Elizabeth Griffiths January 19, 2022
I was at the gym the other day and I got talking to a lady I had seen in class a few times. After I told her I worked for myself and was lucky to fit gym classes in during the morning, she asked if I had any children.
“Yes, Henry, he is four. I love this age!” I said enthusiastically.
“You have just the one?” She asked.
“Yes - just the one.”
“And you are with his father?” She asked pointedly. Wondering, I guess, why I had “just the one”.
“No, we are not together. I’m a single parent.” I said proudly.
“Ah.” She replied looking down at the ground with the expression of a disappointed parent.
“He’s a very happy boy and he has a great relationship with his dad,” I replied, a little defiantly.
I’d had this same conversation many times during the four years of being a single parent. And I had always felt a little defensive because the stigma of being a single parent is still inherently within society, no matter how far we have come in many ways.
But then the conversation shifted unexpectedly. The lady smiled and said, “That’s the main thing, they are happy.”
That is the main thing. He is happy. I am happy – most of the time but with a hell of a lot of work I’ve been doing on myself.
I would not be happy if I was with Henry’s dad. And in turn, Henry wouldn’t be the boy he is today. He’d have grown up with an insecure, unhappy, unstable, sad mother in a house that would have been filled with mistrust, arguments and no stability.
Instead he has been raised by a woman who he sees is independent, strong, works hard, has fun, and is at the centre of her world. My biggest passion in life now is raising a boy who will become a man who respects women and can be open about his emotions. I feel like we are on the right path.
I truly believe children can have a more consistently happy and stable childhood when they have parents who are separated rather than living in a house filled with arguments and animosity because two people are staying together for the sake of children. I know that is easier said than done in many cases.
The guilt of being a single parent is always there but it has lessened in time, but it is still there. When I’m tired and have no patience for his meltdowns, I often think, this is when his dad would come in and take over and he’d be protected from my raised voice and tears. Yet, I realise he has learnt that I’m not always able to be ‘happy mummy’ and that it is okay to show emotions rather than bottling them up.
And I feel guilty that Henry doesn’t get to do all the things he would do if he had parents who were together. He doesn’t get to go on days out with both of us as a family unit, he doesn’t get to go on holidays with both of his parents there watching him paddling in the sea, and he has to go from house to house at the weekend, leaving at 9am on a Sunday when he should be able to stay in his PJs watching YouTube.
I also imagine how wonderful it must be to share the moments with the other parent. The pride you feel together, knowing you together have created this amazing little human. That’s when I feel alone in this. I rarely feel lonely (I’m never alone!) but I do feel alone in certain situations. Like looking at prospective schools without the other parent, making all the decisions on your own and always being the one who is clearing up snot and sick.
Instead, Henry will go to his dads and Henry’s dad and his new wife will experience moments together, like seeing Henry and his little sister playing together and having their first sleepover. Waking up in the morning and giving him his breakfast, knowing they may not know his little ways as much as I do.
I’m so proud that I have always given Henry the opportunity to have a relationship with his dad. It was incredibly hard in the beginning but we have come a long way. In turn, Henry has taught me the greatest lesson I have ever learnt in my life: to leave anger and negative energy behind and move forward as it does no one any good. I set aside whatever I felt in the past and I send Henry on his way to his dads and I make the most of that time so I can reset and try and be the best mum I can be.
So, there you go. Life as a single parent. I wouldn’t change my experience for anything. If I meet someone then the dynamic will change and Henry will have another person to love. But for now, I’ll soak in our special bond. Just the two of us (and our dog, Mindy).







