In October 1994, I loaded a couple of holdalls of clothes, a box of cassettes, a frying pan, three tea mugs and some rolled-up posters into the back of my dad’s car. Then he drove me down to university for the first time. He had come to pick me up from the house I shared with my mum. When I kissed mum goodbye on the doorstep, she wiped a couple of tears from her eyes.
I was the last to fly the nest and now she was all alone. “Don’t worry about the crying,” dad said a few moments later in the car. “Women get like that all the time for no reason whatsoever. Just ignore it.”
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My old man is not the sentimental type. But I am. I was gutted to be saying goodbye to my mum. I was excited about university, but I was also fretful: I had a tendency towards homesickness, enjoyed my home comforts, and suspected that student life might not be for me. To be honest, I felt like crying that day too, but I didn’t want to worry my mum or irritate my dad, so I kept my upper lip as stiff as possible as we trundled down the A23 to Sussex.
And then, in what felt like the blink of an eye, it was September 2025, and I was trundling up the M1 in my own car, taking my daughter to university. At times, life seems to move so heartbreakingly fast. I can still feel the lump in my throat and the fluttering in my stomach that accompanied that journey with my dad in 1994. Three years of university still feels like something massive lying ahead, not a distant memory fading in the rear-view mirror.
All of the same feelings of anxiety, excitement, hope and pain were present as we drove my daughter to university 31 years later. There were four of us in the car: my wife, my daughter, my son and me. At various stages of the drive, we all had our wobbly moments. Tears are not something anyone in our family feels the need to hide. Repressing all of my fear and emotion when I was a kid just made a tough situation worse.