Almost six years ago, I wrote this story about my best friend giving birth.
In it, I spoke about my worry that I was losing her forever - that our lives, once so intertwined that we were frequently mistaken for one another at university events, would start to peel away in different directions and never stop. I wrote about my joy at meeting her newborn, the most perfect little girl, but also how that joy mixed with a bittersweet understanding: she had a big job to do now, and where our priorities might once have lined up scarily closely (study law, go to parties, watch Dance Moms in our pajamas with a bottle of Passion Pop), that wouldn’t be the case for quite a while.
Watch: Be a good mum. Post continues after video.
Even then, I knew I wanted kids, but not in the near future. I wasn’t worried that I’d never join her in the motherhood bubble, but in retrospect, I was mourning the fact that we’d lost the opportunity to join it together. I was saddened by the thought that we wouldn’t be able to force our first-borns into being best friends (and/or romantic life partners - I’m nothing if not an optimist). I missed the late-night phone calls we never got to have, both of us kept awake by crying newborns, and the maternity leave we’d inevitably line up perfectly (because that’s how you think the world works when you’re 22). I grieved the family holidays and joint birthday parties that it felt like we might never have.