My Four-Year-Old Whispered “Mummy, Can I Stop?” Then I Saw Why-Teptep

I was chopping vegetables when my four-year-old daughter pulled my sleeve and whispered, “Mummy, can I stop?”

I thought she meant dinner.

Then I saw her heavy eyes, the bunny crushed against her chest, and the fear she was trying so hard to hide.

Image

The kitchen looked painfully normal.

Rain tapped lightly at the window over the sink, the kettle had just clicked off, and the mug of tea I had made for myself sat untouched beside the washing-up bowl.

There was half a courgette on the board, a tea towel folded over the oven handle, and Emma standing at my elbow in pink pyjamas as if she had wandered in from a bad dream.

She was four years old.

Four years old, with brown curls, firm opinions about socks, and the sort of questions that made a rushed morning suddenly wonderful.

She used to ask whether clouds had somewhere to be.

She used to insist her stuffed bunny needed a seat belt in the car.

She used to dance to adverts in the living room, not because the music was good, but because it was music and she was Emma.

For three weeks, that Emma had been fading.

Not all at once.

That would have been easier to name.

She became quieter, then sleepier, then strangely obedient in a way people without children might have called good behaviour.

She stopped arguing about socks.

She stopped asking for one more story.

She would sit on the sofa with her bunny tucked under her arm and stare at the telly as if she were watching it from very far away.

My mother-in-law Diane called it progress.

“She’s finally calming down,” Diane said, as if my daughter’s brightness had been a problem waiting to be solved.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *