I pulled the car over and cried.
I held it in until I had stopped in the furthermost park, under a tree, away from sight. I let it out, whilst blubbering to my husband about how awful the morning was.
He told me it would be okay, and that he understood. He told me to rest. He told me he had to go to a client, and so the phone call ended.
Watch: Superwoman is dead. Post continues below.
It was 9.38am, and I had been parenting for two and a half hours. That was all it took for my special needs, neuro-divergent son to reduce me to rubble. To boil anger in my blood, to lose myself and yell at him. I literally pleaded with him, as he sat in his car seat yelling at his twin sister, to stop. To stop tormenting her, their older sister, and me.
Now you might be thinking - by God, she’s a terrible woman, losing her temper and yelling at a child who struggles to cope with everyday living activities. I’ve watched and silently judged other parents who snap at their kids, wishing for a moment's silence or the ability to drink a coffee without it spilling on the café table.
In the past, I've side-eyed them and thought, that won’t be me! I will never make them feel sad, I will never let them pick up food off the floor and eat it, I will never yell in public. I will breastfeed until they are two years old, and they will definitely not eat sugar. I will only prepare healthy meals and we will enjoy them as a family, together, at the dinner table, as we discuss our day.