I’ve been told the first time we met I was shuffling slowly up and down a blue carpeted corridor. Slumped body. Empty eyes. I barely registered being asked how I was with a slowly exhaled ‘Not so good.’ before moving on with my pram.
I say ‘I’ve been told’, because I don’t remember our first meeting or the following weeks. I was sicker than I’d ever been. Not many people would have repeatedly made friendly conversation with someone as unresponsive as I was.
She did. At a time when she wasn’t well herself.
When I finally re-emerged after several months of illness, I was delighted to find I had a new friend. A friend I never would have met in my geographical or professional circles. A friend who, like me, had spent the early months of first-time motherhood in a psychiatric hospital instead of at home.
We created an informal mothers’ group after we finally left the hospital.
We were too raw, and unable to tolerate the glowing veneer of perfection pedalled by mothers whose less traumatic experiences we could no more identify with than they could ours. Mothers who still naively believed how babies entered the world and what they were fed was worth expending energy thinking about or debating. Mothers who had not yet confronted what it meant to be on the knife-edge of existence. So, ours was an exclusive group of four: Her, me, and one baby each, who thrived on their formula and their mothers’ increasingly irreverent conversations about motherhood, together.
After my first episode of illness I eventually came off all my medication. Even done gradually, under the close supervision of my psychiatrist – it was rough. My friend came and sat with me. She made me laugh at politically incorrect jokes as my body twitched and ached its way through withdrawal.