
For the mum who loves deeply and still gets it wrong sometimes.
A children's book that tells your child what you wish you could always say — in the moments that are hardest to say it.

Every mum has that moment.
You snapped. You shut down. You were somewhere else even when you were right there. And later — when the house was quiet — you wondered:
“Did that hurt them?”
“Will they think it’s their fault?”
“Will they remember this version of me?”
This book exists for that exact moment. It tells your child what you wish you could always say: this isn't your fault, and my love never left.
Because children don't just see our best moments. They see all of us. And when they don't have words, they fill in the gap with self-blame. That self-blame becomes a story. That story can last a lifetime.
Mummy's Big Love interrupts that story before it takes root.
For your child
Language for big feelings. Reassurance they didn't cause them. A story where love stays steady no matter what.
What it teaches
Emotional intelligence that lasts a lifetime — that grown-ups have big feelings too, and love doesn't disappear on hard days.
For you
Permission to be imperfect. A way to repair without shame. A reminder that you can always come back.
What it heals
The quiet belief that a child caused a parent's pain. The wound that so many carry into adulthood without knowing why.
What's inside
Simple, gentle words that a child can hold onto. Illustrations that show the full range of a mother — tender, tired, overwhelmed, joyful, and always, always loving.

The book mums need, too
This isn’t a parenting manual.
It’s a sigh of relief.
It helps mums:
normalise being human
reduce mum-guilt
reconnect after a hard day
repair without shame
feel good enough again
This book says:
You can come back.
You can say sorry.
Your love is still shaping them.

Why I wrote it
I’m a mum who’s been healing while parenting.
My son has seen my tenderness —
and my overwhelm.
Versions of me I loved —
and versions I wish I could take back.
The fear underneath was always the same:
“What story is he telling himself about me?”
My work with trauma survivors showed me a hard truth:
the stories children create about us become the beliefs they carry into adulthood.
I wrote this book so my son never had to interpret my behaviour alone.
I wanted to plant unconditional love in him early — and help him feel safe in all my versions.
This book is for him — and for every mum who knows that feeling.
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