At Christmas, My Mum Insulted My Baby — I Finally Walked Out-heuh

By the time I dressed Lily for Christmas lunch, the kitchen window had fogged at the edges and the kettle had clicked itself silent twice.

The house was warm, but my hands were cold.

Lily lay on our bed between two folded blankets, kicking her tiny feet as if she had important places to go and no patience for socks.

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Her red velvet dress was soft beneath my fingers.

I had bought it weeks earlier, telling myself it was only because it was pretty, not because I wanted my mother to look at my daughter and finally say something kind.

That was the embarrassing truth beneath everything.

I still wanted my mum’s approval.

Even as a married woman, even as a mother, even after years of comments disguised as concern, I still caught myself hoping the next milestone might make her gentler.

Lily was eight months old.

She was small for her age, though every doctor had told us she was healthy.

She had been born six weeks early, arriving before I was ready, before the nursery was finished, before I had even washed all the tiny clothes stacked in the drawer.

For three weeks, Evan and I lived between home and the hospital, learning a frightening new language.

Oxygen numbers.

Feeding tubes.

Monitors.

Expressed milk.

Weight gain counted in tiny amounts that felt enormous when they went the right way.

I learned that fear could smell like hand sanitiser, plastic tubing, warmed milk, and stale coffee from a paper cup.

I learned that a baby could be impossibly small and still take up every inch of your heart.

And Lily had fought.

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