Dear Mom,

This little note of thanks is long overdue. There have been many moments to write it.

I probably should have written it on January 25 1988 after deciding the only way to enter this world was through you, not around you. Without even a courteous “excuse me” or a civil “I am terribly sorry to bother you ma’am but if I could just get past, that would be great”. Instead I chose to tear right through you, to arrive and do nothing except demand to be loved and fed.

And changed.

All this and no offer of anything in return but sleepless nights, the odd smile and that lovely “new human smell”.

Maybe I should have started the letter when I was five and lost in a mall. How I could stand in the middle of a busy toy store in New York and shout “Muuuuuummm” and somehow, with hundreds of kids around, you knew it was me and found me.

I could have penned it the first time you gave me a whopping so hard my hiney, to this day, still feels the sting. My brain remembers the lesson. Respect your elders. The old lady who I gave my seat to and the elderly gentleman who I made time to assist even though I had “young thundercat stuff to do” thank you.

Maybe it was when you tried to teach me about the birds and the bees with the help of bubble bath. The effort was commendable if not somewhat hilarious.

A good time I should have probably penned it was when you sent me to an amazing school in a far-off fairy-tale land when you were not even sure where the money would come from but like the magical creature you are you made it appear out of thin air.

I suppose I could have written it when I was a teenager and my catch phrase was “you are ruining my life, you just don’t understand me”. After I decided to go wandering the streets of London chasing a party thrown by friends and lying to you about where I was. You still to this day refuse to hear the story as you say it makes your “womb hurt”.

Then again I suppose I could have written a little more every time I went out to meet friends and you stayed awake waiting then pretended you were not checking at the window. When you would feign sleep or say you wanted to catch up on your TV shows. I saw you peak through the curtain as I drove in.

I could have and at least brought about a draft when I pulled the “you never let me do anything” when you stopped me from going to that party where people died in a stampede.

Or when I did not speak to you for four days because you had brought me to South Africa for the first time. You had again “ruined my life” by taking me from my friends. This is a country I have now called my home for 10 years.

I could have penned it last Christmas when you insisted I come home. Again. When you insisted family was important, a value I know will always serve me well.

Every time you gave me advice that changed my life and gave me hope. The times when you were so wise I thought it bordered on sorcery or clairvoyance. Every time you make a flash judgement on my life based in as much love as misunderstanding of who I have become.

But as has been said procrastination is the art of keeping up with yesterday so I choose to pen it now when the next generation is coming.

When people with who I mumbled “damn they just here to ruin my life” now send me messages saying “if this child I am carrying ever backchats me … “.

I pen it as I lose yet another partner in chardonnay to the miracle of morning sickness. As I now witness first-hand, women who I knew could sleep through a house party wake at the slightest cough three doors down. As I see friends who would not share their last stick of gum give this tiny human they made everything their body can produce.

When I witness the mistakes we will all make that will prove like you, we are not perfect but we do the damn hardest we can. As I realise this is a cycle that is as old as time.

As I see statistics such as 53% of working mothers in South Africa are single parents or how in other parts of Africa, such as Kenya, six of every 10 women will become single mothers by the time they reach 45.

In light of all this I say thank you mother to the woman who raised me. And to the village of women who helped her. To everyone else who was blessed with an amazing mother I say do not be an ungrateful random grouping of cells and give the woman a call.

Author

  • Tiffany Kagure Mugo is the host of the Basically Life podcast and author of Touch: Sex, Sexuality and Sensuality and Quirky Quick Guide to Having Great Sex

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Tiffany Kagure Mugo

Tiffany Kagure Mugo is the host of the Basically Life podcast and author of Touch: Sex, Sexuality and Sensuality and Quirky Quick Guide to Having Great Sex

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