Mum Mocked My Baby At Christmas, So I Walked Out For Good-Teptep

By the time I fastened my daughter into her red velvet Christmas dress, I had already told myself three lies.

The first was that this year would be different.

The second was that my mum would behave.

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The third was that I was strong enough to ignore her if she didn’t.

Lily sat on our bed between two folded blankets, kicking her tiny socked feet and smiling at nothing in particular.

She was eight months old, but people often guessed five or six because she was still so small.

Her cheeks were soft and round, yet her wrists had that delicate little-bird look that made my hands slow down whenever I buttoned her sleeves.

She had arrived six weeks early.

For three weeks after that, I had lived under hospital lights, learning a world I never wanted to know.

Monitors.

Oxygen numbers.

Feeding tubes.

Sterile plastic.

Warm milk.

Old coffee in paper cups.

The sound of a machine changing rhythm at three in the morning and making your whole body forget how to breathe.

But Lily was healthy now.

Every appointment said the same thing.

Small, but healthy.

Petite, but growing.

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