I was 13 and it was Celebration Evening at my new school. It was the end of a big year and I was receiving an award. I had achieved “excellence” in whatever-the-subject-was and I yelled at my mum in the car park because she was late and didn’t get there in time to see the presentation. I was furious. It was dark and cold and I had been so nervous and my mum hadn’t been there.
It was one of many nights where I would slam doors or storm off or say something nasty because my mum wasn’t like other mums.
She wasn’t there in the mornings. She didn’t pick my brother and I up from school. She would bustle in the door before dinner, a stack of blue folders under her arm, her keys in the other, and she would work into the night. Before disappearing in the morning once again.
I was the 13 and the whole world was against me. I was a brat and my mum worked hard.
Now, research has shown that children of working mothers develop faster than children who stay at home with their parents.
The study out of the Health Economics Research Centre at Oxford talks about a child’s capacity to cut shapes with scissors and speak in two-word sentences. It talks about the benefits of sending children to nurseries and day care. That socialising and learning in these environments helps improve dexterity and talking capabilities in young kids.
I don’t know about childhood development. I’m not a mother and I don’t recall my own development (I do know I was never awarded for cutting shapes with scissors. Triangles are not my strong suit.)
But I do know I’m grateful. And very, very proud.
Once I surpassed the chasm of teenage-hood, where mothers and daughters are separated by a thick wall of misunderstanding, and anxiety and the “you’re-so-unfair” slamming of doors. I discovered all the things my mother taught me.