Part Eleven – Take These Broken Wings And Learn To Fly…

So. There I was.

Sat in a public toilet staring in disbelief at a pregnancy test with 2 very obvious blue lines on it. I slumped to the floor as my legs couldn’t keep me upright anymore.

Very much aware of my current situation. I was living back in the belly of the beast with my mother, my boyfriend who only seemed to treat me like I was human if he was stoned, and me trying to survive and feed us both on £7.50 a week.

I let the news settle in my bones for a good few days before I dared to even speak the words out loud.

Pregnant. 16. Homeless pretty much.

Scared, because I’d been here twice before, it never ended well. I didn’t have spare money to test again, so I took another test from a chemist, just to see if it still said the same thing.

Still there. 2 solid blue lines.

I thought about telling him, I thought about telling my mother, but I needed the time to let it process into my mind.

Only hormones caught me out this time. I felt sick from the moment I was upright in the morning till the moment I went to sleep. He noticed. My mother noticed too.

We were on our way to go hang out at a friends place, and he stopped me.

You’re pregnant aren’t you? he asked.

‘Yes’ I replied.

Not knowing which way the weather would carry his response.

‘Well, you can’t be thinking of actually keeping it?! we have nowhere to live, no money! How the hell are we going to look after a child?! he shouted.

Not the reaction I was hoping for. It was just sinking in for me, I just couldn’t process his feelings too.

Then he told my mother.

She was less than impressed. She had been drilling into me every time I happened to see her how I wasn’t going to be like my brothers girlfriend, another teenage pregnancy.

I happened to think my nephew was actually, adorable. This tiny perfectly formed human made of my brother and his girlfriend, he was cute, with an adorable lil face. My brother was making a go of things, starting his family. would it really be so bad?

Time passed and Social Services were informed, I continued to stay at my mothers, not ideal. But I really didn’t have much of a choice.

She had this weird thing with her mind where she believed people were coming into her flat when she wasn’t there, claiming they’d come in, make toast, make a mess and leave. Or they’d use her computer and games would be out for it that she was sure she had put away, it was bad enough she put wrapping paper on the front door to stop people spying on her.

I could never work out just what it was she was so afraid of.

My sister took the news a bit better. I knew for her this came as a heavy kind of happiness, she had hoped she would be the first one to have a child out of me and her, but we grew quite close over the course of my pregnancy.

She wanted me to have nice things, She didn’t want my situation to be made worse by having nothing for my baby, so she took me into Mothercare and we browsed prams and cots and all this stuff that was designed for mothers to be, grown women with big bumps browsed the shop with us, I felt ever so slightly uncomfortable and the looks felt like sabres of judgement and disapproval.

But my sister said she wanted to help me, So we picked out a brand new pram. It was ridiculously expensive, I looked at the price tag and swallowed hard. £500. That was not including any extras, but my sister insisted.

‘In the very least, have something nice to take my niece or nephew out in? I can’t see you have some second hand pram from out the paper, you have to let me help you to get this. Please?’

I relented. ‘okay’.

It was really beautiful.

So she grabbed the pram, the matching bits and pieces to go with it and a rain cover, She also had me fitted for a maternity bra and bought me a maternity dress. It was the closest we had been since I was tiny.

She knew I had very little money, she said if I could put a fiver a week to it for the remainder of my pregnancy she would pay the rest. I was awe struck, but very grateful.

Then things started to get worse at my mother’s, she would do really random things like walking into our bedroom with just a T-shirt and badly fitting knickers on leaving very little to the imagination, it was creepy, it was weird.

Then came the garlic.

See she found out really quickly that certain smells would have me wretching and heaving, Garlic was one of those things. She would buy chicken kievs or garlic bread, cooking them first thing in the morning then sitting back all smug with herself as I struggled to keep even fluid down. She actually found it funny.

You see I also didn’t look pregnant for quite some time. Rumours went around like wildfire, The stories I heard were quite wild, I was in my last trimester before you could look at me and see I was visibly pregnant.

My sister wanted to help as much as she could, she asked if id be okay to house sit whilst she went on holiday and I agreed, She went to Social Services and a plan was made that she would foster me for a few weeks, to have someone look after me and give me some actual food, now this being in 1998, My sister was being paid around £275 a week to have me sofa surf, this meant that she could help me finish buying the things I needed for my baby.

Only he wasn’t welcome.

She left me to flat sit whilst she was away, I had her flat to myself and it was so good to have some real actual food for once, a bath I could soak in and a front door to shut the world outside out.

I’d sit there quietly in the evenings, watching tv, stroking my tummy and marvelling at the way this tiny human inside of me was growing. See I’d seen plenty of pregnant women in my time, but being one? was a whole new experience. I vowed I’d do my very best for the little person growing inside my womb.

He wasn’t allowed to stay at my sister’s she made that very clear, so he ended up sleeping on the sofa of this woman who lived across from the Kids Home, she was a bit weird. A rather grossly overweight woman who captured the attention of the boys at the kids home, not for her looks, nothing like that. She had prescription drugs, heavy duty stuff that the teenage lads seemed only to eager to try.

I heard a rumour at the time, that whilst I’d been staying at my sisters place, he had been taken in by her. I was grateful at first that he found somewhere to go but then I was told by a friend of ours from the home, that one night, whilst the friend had also stayed over, that he went to go to the toilet in the night and as he went to go in, my boyfriend had come out of the bathroom, fully naked, drying his tackle off on a towel like he’d just been having sex.

My stomach lurched. Surely he wouldn’t be burning his ass on the lightbulb by mounting that, that, whale?!

I confronted him about it at the time and he assured me that he didn’t, said our friend was lying and trying to stir up trouble between us, naively I believed him. It would be a good five years later that id discover the truth. It made me feel sick to my very stomach.

Especially when she tried to make out like she had chosen the name of our baby like she was proud of sleeping with a kid who was only 3 years older than her son. I just thought she was vile.

My sister returned from her holiday and I wasn’t able to stay much longer, so social services helped me fill in some forms so I could go on the housing register, the plan was I’d be there till I was almost ready to have my child, then I’d go into a mother and baby unit until a place more permanent was found.

I arrived at the bed and breakfast. There was a family sharing each room, some had one child, some had two or three, and the main cooking area was taken over by an older mother with several kids. There was no provision of food of any kind, despite the name of the place.

He came with me and we settled in as best as we could. Only we also fought more often than not leading to physical fighting, it seemed to be a regular occurrence.

See I was back to a familiar place in our relationship. My £15 went nowhere. It didn’t seem to matter that I was pregnant either, if he didn’t get his weed he took it out on me and our unborn baby. The break at my sister’s a distant memory already, but it was nice whilst it had lasted.

Social Services for some reason were still paying half the rent at my mother’s so that took £20 before I even got my cheque to cash, to get it would be a 7 mile round trip, walking all the way there in the heat of the summer, for £15. It didn’t matter that the countless times he put me in hospital or the amount of times the hospital tried to keep me in for my own protection, Social Services refused to assist, and each week that trek grew harder and harder.

He was still taking his weed money from me, I was paying a fiver a week to my sister to help pay for my pram and it left me with the odd pound or two if I was lucky. We had no choice but to turn to shoplifting to try and help us get by. We learned tricks to help us, including stealing items and returning them for gift vouchers saying they’d been bought as baby gifts and they were things that I didn’t need.

I’d collect gift vouchers and then use them to buy 10p items, so they’d give me the rest in actual coins, it was a lot of effort to make not even £10 as a result, and the stores cottoned on very quickly to the dangerous game we were playing. But at the time I was desperate. I had no money for food, and even a tenner scraped together still largely was reduced to just a couple of quid once he had taken what he needed for his weed.

See when you are in the thick of a situation like that, you can’t see it even though those red flags couldn’t have been more obvious, but at 16 and the first person to show me what I thought was love? well. When you’ve been rejected over and over and over again, a little affection lights up the brain like Christmas and is just as addictive as any drug, even if the only way to keep that love from beating the living daylights out of you, is to make sure he didn’t run out of that thing he needed. The drugs.

We picked up other ways to get food, one of the other families was a couple addicted to Heroin, who had 2 children, a toddler and a baby. They showed me how to find food if I was desperate, the mum took me with her a few times, showing me how a local supermarket would triple bag rotisserie chicken before tossing them in the bin at the end of the day, and if we were really lucky, we would find one or two and share them, you’d think I’d never seen food before, but desperate times caused for very desperate measures.

My sister would still come and visit any time she could, she would often ask where our food was and I’d have to lie and tell her it was in the kitchen or it was going to be collected later, she cottoned on very quickly to the fact that I was lying, especially when she took me out for a treat to get me out of the bedroom and away from him for a little while.

We went to a local cafe, she asked me what I wanted to eat and in my mind it was like the times when I was little, where she would find me all alone without a friend to play with, but she would use her money to buy little packs of chocolate chip cookies and she would sit with me and share them, she was more like a mother to me than our own mother ever was.

Only one minute I was upright, the next minute? Floor.

Without any warning I’d passed out, toppling backwards onto some poor unsuspecting elderly gentleman who had the misfortune of being behind me.

I got my bearings and got into a seat and practically inhaled the food she bought for me.

‘How long has it been since you last ate?’ she asked.

Four days was my reply.

She was utterly horrified. She was also a bit cross that I didn’t tell her or ask for her help, to be honest, I’d didn’t know how to ask her, how to explain where my money went, and there was no way I could tell her I was shoplifting and eating food out of supermarket bins to survive.

She took me to get some food that I could keep in my room, nothing huge as I confessed I didn’t have any way to store food, except for one drawer in a freezer where I could fit 2 bags of chips, I’d have to ask the mother downstairs if it was okay to use her chip fryer, which was always filled with lard and leftover food. But there really wasn’t anything else if I wanted to try and cook what little food I had.

But it still didn’t make that much of a difference, any food my sister would buy to help feed me and my unborn child, would get eaten by him and his mates if they stopped round, I got stuck in a revolving door of being hungry, no money, him getting violent with his weed, and landing me in hospital, where I’d stay a few nights, and again, get released only to not get the bed rest I was told to have, and exhausting myself every week for that £15 life line.

Then one night, when I was about 7 months pregnant, I’d been asleep whilst he was out with his friends, he’d been drinking, I could smell it. He got undressed and into bed beside me, One minute I was resisting his advances, the next were minutes I never did account for, but I knew from the feeling between my legs and the sight of him stood up, that he had taken something without my permission.

The next day, back in hospital I went, they asked me what I’d done to be bleeding again, and I told them the truth as I knew it, that I had no memory of what had occurred.

Social Services decided I needed some time away from him, a chance to try and keep my unborn child inside of me for as long as possible, but because I hadn’t had my child yet I was put into a hostel for homeless women, I would be in there with many drug users, many women with equally as bad if not worse situations in their lives but this was my last stop before I had my baby, I just needed to keep him inside of me for as many days as I could.

only a few weeks later, another beating because he didn’t get his own way and back to hospital I went.

Only this time, one of my foster sisters was there. She had just given birth that very night, and she proudly showed me her newborn daughter. She was beautiful, all scrunched up and new, with a big mass of dark brown hair. I held her and that moment was so very special. We had both lived in the kids home at the same time, we both just wanted a life that was ours, we both had so much pitted against us.

I quizzed her about how the birth had gone, what did it all feel like? I wanted every detail of the experience that would soon be coming my way, she described in great detail what happened, and then I asked her, how do you know when your waters have gone? she shrugged and told me I’d just know, she said imagine peeing but you are peeing its just fluid that won’t stop.

Moments later, 9 weeks early, I suddenly felt warmth, water, what on earth???

Just like that I knew.

My waters had just broken.

Featured

I invite you to step inside my neurodiverse mind, together with a side of hyperlexia, I create pictures with words, bringing them to life as only I know how.

I was told recently I should write.

As of July 2025, that was about a month or so. Give or take a day.

I wanted a space to tell my story, my way. Without the limits of anyone telling me how that should be.

I mean, if I had a pound for every time someone told me I have “a way with words,” I’d be a hell of a lot richer than I am…

(well, if Amazon didn’t also exist, that is….)

My story is as unique as the words I choose to write with, light and dark, witty and clever with epic lows and occasionally a beautiful high.

This is my journey to process my story, as I heal from devestating trauma that has taken so much of my life away from me.

This is my stand.

In the words of Sarah, near the end of the film Labyrinth

This is my way of saying Trauma?

You Have No Power Over Me.

✨ Ready to start reading my story?
Start with Part One – An Early Memory I Didn’t Ask To Keep

Part Ten – Girl, Interrupted….

We continued to be together, though cracks were very much visible to the outside world. But in true lovesick teenager form, I didn’t see them. Maybe I was in too deep? Totally.

I noticed that a new thing seemed to rise up in me now and then. Firey Rage.

We started to argue, to fight. I discovered anger inside that I couldn’t release in any way but to be destructive.

Smashing windows, wrecking doors, taking out banisters, furniture — it was like nothing was safe. It was especially worse on the days when I couldn’t access the crutch I used to keep everything suppressed.

Then I noticed that drinking even more kind of numbed things for a while, but it was an unpredictable addition to an already turbulent situation.

I was arrested several times. Mostly for being drunk and disorderly. My name is easily mispronounced, and when they would call me by a slightly different variation of my name, it just made me see red. I’d shout and scream and be wild, they would just handcuff me, put me in a car, take me to the station, and put me in a holding cell to calm down till the morning.

Then came the day I dreaded. The day he was moved out to a shared house on the other side of the city.

It was a small room. He had a leaving care grant of £100 to cover the cost of basic things he would need. Which really only covered some kitchen items and some basic bedding.

It wasn’t long before my time came.

I was moved to a small flat. Fifth floor of the house, only stairs, no lift, my main living area in the attic, and down two flights of stairs to pee. I didn’t think this would be a problem until I needed to pee at 2 a.m, dashing down in the wee small hours hoping I didn’t wake anyone else up.

But I had a place that I could call mine. It was a bit nicer than his place. As I understand it, we had slightly different provision because he was classed as “accommodated” and I was a Ward of Court. I didn’t really understand how the two were different, but apparently, it meant I got slightly longer under their wings, and as I wasn’t able to sign for benefits, I’d get a cheque I could cash for around £35 a week to cover anything I might need — my rent etc was covered by Social Services.

He would often stay at mine. There was a strict no-smoking policy which we tried to get around by putting a sock over the fire alarm. It seemed to work and meant no one knew we were smoking up there — until the day my landlord did an unannounced visit while I was out. He found the cannabis smoking paraphernalia and the covered fire alarm and terminated my tenancy immediately.

So I stayed with him for a few nights, then was told my stuff had been bagged up and moved to a room in a shared house. The keys were dropped to me, and I was told I’d have to go and collect my money each week — a good 7 miles walking round trip. But I didn’t have a choice.

He didn’t seem to have an income at the time. I can’t recall why, but later understood that he simply couldn’t be bothered to sign on to get a giro. But then why would he, when he had me and my regular supply of funds?

I foolishly chose to support the two of us, but he had stolen something off a housemate where he lived. He arrived home one day to a threatening letter pinned to his door, telling him in no uncertain terms if he returned, there would be consequences.

It turns out he was funding his habit any way he could, stealing from housemates and selling what he could to make sure he always had access to the drug that seemed to be the only thing that kept him sedated enough day to day not to be aggressive or abusive.

Only with the letter pinned to the door, and me being really quite worried about it, the only option left was to go to the place where all my stuff had been moved to. I had the keys. It was super late at night, but we arrived quietly. I tried the lock on my door with the key I was given.

To my utter horror, there was a stranger asleep in the bed that was supposed to be mine. Which meant we had nowhere to go. Officially homeless, we stayed overnight in the local train station waiting room. It was the only place that felt safe. But just one night of that, and it was clear we couldn’t do this for very long, so I contacted the one person who might help.

My mother.

We arrived at hers and she was welcoming enough. She had a spare room in her flat and was happy to let me use it on one condition: Social Services paid her £20 a week to contribute to rent. This was taken from the money they provided me with. So I’d gone from having £35 a week to £15. £15 a week to find food, supply his habit a tiny bit, and there was nothing left. It wasn’t even a choice as to whether I gave him half of the remaining money I had — if I didn’t, he would become violent and abusive. I’d believe it was my fault, and my mind just went for the easiest option that kept me somehow safe-ish.

But it wasn’t enough to live on. Trying to feed two people on £7.50 a week meant getting creative or starving. My mother didn’t provide anything to eat, and the freezer was bare except for bags of frozen peas and sweetcorn. I went hungry a great deal of the time.

There was also no point buying anything to last because any food I bought, my mother felt was her right to eat. So many days I’d drink water to fill my stomach, tricks I’d learned from being younger. And just like when I was younger, there was usually only pet food, coffee granules, and occasionally milk — but my mother made it very clear this was hers. Though in desperation, I’d sneak a black cup of coffee so there was some different taste in my system.

I’d scour for anything, pennies, anything to try and add something to the amount I was to live on. But there still remained more days than not where I didn’t eat.

We had been there for a few months, not really having a plan past the next day, when something changed everything.

I discovered I was pregnant. With our son.

Missed a bit?

←Part Nine – Her Name Is India

Ready for more?

→ Part Eleven – Take These Broken Wings And Learn To Fly…

What Is Unwearing the Mercury?

“So I guess I’m here. Planting myself into the script code of the internet, for all to see.”


.

I was told recently I need to start writing.

I don’t know who I’m writing to, but I’m at a time in my life where I need direction. I spend too much time alone, hiding from a world I find both exciting and terrifying in equal measures.

I’m actually just a mother. I’m in my 40s.

And if I had a pound for every time someone told me I have “a way with words,” I’d be a hell of a lot richer than I am…

(well, if Amazon didn’t also exist, that is).

I’m trying to share the insides of my eyelids — the bits no one sees — even if I don’t think anyone will ever read or enjoy them.

But I know there’s one person out there — maybe long after I’m gone — who’ll find my words and feel connection.

I hope to build this into a collection.

And who knows?

Maybe one day…

I won’t feel quite so alone.

Let me know if you’d like this saved into a Post, Page, or Notepad note — or if you want to edit/polish it together.