole world feel safer.
She looks down at my fingers, squeezes them, strokes the chewed-away nail polish, and splays them out thoughtfully in hers.
“You’ve got baby hands, Katie,” she says. “The rest of you looks like a woman, but you’ll always have a little girl’s hands.”
It’s true. There’s nothing sophisticated or womanly about my hands at all – they’re small and innocent-looking, if it’s possible for the grabbers at the end of your arms to look innocent. My ears are also weirdly tiny, by the way, like “little dried apricots on the sides of my head” (that’s another description courtesy of my ma).
“You have a little girl’s soul,” I want to say. And I mean it as the highest compliment I can pay her.
Just as an FYI, you should know that this post is sponsored by Dove. But all opinions expressed by the author are 100 per cent authentic and written in their own words.
The most delightful thing about my mum is that she’ll always have a young spirit. Sure, she’s beautiful and womanly and strong and at the moment, exactly twice my age, but there’s something enchantingly girly about my mama. Like there’s a part of her that refuses to grow up entirely. Like her own little rebellion against time, she’s stayed sweet and she loves fully. It’s what I love about her – and I might be quite fond of that same quality in myself. Anything that makes me more like my ma, I’ll take.
My mum — Sally, to anyone other than me or my sister — is the most caring mother on the planet. Sounds like an exaggeration, but truly I defy anyone else to be so loving. She’s cared for me through some pretty heinous experiences, she’s helped me survive a lot, and she hasn’t once complained. She’s also smarter and more amazing than she will ever properly acknowledge.