I cant help but judge my twenty-year-old daughter for what she did to her family and her little girl. Shed been with Jonathan since she was fifteen, counting down the days until her eighteenth birthday so they could finally get married. Right after the wedding, they moved into a rented flat, eager to start life on their own. Times were tight at firsta shoestring budget, both of them juggling part-time jobs as waiters and shop assistants, while starting at university. But things began to look up when Jonathan landed a proper job as an assistant at an estate agency. His new salary brought some stability. That very year, they found out a baby was on the way.
My daughter couldnt stop boasting about becoming a young mumthat shed be the best parent out there. Money was just enough to set up a little nursery: they picked out a cot, a pram, and bought a few essentials well ahead of time. She dutifully attended antenatal classes, ate all the right things, and didnt let herself go without. Jonathan was fully attentivealways there, always caring. Yet, beneath it all, she was terrified of giving birth and the enormous responsibility that would follow. She confided in me, never in her husband or mother-in-law, fearing theyd see her as weak. I did my best to reassure her, told her shed cope just fine. But it turned out she couldnt.
The birth itself was gruellingtwenty-four hours in agony, and then a week in hospital with her newborn. When she last came home, she handed her daughter to Jonathan and confessed she wasnt ready to be a mother yet. She left the baby with Jonathan and his mother, and moved back in with me and her dad.
At first, we tried to talk sense into her, but she stood her ground. Jonathan himself came round, desperate for her to step up and be a proper mum, promising that his family would help however they could. Thanks to my son-in-law, Id see my granddaughter now and then. This dragged on for over six months. Then, my daughter finally realised what shed doneshe missed Jonathan and the baby, and wanted to come home.
Jonathan and his mother welcomed her back right away, yet theres a chill between them that hasnt faded. My daughter says she feels like Jonathans family is still judging her for leaving her child for half a year, and now she tries to act the devoted mother as if those missing seven months didnt exist. Honestly, I dont blame them for feeling that way. Im angry with her myselfand I keep hoping, maybe praying, that she and Jonathan will manage to sort things out and dissolve this bitterness. But I question if its truly possible. She hurt them so much by walking away.
Reflecting on all this, Im learning how fragile trust can be within a family, and how hard it is to rebuild once youve let your loved ones down.






