The headline that Peaches might have succumbed the same way as her mum, of an accidental heroin overdose, struck more of a chord with me than I would imagine.

Yes, I was shocked as anyone at Peaches sudden passing but to discover that it might be in the same way as Paula died says much more about Peaches’ state of mind.

To her thousands of Twitter followers Peaches was a beacon of light, living out the perfect young mum existence, raising two boys, mashing vegetables, walking her dogs, painting Easter eggs. But beneath the veil of wholesome, home-spun fun, life might have been quite different.  

What I have learnt is that becoming a mother doesn't necessarily erase the hurt of losing a mother.

I didn’t lose my mum to such rock-and-roll circumstances as a heroin overdose but to common, household-name, cancer.

Loss of a parent at any age is visceral and raw but for children and young adults it seems  particularly destructive, leaving many forever weakened and fragile by that loss. 

It’s scary to admit that when I became a mother myself, it helped, but it didn’t heal. In some ways it made the absence more apparent.

In the early days I would see new mums with their mums everywhere. Steering them through the down times, the sleepless nights, the sore bits, the days when they didn’t have time to shower.   

I was fortunate to have a lovely supportive partner. But when I find myself huffing into a paper bag outside Sainsbury’s to stave off another panic attack I wonder, is this me or what happened to mum still?

You see sometimes on the really dark days (luckily these are few and far between), I resonate with those people who are brave enough to square-up to the unknown and slip into a drugged sleep.

I suspect there is nothing afterwards but maybe, just maybe I would get to see my mum again.
 
I imagine sharing a Guinness with her on a sunny Autumn day.  She would probably bark at me 14 years’ worth of stiff talking to. 

Asking why I didn’t leave ‘so and so’ sooner, why I still highlight my hair (you’re almost 40), why I wrote such a verbose inscription on her grave (grief does strange things) and, importantly, why I gave away her car boot treasure.

My mum died aged 49 and like many people whose parents have died I expect to die at the stroke of midnight on the same day. I also think that despite the warnings I am daintily pursuing the same path.

There are many steps I could do to avoid breast cancer and yet here I am, blithely drinking my daily allowance of alcohol, not exercising and rarely checking for lumps and bumps.

Perhaps Peaches was on a sabotage mission too?

In trying to recreate the idyllic childhood she had had and taking thoughtful well planned steps to avoid inflicting pain she felt, history repeated itself anyway.

Consciously I want to avoid the same route as my mum’s death; sub-consciously I suspect there's something darkly comforting suspecting it might be the same.

Whether the cause of Peaches’ death proves to be true or not, I hope that wherever she is, she’s at peace. Or enjoying a natter and a cold Guinness with Paula.

Good night sweet girl.

@melissablamey