For most women, bringing a baby home from hospital is a joyous occasion.
But for Nicole, the noise of her child’s cries brought back frightening memories of a childhood involving “a lot of screaming”.
“My dad left when my brother and I were babies because mum had paranoid schizophrenia and was in and out of hospital and lived in a fantasy world,” she says.
While her grandmother took over parenting responsibilities, the two matriarchs often fought and Nicole’s mother’s erratic behaviour – such as turning up unannounced at Nicole and her brother Jeff’s primary school – would often leave the pair frightened and confused.
“(T)he teachers would hide us, because mum was raving that people were trying to get us and we had to go away together and hide from people and kill ourselves,” Nicole says.
Despite these difficulties, Nicole finished high school, moved, found work interstate and met her husband Mike in 2000. Life, for a time, felt “amazing”, she recalls.
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It wasn’t until she fell pregnant with her first child at 36 that the effects of her difficult childhood manifested.
“Sienna was born about five weeks early and right from the start, she was always crying,” Nicole says.
“When I brought her home, Sienna couldn’t be with me because she was crying all the time. As soon as I heard her crying, it set something off in me, I just found it really difficult to cope.”