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Navigating Guilt, Duty & Desire As A Young Carer

“Are you telling me this because you want to study for your exam? It’s not like you are 11.”

This was my school’s safeguarding officer’s scathing assessment of me, a 17-year-old disclosing that I was struggling with supporting their mum who has mental health difficulties.

What hurt the most was that he was kind of right. I only wanted to revise distraction free, and I wasn’t 11 so perhaps cooking, cleaning, collecting medication and contacting the Department of Work and Pensions wasn’t deep enough to warrant a chat with a child protection professional.

This interaction has shaped the complex relationship I have with my role in my family. Was I a young carer? Watching Children in Need as a child and feeling sympathy for ‘real’ young carers made me think there is a world that separates theirs and mine. I was not showering my mum. I was safe at home, not exposed to violence, and as a child of immigrant parents, reading letters from the council was not unusual.