My Mum Told Me to Get Rid of My Baby—Now I’ll Never Be a Mum Myself

My mother told me to get rid of the baby, and now I will never have children of my own.

I was sixteen when I found out I was pregnant by a boy I loved dearly. His name was William, and we’d been together for a year. We were classmates, side by side every school day. The day I discovered I was expecting, an uncanny fog crept into everythingI felt swallowed by secrets and panic. William and I didn’t breathe a word to our parents. But shadows have a way of stretching, and soon enough, our secret was spilled. My parents erupted in anger, their voices echoing through the halls of our tidy, well-kept house in Oxford. Ours was a picture-perfect English family, the sort you’d see nodding politely and achieving top marks. I, the only daughter, never once brought them shamethat is, not until now.

We were too youngthey said so, over and over, icy cups of tea trembling in their hands. Mum and Dad had painted all their hopes for me in pastel colours: university, career, a sensible wedding. An unexpected baby was not on the palette. Choices were not choices, not for me. Our parents made their decision on our behalf while we drifted, voiceless, as though caught in a current. Mum escorted me, grim and silent, to the surgery in a city I barely recognised while half-awake. The doctor wore a tie with blue ducks on it. Afterwards, it was just another rainy afternoon, though the sky outside looked like watered milk. It wasn’t too late, they said. There were sighs of relief, biscuits passed about; I just went back to school, tucked away inside my own unspoken storm.

William and I carried on. The seasons wheeled by in dreamlike hazewe saw each other, sat exams, left school, entered university. A year later we were married, a small ceremony with roses and grey clouds drifting by overhead. Our parents, lighter now, left us be. Then the day came when my world shifted again: another child was coming. This time there were no secretseveryone was elated, especially us. The world felt clear and soft, like the air after an English rain.

But at six months, the dream twisted. One morning the world melted, colours running together, as blood stained the floor. The boy arrived quietly, impossibly tinyless than three pounds. He breathed for three hours beneath strange hospital lights, then slipped away as quietly as hed come.

Complications ensnared me like ivy on a crumbling wall. The doctors in their white coats, all sighs and muted tones, said they were sorry but had to remove my womb. My mother came to the hospital in her best wool coat, smelling faintly of lavender, and told me through tears that she was sorry for forcing me to end my first pregnancy all those years ago. But apologies didnt restore what had been lost. Regret cannot be unwoven, nor the years rewound.

Now, I drift through the days with William, uncertain if we belong to each other or merely walk side by side, ghosts in a world where children tumble across green fields while we stand apart, watching, untouchable. Family games echo from neighbours gardens while our own home remains silent, save for the ticking clock. I will never be a mother now. I wonder: can happiness grow in such emptiness, when something so important is forever missing?

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My Mum Told Me to Get Rid of My Baby—Now I’ll Never Be a Mum Myself
The Door Left Ajar He didn’t notice at first that something was wrong. He stepped out of the lift onto the ninth floor, reached into his pocket for his keys, and wandered towards his flat, the hum of champagne and salads still buzzing in his head. The hallway was quiet, unusually so for this night—the only sounds were laughter and slamming doors drifting up from a floor below. At his own flat, he paused, bracing his palm against the wall so as not to miss the keyhole, and only then caught, out of the corner of his eye, the flickering to his left. The neighbours’ door, just across the wall, was left slightly ajar, open by a hand’s width. In the dim corridor, coloured fairy lights were draped over the coat stand inside their hallway, and from within, almost inaudibly, drifted an old song—a woman’s voice singing, “Snowflake, snowflake, don’t melt away.” He froze with his key still in the air. The stairwell felt cool, scented with something fried lingering from someone’s kitchen, and the deodorant trapped in his jacket. Fragmented toasts from friends echoed in his mind: “To health, to us, to staying young,” and the emptiness pressed sharper for it. At the friends’ gathering, it had been noisy, the room bustling, children racing between beds and windows, someone setting off streamers. He’d laughed, drank, listened to chat about mortgages, Turkey, endless renovations. At midnight, glasses clinked, hugs were shared, tears spilled after the third glass. Then the taxi ride through a half-empty city, garlands twinkling in the trees, and here he was, in pinching leather shoes, a gentle throb in his temple and strange clarity: for all of it, he was going home alone. The neighbours. He knew their faces, not their names. The man was about sixty, greying at the temples, a slight paunch under his sweater, always nodded politely in the lift. The woman was a bit shorter, cropped hair and a mesh shopping bag, forever carrying groceries. They’d lived here before him. When he’d moved in fifteen years ago, their surname was already on the brass plate beside the door, but he’d never really read it. A hello, a nod, the odd exchange about hot water hoses, and that was it. He stared at the door left ajar. The music played softly. The fairy lights blinked as if half asleep. Inside it was dark, just the faint glow of a corridor lamp, and the door didn’t move. The logical first impulse was simply to walk past; maybe they were airing out the flat, maybe they’d forgotten, not his concern. He’d already begun turning his key in his own lock, but something pricked at him. An open door on New Year’s night, when everyone else was holed up with guests, wary of strangers and stray fireworks. Old songs drifting from the darkness, just like his childhood. And a nagging sense: if he simply disappeared inside his own flat, kicked off his shoes and set the TV to reruns, his life might remain just that—beside people he’d never really known, separated only by a wall. He withdrew the key and listened. No voices, no laughter, only the tail-end of one song and another starting, about a little blue carriage. He grimaced. What if something was wrong? Someone fallen, unable to reach the door? You read stories all the time about elderly neighbours only discovered after days. He remembered seeing the man a few weeks earlier, hunched in the pharmacy, fumbling for coins, apologising to the queue. “All right,” he murmured to himself and took a step towards their door. He tried gently pressing it with his fingertips. The door moved slightly, then stopped against something soft. Peering through the gap, more of the hallway came into view: a worn rug, a pair of boots, fluffy ladies’ slippers. It smelled of cold roast chicken and mandarins, the scent already fading but still holding on. Coats hung from the rack, the fairy lights dangling haphazard over hangers to the floor. “Hello?” he called, cautiously. “Er…are you at home?” No answer. The music played steadily, so electricity and devices were fine. He rapped on the wood. “Neighbours, you alright in there?” A muffled sound inside, then footsteps approached. The door widened and the lady of the house appeared in the gap: pink-cheeked, her eyes tired, festive curls falling limp. A sparkly sweater draped her shoulders, a thin chain at her neck. “Oh,” she said, instantly grabbing for the handle as if to close it. “Sorry, we were just…” He raised his hands, apologetic. “I…um…door was left open. Just thought…you never know. Is everything okay?” She gave him a once-over, clocked his slightly crooked tie, and the leftover salad bag in his hand—and seemed, finally, to recognise him. “Oh, you’re from the ninth, right?” she said. “Yes, yes, all fine. We just…had the window open and…” From deep inside, a man’s voice shouted: “Who’s that, Lyd–is it more party poppers?” “Neighbour!” she called back. “Ours, from the floor.” The door nudged wider and there was the man—shirt untucked, top button undone, clutching a glass of something amber. His face was creased, but his eyes clear. “Oh, hello,” he said. “Happy New Year.” “And you too,” replied Anton, realising he still didn’t know their names. “I…saw the door. Thought maybe a draft had blown it, or you’d stepped out.” “We just…” The woman—Lydia—smiled weakly. “Force of habit. I go to bin the rubbish and never bother to shut it all the way. Today I got distracted, left it open. Sorry if we startled you.” He nodded, already backing away. “Well, if all’s well, I’ll let you get back. Happy New Year…” “Wait a minute,” the man—Victor—suddenly said. “Come in for a minute, since you’ve stopped by.” Anton hesitated. “I…was just with friends. Ate, drank. I’d be intruding…” “No intrusion,” Victor waved it off. “Neighbours, aren’t we? Twenty years’ worth of hellos, never once sat down together. Lydia, let’s pour him a shot?” Lydia shrugged, but the gesture was more welcoming than not. “Come on in. Nothing fancy. Shoes off, kitchen’s through there.” Anton glanced reflexively at his own door. Keys heavy in his pocket, his leftover salad and unopened champagne still in hand. The cold emptiness of his own flat felt suddenly sharper. “All right,” he said. “Just for a minute.” He left his shoes by theirs: two pairs of men’s boots, old but smart, woman’s boots, but no children’s. Took his bag with him out of habit, not sure where to leave it. “Let me take that,” Lydia offered. “What have you got?” “Oh, you know,” he stammered. “Salad and champagne. Didn’t finish it.” “Perfect,” she smiled. “We’re out of bubbly. Looks like you brought a present.” The kitchen was small but welcoming; salads and herring under a fur coat, slices and tangerines still set on the table. Between the plates, a vase of fir branches with a couple of ornaments. On the windowsill, another set of fairy lights flickered. A woman of fifty or so sat at the table, glasses perched on her nose as she scrolled her phone. Next to her, an empty glass on a stool. “This is my sister, Tanya,” Lydia introduced. “Tanya, this is our neighbour from nine. What’s…” “Anton,” he supplied. “Anton Sergeyevich.” “Oh, so formal!” Victor chuckled. “We’re never that posh here. I’m Victor,” he said, reaching out. “Just call me Victor.” Warm, rough handshake. “Sit down, Anton,” Tanya said, pulling over a stool. “Lydia’ll get you a plate.” Anton settled in, self-conscious. He noticed the black-and-white photo on the wall—Victor, young, in uniform, Lydia with long hair, holding a boy by the hand. Magnets on the fridge of cities he’d never visited. “Well then,” Victor splashed glasses with clear liquid. “A toast—to opening doors sometimes, and not just closing them.” Anton smiled; it sounded grand, but Victor was sincere, more tired than pompous, somehow determined. They drank. The vodka was surprisingly gentle, warmth spread in his chest. From the next room, music played on—a man’s voice now singing of “three white horses.” “So, where were you tonight?” Lydia asked, doling out salad. “With friends,” Anton replied. “Busy, noisy, with kids.” “Home alone then?” Tanya peered over her glasses. He nodded, avoiding detail. “My daughter’s with her husband in Manchester,” he blurted, half out of habit, and checked himself—he hadn’t meant to talk about it tonight. “Family there, you know. And I’m…just me, really.” “I get it,” Lydia said quietly. “Our son’s out in Kent. Says he’s spending New Year’s with the in-laws. It’s fine – young people have their own plans.” Victor snorted. “We don’t mind,” he echoed. “Just, haven’t seen the grandkids in half a year. But we don’t mind, of course.” Tanya’s smile carried a flash of sadness. “How long have you lived here, Anton?” she asked, peeling a tangerine. “Fifteen years,” he said. “Since I…since I divorced. Bought the flat, moved in.” “Gosh,” Lydia shook her head. “I always thought you were new. You seem…young for it.” He grinned. “Thanks. I’m fifty-two.” “Victor’s sixty-two,” Tanya tossed in. “Keeps saying he’s just a lad at heart.” “And I am—at least inside,” Victor laughed, pouring another round. Quiet but genuine laughter. Anton felt his shoulders relax a little. He began to notice details: folded napkins, the old clean tablecloth lamped with beetroot stains, a plate topped by a cold, half-eaten drumstick. “I remember you,” Lydia ventured. “Saw you come up in the lift once, all boxes and books. Thought, ‘We’ve got a clever one moving in.’” “When I moved in, yes,” Anton nodded. “Did it all myself. My back complained for a week.” “I remember you came home one night covered in snow,” Victor recalled. “Ten years back now. I’d just come in, saw you wrestling a Christmas tree stuck in the door. Helped you free its branches.” Anton was taken aback. He’d vaguely remembered the tree, never thought anyone else had. “It’s odd,” he said. “We live side-by-side, but we only know odd fragments about each other.” “What else do you need?” shrugged Tanya. “As long as there’s no noise or rubbish left about.” “And flooding’s the main thing!” Victor added. “Students on the seventh floor—now them, we know all too well.” They laughed over tales of parties below, the old lady on eight who scolded for bin mess. The talk flowed, slow at first, then easier, like warm tea. Anton talked about the office, how he’d been switched to remote work and then hauled back in. About office parties he didn’t care for but attended (“got to show your face”). How it felt strange to be in a team where half were younger than his daughter. Victor spoke of the factory, of closures, attempts to find work elsewhere, finally patching up bits for neighbours. Lydia chipped in little stories—Victor wallpapering the neighbour’s lounge at midnight to fund a fridge, their weekends tending to an allotment they’d had to sell. Tanya recalled old New Year’s Eves—a trio in another flat, real pine tree, a houseful of guests. The guests had faded off over the years, everyone splitting for their own families, their own gardens and habits. “We always thought,” Lydia said, topping up his glass of champagne with his own bottle, “that you, Anton, were some important manager. Always so put together, suit and briefcase…” He snorted. “Not at all. Ordinary office person. Suit’s a dress code. Briefcase holds my laptop.” “Still,” she insisted, “you always looked like a man who knew what he was doing.” He pondered. Did he know what he was doing? Tonight, here, sitting at a stranger’s kitchen table, he felt more like a man who’d made a wrong turn and stopped in someone else’s story. “So—guessing games now—what did you imagine I did?” he asked. “I figured lawyer,” Victor admitted. “You have that walk…businesslike.” Tanya smiled. “I thought you were a teacher. Saw you once talking to a lad who’d drawn on the wall. You just calmly explained why he shouldn’t.” Anton remembered. That was the neighbour’s boy from six, ten or so. He’d intervened, spoken gently and moved on. Forgotten in a week—but not by everyone, apparently. “How strange,” he said. “We invent whole other people from little snapshots.” “And what did you think about us?” Lydia rested her chin in her hand. He hesitated, sheepish—he’d never really thought much at all. “Well…” he paused. “I figured…just an ordinary family. Children, grandkids, all of you together at holidays.” Victor sighed. “So you pictured singing and accordion, did you? But it’s just us—three at the kitchen table, telly on in the lounge.” “And the music,” Tanya said. “Had to have my songs on tonight.” A hush for a moment as another tune finished, the radio host introducing the next. “There used to be a full house here,” Lydia said quietly. “Our son, his friends, my parents visiting. We didn’t fit in the kitchen, had to use the table in the lounge. Now…well, everyone’s scattered. My parents gone, our son far off, his life elsewhere. Not saying it’s bad. Just…different.” Anton nodded, recalling his own lost holidays—back when he was married, a packed table, in-laws and friends. Then divorce, the odd years of visiting his daughter, sometimes alone, sometimes taking up colleagues’ invitations just to avoid his empty flat. This year he’d chosen a noisy party, still feeling a guest at someone else’s celebration. “When I left friends’ tonight,” he found himself saying, “it felt like I was heading to a hotel—not home. The flat, the stuff…it’s mine, but…” He trailed off, words escaping. “I understand,” Tanya nodded. “When my husband died, I lived like that a while. Everything was mine, but felt borrowed.” Lydia squeezed her shoulder, and Anton felt a knot in his throat. “Sorry,” he said. “I didn’t know.” “And why would you?” Tanya replied softly. “We only nod in the lift.” Talk lingered on, time stretching gentle and relaxed. They remembered old New Years: the blackout in the ‘90s warming food on a gas flame, the upstairs flooding that had Victor collecting drips in a bucket midnight, Anton’s year spent on a train home where everyone toasted with plastic cups. Gradually, the bottles emptied and salads cooled; the room slipped into slow songs as the clock pushed past three. No-one hurried to send Anton off. He realised he felt good—not jubilant like at the loud party, but peaceful. He listened as Lydia shared stories about working at the library, how fewer folk borrow books now. Victor joked about his ailments, comparing them to a car’s MOT checks. Tanya talked of her job in housing accounts—endless complaints from residents. “You know,” Victor mused at one point, “I always said folks in this building were like on the Tube: get in, ride along, get off. But here we are together, talking, and it doesn’t feel so scary—getting older.” Anton smiled. “Scary isn’t ageing,” he said. “It’s ending up alone.” “Exactly,” Lydia agreed. “Sometimes at night, I worry—if something happened and Victor was at the shop or the allotment, who’d know? And you, Anton—if something happened to you, who’d check in?” He hesitated. Colleagues, friends, his daughter—everyone far off, busy. “No one,” he answered honestly. “Maybe my boss if I missed a week of work.” “That’s just it,” Tanya replied. “There’s three of us right here. We could at least know each other’s numbers.” Victor snorted. “Now you’re getting ideas, sis?” “Just practical,” Tanya said calmly. “Not to ring all the time, just in case.” Anton nodded. It seemed sensible–but now, somehow, it felt important. “Let’s do it,” he agreed. “Would be silly not to.” They got their mobiles. Lydia dictated her number, Anton saved it as “Lydia, neighbour.” Victor gave his, “Victor, neighbour.” Tanya too, another new name in Anton’s contacts—not just a face in the corridor anymore. “Be sure to save mine,” he added. “If you ever need anything.” Lydia wrote his out, stuck it with a magnet on the fridge. “There—now we know your name, not just ‘the chap from nine’.” At four, fatigue washed over the group; Lydia yawned, Victor rubbed his eyes, Tanya watched the clock. “You should get home,” Lydia smiled. “We’ve kept you too long.” Anton checked his phone: twenty to five. He felt heavy from the day. “Yes, probably,” he agreed. “Thank you. For…” He paused, searching for the word—for food, for company, for letting him in. “For the company,” Tanya prompted. “We enjoyed it too.” Victor got up, swaying a little. “I’ll walk you to your door,” he said. “Can’t have you lost in the hall.” They stepped into the corridor; music barely audible, the fairy lights blinking lazily as if ready to sleep. Anton tugged on his shoes, zipped his coat. Victor leaned a hand on the wall. “Listen, Anton,” he said, lowering his voice. “If you ever—well, whatever—knock, don’t be shy. We’re right here.” Anton nodded. “You too,” he said. “If you need anything lugged, fixed, computer issues—I’m good with that.” Victor cheered up. “Ah, the computer! Our laptop freezes all the time. Lydia always says I’ve broken it.” “I’m not blaming you,” Lydia called from the kitchen. “Just stating the facts.” Both men grinned. “Deal,” Anton said. “I’ll pop round and look at it.” A handshake. “Happy New Year, neighbour,” Victor said. “May it be—at the very least—as good as tonight.” “And you,” Anton replied. “Happy New Year.” He stepped onto the landing. Their door closed softly, not guarded as before. His own door greeted him with its usual silence. He unlocked, switched on the light. The flat looked just as always: sofa, telly, table with his untouched morning mug. Tangerines on the windowsill, the empty vase. He hung his coat, sat for a moment on the edge of the sofa, eyes closed. Faces flashed—Lydia, kindly tired, Victor with rough jokes, Tanya’s attentive smile. Their stories, gripes, their laughter. For all these years, a whole small world had lived just beyond his wall. He glanced at the wall behind which their kitchen sat. Perhaps now, Lydia was clearing plates, Victor shutting off the music, Tanya laying out a bed. It no longer felt so impassable, but somehow thinner. He made himself a glass of water, set it quietly in the sink. Back to the lounge, lights out. Sleep arrived swiftly, but before it took hold, Anton promised himself: tomorrow he’d buy something for tea and drop by—no reason needed. … Three days later, coming home after work, the hallway smelled of boiled potatoes and something sweet. All was quiet on his landing. He slipped out his keys—just as the neighbours’ door swung open. Lydia, in a dressing gown, towel in hand. “Oh, Anton,” she said, already on first-name terms. “Good thing you’re—back.” He paused, key hovering at the lock. “Something wrong?” he asked, bracing for trouble. “Oh, no.” She smiled. “I made an apple pie. Remembered you said you fix computers. Fancy popping in for a minute? I’ll feed you pie.” Anton felt a gentle warmth uncurl inside. He nodded. “Of course,” he said. “Let me just drop my bag.” He went into his own flat, left his briefcase in the hall, and returned to Lydia. She carried a dish fragrant with home-baked apples and pastry. “Come through,” she said. “Victor’s already complaining at the laptop.” He crossed the threshold. The fairy lights were still looped over the coat rack, but switched off. No music tonight. The kitchen was plain and everyday. But Anton knew: that door, once left ajar on New Year’s night, would never close on him in quite the same way again. He smiled and stepped into the kitchen.