This post deals with abuse and might be triggering for some readers.
"You should get a divorce too, mummy."
My friend didn’t even react to her daughter’s statement; it clearly wasn’t the first time she’d heard it.
She ran her hands through her hair and nodded, looking years older than she was - fragile, brittle.
Things must be getting bad, I thought. I sat across the table from her in silence. She knew I understood. We’d been friends for a long time: her daughter’s comment didn’t need an explanation.
Watch: Women And Violence: The Hidden Numbers. Post continues after.
I took her hand in mine, and waited.
I recognised the numbness, the racing mind, the exhaustion. It had been mine six months earlier: my numbness, my confusion, my hopelessness.
I looked at her and thought of driftwood, as I often did with her. We live in a coastal town but my friend, more than anyone else I know, loves to decorate her house with the dry pale wood that washes up on the beach: turning the twisted branches into abstract art and pieces of furniture.
My friend and driftwood are fused together in my mind.