Five minutes sounds like nothing. But five minutes is a yawning eternity when you don’t know where your child is.
I lost my daughter the other day.
One minute I was watching my two little kids playing together, my son trying to scramble up a shallow wall behind his long-legged sister. The next, my boy had bolted, and I was running after him.
Seconds passed while I chased down my little runner, and then I turned back to my daughter. And she had gone.
It was a busy morning at the edge of the beach where we live. A weak Wintry sun was out and there were people everywhere, getting coffees, power-walking, throwing balls for dogs, chasing kids on scooters. As I stood a moment, trying to contain a wriggling two-year-old, I refocused my eyes through the constantly moving scene to spot a little red-headed girl in a pink tutu. She wasn't there. To me, it seemed like there was a little Matilda-shaped gap where she'd been standing seconds earlier.
Anyone who has ever been in the same situation will know the feeling of rising panic that begins to bubble up when you realise your child is not where you thought she was.
And as I began to look for her, with a silent chant of 'stay calm, stay calm, stay calm' pounding my ears, I start to move.
My daughter knew that we were heading to a cafe to pick up drinks, so that is the first place I look. No sign of her. There's a park opposite. No sign of her.
I'm shouting her name now, and I can feel myself getting hot. I strap my son into his stroller and begin to push him down the street, away from the cafe, shouting for her the whole time. My heart is beginning to pound. I stop to take my jacket off. I'm so hot.