For those of you who don't know who Abby Gilmore is, she is a mummy blogger who lives in Melbourne. And yes, I can hear the collective sigh of all those who are reading this post now - 'so she's just another mummy blogger (insert eye roll)'. And yes, in the practical sense she is 'just another mummy blogger'. But to me she is she so much more, she is an inspiration, and someone I wish I saw more of in the social media world.
In my time as a young single mother I have loyally followed a few mummy bloggers - the biggest ones for me being Sophie Cachia (The Young Mummy), and Mel Watts (The Modern Mumma). I think these two women are great. Both were young mums, and therefore offered a perspective on motherhood that I could relate to the most. However as I have watched both of these women's daily stories and posts about motherhood, I can't help but disconnected from their struggles and lives as time goes on. This is mainly due to the fact that both are married. Both have (what appears to be) incredibly supportive and loving partners. Both men in their lives work their arses off, for them, for their children, and for their families. I can't help but envy that...a lot. This is why when Abby Gilmore recently separated from her AFL star partner and became bumped 'down' to the single mum status, I instantly clicked the 'follow' button on her Instagram page. I was excited to finally see another young mummy blogger out there who is like me - well to a certain extent.
Yes her ex still sees the children (my daughter's father has never met her), and yes he would be financially contributing a lot more than $62 per week to cover expenses (my daughter's father is a low income earner, and has fathered another child, hence the dismal child support payment he has been ordered to pay), and yes they seem to get along for the sake of their kids (my daughter's father has not spoken or seen me since early 2015). So in some ways I still envy Abby. I of course do not want to have contact at all with my daughter's father and quite enjoy being left alone by him and his family, however I worry about the impact the lack of connection will have on my daughter in years to come. When I find myself celebrating that he isn't around, guilt instantly floods my body. After all, no matter how little I think of him and his family, he still is my daughter's other half, and I believe all children should be given the opportunity to know both their parents (of course subject to their personal safety ect). So in this sense, the way Abby's children still have a connection with their father I envy, however the rest of her story I can relate to.
And this is why I admire her so much. Because even though I envy the relationship she has with her ex, in that there is one there at all, I still feel so bad for her. Bad because I know how hard the journey has been for me, and therefore I know how hard it must be for her. See unlike Abby I was never in love with Luke, Zaria's father. (I wasn't going to use his name but it is quicker to write than 'my daughter's father'). I had been with him for a fleeting few months, and not 13 years like Abby was with her ex. I had no assets with him, no joint bank accounts - literally the only thing we shared and ever have, is our daughter. He left shortly after Zaria was conceived and I never heard from him again (apart from one email after she was born stating he wanted a paternity test). Our families aren't connected and we don't have mutual friends. I know a lot of people that know him or went to school with him, and a few are my close friends, however no one has a connection with him and certainly do not harbour any respect for him since the birth of Zaria.
Yet I still had my heart broken. How you ask? How on earth could you have your heart broken by someone you didn't even love? I know it sounds bizzare. Even I too was confused by it all. I was so incredibly sad and hurt that I convinced myself that I must have loved him, if he could make me feel this way, make me feel THIS bad. But now as I write from the other side of that dark place, the place where it is all laughter, happiness and pure joy, I can see I did not love him, I just loved the IDEA of him.
For as long as I can remember I pictured myself as an adult doing things a certain way. By 25 I wanted the baby, the career, the dream guy, the big house. I wanted to be a wife and a lover, and fuss and adore over my husband and my children. And I of course wanted the same in return - a man who was faithful to me and our family, and who loved whole heatedly. I soon learned after my experience with Luke that men like that are only born from good families with grounded parents. Luke's parents and family are far from stable. I also learnt that boys like Luke are only meant for girls like me in our younger more dangerous years - those 'bad boys' we meet on the dance floor of the nightclub, and ditch the next morning once the drunken fun is over.
So I can relate to Abby's want and almost need to be a mother and a partner so young. That innate predisposition to mother your own offspring, and create life with someone you love with all your heart. I was, and still am, in love with the idea of love and everything that it represents.
I think this is why I was so heartbroken when it all unfolded for me. I knew it was going to happen, I could see from the moment I met him that Luke lacked integrity, kindness, family support and encouragement to do 'the right thing'. But for me I realised I wasn't heartbroken over him, I was heartbroken at what I believed he had taken from Zaria and I.
You see when I was pregnant and after Zaria was born I did nothing but compare myself to other women. I saw all these women come to their anti-natal appointments with their men, gush excitedly together over baby names while they patiently waited in the waiting room. I imagined what they would say to each other when they doctor scanned the mum's belly and the sex was revealed. How they would hold each other's hands while the doctor talked to them about the 'birthing plan'. The look in each other's eyes - that look of love and adoration for each other over the miracle that they just created. The sound of the doctor's voice all but I distant murmur, drowned out by the love and excitement of 2 parents to be. I imagined these couples going home and planning out the nursery. Going to shops and buying all the essentials in preparation for their baby's arrival.
I imagined the man rubbing the woman's feet, massaging her back in labour. Feeling her pain, as she dealt with every single contraction with grace and strength. The look of pure admiration in his eyes as he witnessed the full potential of his partner's body and mind. I imagined the look in each other's eyes when the baby is finally born - the tears, the joy, 'look at what we created'!!
I imagined the first night at home together with their baby. The first walk in the pram as the happy couple ventures out for the first time. 'Oh he has your eyes, but dad's nose', admiring strangers would say.
Then I imagined that baby growing up to know and love both parents, and know that they are loved in return even more. That this baby grows up to be a child that knows they can count on both their parents no matter what. That they can share all milestones and achievements with both their parents, and live in a big home filled with family photos of all three of them. Then as time goes on, that child shares a sibling, or 2, or 3, or 4, or more. All this happiness and love just oozing out of every aspect of their life.
And this is why I was heartbroken. Because Luke took all that away from me and Zaria. Because of him, I never could share any of these amazing moments like most couples do. Because of him I was the only one that took my mother to birthing class while the rest had their partners. Because of him I had to choose my 3 best friends as my support people in labour when everyone else on the birthing ward had their partner. Because of him I financially struggled to raise Zaria on my own when others had 2 incomes. Because of him I had to (and still do) juggle so much more in my life than what I would if he were here helping me raise her. Because of him I could never enjoy all those 'firsts' with the other person that helped create Zaria. Because of him our daughter will grow up never knowing her father and his family. Because of him she won't get to share a full sibling. Because of him she won't ever get to experience the pride and joy that comes from watching your parents love and adore each other.
See being left heartbroken is a funny thing. You feel so much sadness that it is sometimes difficult to pinpoint exactly why you are feeling the way that you do. But now as I reflect, I can see that I was heartbroken over what I never got to experience, and I was immersed with guilt over 'choosing' a father like Luke for Zaria, when she deserves (like any child), so so much more.
This is why Abby resonates with me. Because she was in so deep with her ex, and resigned to the fact that that was it for her - he was her soulmate, the man she was 'destined' to be with. And when us women make that pact with ourselves, we commit to it. We see a family unit we want to keep together, we see a life that 'could' be, and we see the potential our partner has if he were to do 'this, this and this'. The reasons to stay and overlook all the faults is motivated so strongly by our children and by how we think our life should pan out, that we dive in blindly and hope for the best.
When I read Abby's latest blog on love my heart broke for her. Because if I was as sad as I was over my situation, and felt everything that I did in that time, I honestly don't know how women like Abby are even finding the motivation to get out of bed and smile.
She inspires me because she uses her children to motivate her. She uses her friends to uplift her, and her family to support her. She continues to get out and enjoy life, and uses her social media network, not to brag about lavish items generously donated to her, or post pictures in vain purely for the attention it will receive from followers, but to reach women and girls who, like me, need to desperately know that they aren't alone in their journey, and that no matter how 'pathetic' their feelings and emotions may seem to them, they are most certainly validated by their struggles.
Abby is a woman and a mother that embodies the values that I aspire to surround Zaria with, and it is because of this that I believe that even though she thinks her world has crumbled in recent months, it really is only the beginning; for how can someone so pure, strong and beautiful not have the world at her feet?
Here is to all the women like Abby; may we know them, may we be them, may we raise them.
A.
xx
#AbbyGilmore #AccordingtoAbby #singlemums #parenting
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