Simon, Put On Your Hat—It’s Windy! You Know How Delicate Your Ears Are! And Don’t Run or You’ll Get …

David, put your cap on! Its blustery out there! You know your ears are sensitive! And dont run, youll get all hot and bothered!
Mum always did know best. She knew what David needed, even when he was too old for such things. One day, when youre grown, youll thank me for keeping you safe from all the worlds perils! shed say.

David was thirty-two. Yet there he stood at the bus stop in Manchester, automatically adjusting his capdespite it being May and hardly cold. Mum’s voice rang in his memory: Margaret Tilley, with her unwavering certainty.

He still lived with her, even at his age. Not because he was ill or struggling. He had a decent job as an IT analyst, earning a fine salary. He could have bought a flat in Leeds, a car, or even flown off to Tenerife for the winter.

But he couldnt even buy a train ticket to London without ringing Mum first.

David, did you get the cottage cheese? Not the full-fat! Only the Country Meadow 5%, your stomachs delicate!

Got it, Mum.

And have you called that girl what was her name Sophie? That one from work?

Not yet.

Dont bother. I saw her photo on Facebookfar too gaudy. Her family looks a right mess. We dont need that sort around here.

He ended the call. Sophie was lively and spirited, her cheeks full of freckles; he liked her plenty.
But Mum said no. And what Mum said was law. Mum was the rampart shielding him from the world, yet pressing down so tightly that he could scarcely breathe.

Everything changed when David was sent away on a work assignment. To London, for a month.

Margaret Tilley swiftly developed a heart flutter (which always cleared whenever David remained at home), but his manager wouldnt have it. The project was vital.
David had to go.

For the first week, he rang her five times a day to assure her hed eaten, dressed warmly, gone to bed at a sensible hour.

Then, he met Alice.

Alice was an artist, living in a poky attic flat in Hackney, drinking cheap red wine and traipsing across the rooftops. She never asked about his cap. She asked instead, Are you happy, David?

He was stumped. He had food, clothes, health. But was he happy?

For the first time in his life, he turned his phone off for a whole day.

They wandered along the Thames, shared greasy street kebabs (Mum wouldve faintedOh, the germs!) and kissed beneath the drizzle.
For the first time in thirty years, he felt he was truly breathingfree, without the stifling gossamer of Mums constant concern.

Returning home, David was changed. A new spark flickered in his eyes, and his coat pocket held an application for a mortgage.

Mum, he said at dinner, Im moving out. Im getting a flat, and Im marrying Alice.

Margaret dropped her fork.

What! That ragamuffin from London? Are you daft? Shes bewitched you! She only wants your address! Youre still a child, Davidanyoned take you for a ride! I forbid it!

Im thirty-two, Mum. Im a grown man.

Youll always be my boy! Mum clutched at her chest. Oh, my blood pressure! Youll be the death of me! I gave up everything for youpushed your father out, so you wouldnt be scarred! Worked two jobs, all for you! And this is how you repay me? Traitor!

She slid to the floor, playing her part perfectly: paramedics, smelling salts, crocodile tears.

Once, David would have foldeddashing for water, apologising, begging forgiveness.
But now, he remembered the wind atop Alices roof.

Take a tablet, Mum. The doctor says your hearts sound as a bell. Im going.

He left. Rented a place of his own. Moved Alice in.

That first month was sheer bliss. They pasted wallpaper, laughed late into the night, lived by candlelight.

But then reality hit.

David didnt know how to make a go of things on his own. He hadnt a clue how the council tax worked, or how to book a doctors appointment without the magic of Mums contacts. Hed never made a real decision.

David, we need to pick new tiles for the bathroom, Alice would say.
Er you choose. Ormaybe Mum could help, shes great with that sort of thing hed mumble.

Alice frowned.
I dont want to live with your mother, David. I want to live with you. Blue tiles or green?

David froze, terrified of choosing wrong, of getting a scold. Somewhere deep down, the small boy waited, still desperate for approval.

Margaret Tilley didnt ring. She employed the weapon of silence. She knew hed crack.

And crack he did.

It was something silly. David caught the flu, just the usual sort. His temperature soared.

Alice was away at work.

Panic set in. He believed he might die, alone. He craved Mums tea with honey, her cool hand, her unwavering voice: Nothing dreadful, well see you right.

He rang her.

She came round in half an hour, armed with broth, medicines, and a vaporiser.

Three days and shed nursed him back to health.

When Alice returned from her painting class, she found the flat scrubbed spotless, the furniture rearranged, and her mother-in-law stirring soup in her kitchen.

Alice dear, Margaret cooed. You really ought to look after David better. He nearly burnt up! Good job hes got a proper mother.

David? Alice stood in the doorway.

David sat at the table, swaddled in a blanket, slurping Mums soup. He looked contentcontent as a hibernating mole.

Alice, honestly Mum helped. Dont start.

Alice packed her bags in silence.

Youre a good man, David, she said at the door. But youre no husband. Youre your mothers shadow. I cant lie beside a man when I know his mothers always in the bed between us.

Five years passed.

David still lives with his mum. In the same old bedroom, under the faded football posters.

He never married.

What for? Margaret tells the neighbours. Hes happy as he is. I look after him, cook his meals. Girls nowadaysalways after something. Davids a homely sort, needs his peace.

David nods, heavier now, soft around the edges. Evenings are spent playing video games or watching serial dramas with Mum.

He feels at ease. He doesnt have to make decisions. Doesnt have to choose tiles, or accept responsibility. Hes safe. Safe, tucked away in the warm, gentle, comfortable grave his mothers love has dug for him.

Now and then, in dreams, he finds himself on a London rooftop, feeling that wild city wind. But he always wakes, straightens his blanket, and hears from the kitchen,

David, come down for breakfast! Your porridges getting cold!

Moral:

Overbearing care isnt love. Its the cleverest and most concealed sort of sabotage. When you clip your childrens wings for their own safety you condemn them to crawl for life. Letting go is painful, like birth itself, but its vital. If the cord isnt cut, it becomes a noose for both mother and child.

Did you manage to release your children, or are you still living their lives for them?

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Simon, Put On Your Hat—It’s Windy! You Know How Delicate Your Ears Are! And Don’t Run or You’ll Get …
Austina was unfaithful to her husband only once, before the wedding. He called her fat and said she’d never fit into her wedding dress, so she stormed off to a nightclub with her friends. After too many drinks, she woke up in a stranger’s flat beside a blue-eyed charmer—and the shame was overwhelming. Austina never told Tom, forgave his insults, and started dieting. She gave up alcohol entirely when she found out she was pregnant—her perfect blue-eyed daughter arrived right on time, and Tom adored her. For five years, Austina clung to the story that her daughter’s eyes came from Tom’s blue-eyed father and dismissed her daughter’s curly hair. She tried to forget the curly-haired stranger whose name she didn’t recall. Perhaps that’s why she forgave Tom everything: late-night texts, endless work trips, and constant criticism. Gabrielle needed her family; she worshipped her dad, and what man isn’t unfaithful? “Just put up with it—where else would you go?” her mum insisted. “We’ve no room here, your gran’s in her bed, your brother’s brought home his new wife—where would we put you? I told you not to sign over your flat to your in-laws; now look at you.” So Austina endured—until Tom eventually left, claiming he’d met someone else. He wept, swore he’d always be Gabrielle’s dad, but said he couldn’t fight his feelings. Even her mother, who supposedly loved her granddaughter, threw in a final jab after the split: “Get a paternity test. Are you sure you should be paying child support?” Stunned, Austina realised she wasn’t the only one with doubts. “Are you mad?” Tom snapped. “Gabrielle’s my daughter—anyone can see that, even the blind.” But her mother-in-law was taken aback when, a year after the divorce, Austina arrived at A&E with appendicitis and was greeted by a familiar face—Dr. Lewis. “Sorry, but haven’t we met?” the surgeon asked. Austina shook her head vigorously, hoping he wouldn’t remember—but he did. The next day he joked, “Hope you’re not planning to bolt like last time?” She blushed scarlet and resolved to leave hospital as soon as possible—but Dr. Lewis, or Linus as he preferred, made her want to stay. Austina told him only that she had a daughter, skirting around the subject of paternity. Linus figured it out when he met Gabrielle—he fussed over her, bought her a doll, and quizzed Austina for all the right details. “You see,” he said, “when I was a kid, my mum loved a man, but my sister never accepted him, and my mum finally sent him away. I don’t want that. I want to be a father to your daughter, too.” Austina was floored, and as he gazed silently at Gabrielle she knew: he understood everything. “What difference does it make?” Austina wondered. “The truth will come out eventually.” Used to marital strife, she expected accusations and shouting. Instead, with just the two of them, Linus hugged her and whispered, “What a miracle!” At first it seemed Gabrielle had accepted Linus. But when Austina cautiously asked her if Linus could move in, the girl wept: “I thought Daddy was coming home—Linus should live somewhere else.” Eventually, Austina persuaded her, but Linus was disappointed. “She is my daughter! You have to tell them!” “Tom couldn’t take it. Gabrielle loves him—he’s her whole world. Besides, I’ve heard he and his new wife can’t have children. That’s what his mum told me.” Linus felt hurt, Gabrielle kicked up a fuss, and Austina tried to keep the peace. They established rules: Austina would ferry her daughter to Tom, keep the men apart, and sometimes leave Gabrielle and Linus together to bond, while she played the translator between them. She even organised Women’s Day greetings from Gabrielle, terrified the girl would say something to Linus which would expose the truth. Then Austina discovered she was pregnant and panicked. What if the baby had the same looks as Gabrielle and Tom realised the truth? What if Gabrielle grew jealous and hated Linus? What if Linus told Gabrielle everything while she was still in hospital? She arranged for her mum to watch Gabrielle during her stay, but fate intervened—her mum landed in A&E with gallstones the night before. Her stepdad refused to take on another child, and her brother and sister-in-law both worked long hours. Austina left Gabrielle with Tom—but he was away on business, and there was no way she’d ask her ex-mother-in-law for help. “Don’t you think I can handle your daughter?” Linus protested. This birth was harder: a caesarean, a longer stay, a jaundiced new son, and chaos at home. Linus said everything was fine, but Gabrielle wouldn’t speak to her, and Austina feared the worst: “He’s told her everything.” Confiding in nosy neighbours, they convinced her “the truth will always out” and she’d pay for her lies. Overcome with hormones, Austina phoned Tom: “I have to tell you something…” “What about?” he said. She hesitated. “It’s about Gabrielle, isn’t it?” “What about Gabrielle?” Austina panicked; she’d planned to explain. “She’s your doctor friend’s daughter. I know everything.” “He told you?” Austina asked in shock. “I’ve known for ages. I did a test when she was one. Before my army days I was told I couldn’t have kids. I didn’t say anything—I hoped for a miracle, and thought maybe this was it. But then I began to doubt. Plus, Mum kept raising doubts… so I checked.” “But… how…” Tom cut her off: “What was I supposed to do? The girl’s innocent. And don’t you dare tell her—I’ve kept quiet for years so you wouldn’t take her from me.” Well, that’s real British drama for you! On discharge day, Austina was a bundle of nerves, watching both her daughter and her partner. They exchanged strange looks in silence. “How did you get on without me?” she asked anxiously as her son slept and Gabrielle drew pictures. “Oh, great! No one needed constant watching, we sorted things straight away.” “Did you tell her?” “Of course not—you forbade it.” “I did. So why is she so sad?” Linus smiled slyly. “Why don’t you ask her yourself?” Austina joined her daughter, who was deep in her drawing, colouring with a red pencil. There were three adults and two children. “Who’s this?” Austina asked. “I thought it was obvious—that’s you, Dad, Linus, me and Vinnie.” “That’s lovely.” “Yeah. Mummy, do you think it’s possible for someone to have two dads?” “So, you did tell her!” Austina thought. “Well… sometimes it happens,” she answered carefully. “Then, can I call Linus Dad? He’s really nice. We built a LEGO castle and watched the fish—there’s a funny shopkeeper, an old man with a cap. He asked me who my dad was, and I didn’t know what to say because we were with Linus. So I said, ‘the doctor.’ It’s cool having a doctor for a dad. I asked him, but I wanted to check with you too.” Austina was overcome with emotion, suddenly understanding the trap she’d laid for herself. Tom had already forgiven her, and so would Linus. But if Gabrielle found out the truth one day… She’d have to decide now: come clean or keep waiting for consequences. Hugging her daughter tightly, Austina whispered, “Of course you can. I think Linus would be thrilled if you called him Dad. But… let’s not tell your other dad just now, all right?”