Modern Athlete Magazine Issue 128, March 2020 | Page 18

ROAD RUNNING of tea, which she always made in a teapot and not in a cup. Recalling that through all of her struggles, it was God and the church who were her constant and most trusted companions. “Ouma never really settled into the role of mother- in-law. Your father always allowed her to interfere in decisions that we should have taken as a married couple.” My mother expected Ouma to be more sympathetic and support her decision, but she was reading the old woman all wrong, and was told if she intended to go through with the divorce, it would be best to find somewhere else to stay as quickly as possible. “Andrew says the children stays here till his return, and until you can find a suitably stable home for them.” The last stipulation was never to be, because it took Mom years to find a place she could call home, and in the end my mother became a peripheral figure in our lives. Meanwhile, my father came home to finalise the divorce and then went back to Windhoek as soon as it was done, leaving us in the care of Ouma while he continued to party with his new single status… not that being married had stopped him before. the wonderful pain to come. The best decision I ever made was when I decided to run, and here I was running towards destiny, on my way hopefully to a better future. infidelities, but she never admonished him for them, either. “Your Mom could have tried harder than she did; he would have changed if she gave him more of a chance.” To me, it was a case of my Dad being Peter Pan, and just not wanting to grow up and leave Neverland. In 1981 my mother decided that after eight years of marriage, she could not take any more of my father’s love for ‘good times’ and loose women. The fact that they had two children to think about probably kept her in the marriage longer than she should have been there. “It was never just one thing that drove us apart but many. He did not show remorse for his actions, he seemed to think of them as normal. The choice was mine to make, either live with it or give up and go, in the end there was only one thing to do.” Divorce was the only answer she could find. Ouma grew up in a small town, where everybody knew your family. She left school in standard 2 to do domestic work and help out with the family’s finances, as this was expected of her, and she had no choice but to grow up quickly. A black-haired woman, small in stature but firm in resolve, she was a strong character and stoically met the challenges life threw at her. She moved to Cape Town on her own, without family or friends, when job opportunities were becoming scarce at home. Married life would follow, but the infant deaths of her first two kids would leave deep emotional scars. Her family would be forcibly moved to the Cape Flats by the Apartheid laws of the country, and then she had to raise her two children alone after her husband passed on prematurely. Life would trip her every so often, but she kept getting back up. My father was working in Windhoek at the time, far away from our home in Cape Town, busy partying up a storm with the locals. He did not put up much of a fight to stop the end of his marriage. Instead, he decided to ask Ouma to make sure that Mom did not take his kids, and that she left the wedding ring he bought. My ouma was not impressed with the actions of her daughter-in-law. She believed a wife’s duty was to stand by her husband, no matter what his indiscretions were. She never approved of Dad’s 18 “God tests our love and faith with the struggles life puts in front of us, we must always pray for His guidance and strength to see it through.” Ouma would always remind me of this as we sat at the kitchen table when I came home from school, enjoying a cup ISSUE 128 MARCH 2020 / www.modernathlete.co.za For my brother Andy and I, it seemed that my Mom was there one day and gone the next. Life would never be simple for us again. Neighbours and friends would recall how Andy changed during this period from a fun-loving adventurous spirit to a more intense and driven child. He still had the ever-present, light up the room smile on his face, but it seemed the joy had left his eyes. He has never said so, but I think he may have taken the blame of my parents’ divorce on himself, and they just never took it back from him. Two Oceans 2016