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    Home»Money»My Kids Have a 17-Year Age-Gap. Motherhood Is Different This Time.
    Money

    My Kids Have a 17-Year Age-Gap. Motherhood Is Different This Time.

    Press RoomBy Press RoomNovember 28, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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    When my daughter was born, I was young and terrified. At 23, I was learning how to be an adult while learning how to raise a child. Motherhood felt vast and uncertain, like stepping into a life that expected everything from me before I’d even figured out who I was.

    Seventeen years later, I had my second child. This time around, I’m in my 40s and older and wiser.

    There’s something extraordinary about becoming a mother again after nearly two decades. The world feels different, and I am different.

    My daughter and I grew up together

    Every stage of my daughter’s life has mirrored one of my own transformations. When she began school, I returned to university to complete my teacher training, choosing a path that allowed me to share the same holidays and rhythms of her world. As she was making friends, I was learning who I was, too. When she started secondary school, I was stepping into leadership, becoming head of the department. She has seen me break, rebuild, and bloom, all before she ever reached adulthood.


    The author is shown feeding turtles in the water.

    The author said she is grateful that she and her firstborn were able to travel to so many places together.

    Courtesy of Frankie Samah



    There was a time when my anxiety was so heavy that even leaving the house felt impossible. Yet now, she has seen me carry us across continents. Together we’ve climbed glaciers, paddled through the turquoise waters of the Caribbean Sea, been blessed by monks in a Buddhist temple, been on Safaris in the Savannah, and volunteered in orphanages and women’s refuges.

    Now we live in East Africa, where mornings begin with birdsong and sunsets fold into gold. She has watched me turn fear into freedom and learned that courage can be quiet, it’s the steady decision to keep moving forward, even when it would be easier to stay still.

    I sometimes wish I had been the woman I am now, more confident and with the wisdom to guide her. But when I look back, I see a different kind of beauty in that earlier version of me. I loved my daughter fiercely, even when I didn’t fully love myself. And she learned that love isn’t about perfection; it’s about showing up, again and again, even when you’re scared.

    I started a new chapter that I never expected

    For years, I thought my story as a mother had been written. Life had taken unexpected turns, and I quietly made peace with the idea that there wouldn’t be another chapter of the parenting kind.

    Then, I met someone new. His smile, his warmth, his quiet charisma caught me off guard in the gentlest way. I wasn’t looking to start over, but life has a way of surprising you when you’ve stopped expecting it to.

    And then, suddenly, there he was. My tiny miracle, one I had never dared to imagine. I was middle-aged, comfortable in my skin for the first time, and holding a beautiful baby boy in my hands.

    It took us all time to adjust

    When I initially told my daughter that she would be getting a sibling, I could see the storm cross her face. It wasn’t anger, really; it was more confusion and hurt. For 17 years, it had just been us, our rhythm. My news rewrote her world overnight.

    During my pregnancy, I felt immense guilt. Guilt for not giving her the perfect childhood I had always wanted for her. Guilt for not giving her siblings sooner. Guilt for taking away the “just me and her” that had defined our little universe for so long.


    A woman looks out at the ocean from the side of a pool.

    The author said it took time for her and her daughter to adjust to adding another sibling to the family.

    Courtesy of Frankie Samah



    But love is a patient teacher, and over time, it showed me that families can expand without breaking. There is room for new beginnings without erasing what came before.

    Now, watching them together fills me with a kind of gratitude I can’t put into words. She’s seventeen years older, yet she holds him as if he’s always belonged in her arms.

    Motherhood is different this time around

    Now, motherhood feels quieter, more deliberate. I don’t rush to do everything perfectly or measure myself against invisible standards. I trust my instincts in a way I couldn’t before.

    The days still blur together, but I don’t wish them away; I know how quickly they pass. There’s a peace that comes with knowing who I am, and it allows me to love without the old fear or self-doubt. This time, I’m not trying to prove I can hold it all together; I’m simply allowing myself to be here, holding him.


    A beach sunset

    The author said that she has been able to slow down and take her time with her son, who was born 17 years after her daughter.

    Courtesy of Frankie Samah



    These days, I go on picnics and read my books beneath the trees, telling my son about the shapes of the clouds and the names of the birds. We sit in the stillness, and I let the moments linger. With my first, I remember always being in a hurry, rushing from one thing to the next, thinking I needed to do better, to do more, to earn more money so I could give her a better life. Looking back, I see that she has had an extraordinary one. She grew up with love, adventure, and resilience, all the things that truly matter. I think, perhaps, it was me who needed to slow down, to realise that “better” doesn’t always mean “more.”

    Raising children 17 years apart has reminded me that life has its own timing. It humbles you. It cracks you open in ways you never expect.

    My daughter got the raw, unedited version of me, all nerves and love and trial by fire. My son gets the calmer, seasoned version, softer around the edges, grounded in grace.

    But both get the same heart, just written in different chapters. In some ways, they are the bookends of my becoming.

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