When do we feel ready to let go of our parents? Natasha Fennell is the author of a new book called The Daughterhood. In this extract she writes about the exact moment when she found herself on ‘the bench’ between being a daughter and letting go.
It’s a Tuesday. I’m standing in a hospital on my way to see my mother. The corridor smells of pharmaceuticals and over-boiled vegetables – I’m guessing Brussels sprouts. It’s a nose-wrinkling, stomach-flipping cocktail.
I’ve always been fond of a carefully handled Brussels sprout, thanks to my mother’s way with them which involves chestnuts and bacon. She has never overcooked a sprout in her life. If she can smell these sprouts from her hospital bed, I’d say they are momentarily distracting her from the recent diagnosis of lupus, which was handed over to her by Dr Kavanagh.
Ah. Yes. Lupus. What an idiotic name for an illness that causes havoc to the immune system. It sounds so harmless and about as terrifying as a crocus or a snowdrop or any other spring flower you care to mention. But it’s that same lupus that has me standing here in front of a lift on my way to Room 41. My mother has it. We just found out. She just found out. Which makes me think that, on balance, she’s probably not thinking about Brussels sprouts. I push the button for the lift that seems to be stuck somewhere, above or below. It’s in lift limbo. I know how it feels. Eventually the lift arrives. I get in and a few moments later I get out on the seventh floor. I look left and right in search of Room 41.
I am forty-one. I feel more like a two-year-old right now. I was a clingy child. I spent most of the years nought to five attached limpet-like to my mother’s legs. I have a flashback to a supermarket in Galway – my mother is trying to reach for a can of beans and I won’t let her because it will mean she is detached from me for several milliseconds. It must have been desperately annoying. But she never let on. I can see her smiling at me now while I threaten to topple a display of tins in my determination to Never Let Go Of Her For As Long As I Draw Breath.