For most parents, curling up on the sofa to watch a box set with their teenager is an everyday occurrence, barely noteworthy. Yet, as Tracy Glover snuggles up with her 14-year-old daughter Eliska and the pair put on Gilmore Girls, she can hardly believe it. In fact, she treasures every moment because, for five long and lonely years, the pair were torn apart after Eliska's father Jarek* fled with her to his home country of the Czech Republic.
'It was a living hell,' Tracy, 48, from Bradford, remembers. 'In the early days, I kept thinking it was a nightmare, or that he would change his mind - but he didn't.'
When Tracy met Jarek, in a local pub in 2005, there was no sign of the horror that was to unfold. 'He was handsome and charming. I guess it was curiosity that led me to talking to him,' Tracy admits.
They became a couple, going on trips to the Czech Republic to visit Jarek's family and moving in together after 18 months.
'We were really happy, I trained to be a teacher things were going well,' Tracy recalls.
Then, in 2008, Tracy fell pregnant. 'I was excited to start a family. I was adopted and had always wanted children,' Tracy smiles. 'I had vivid dreams about having a girl - I could see her face so clearly - and when Eliska was born, she was the girl I'd imagined.'
Nearly five years younger than Tracy, Jarek, then 29, seemed overwhelmed but was loving and caring toward his daughter. And for Tracy, with her new baby, came new worries. 'I became anxious that social services would try to take her away, Tracy says. "There was no reason for it - maybe because I'd been separated from my biological mother as a baby.
This story is from the June 27, 2023 edition of Woman's Weekly.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the June 27, 2023 edition of Woman's Weekly.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Take off to HOUSTON
This Texan city is packed with fun and budget-friendly things to do
MONEY makers
Seven brilliant ways to earn some extra cash
January GEMS
A surprising number of plants are flowering right now. Try these top picks
Feeling FORGETFUL?
It's not always a sign of dementia. Here's what else it might mean – and how to spot and fix it
'I make the most of every day'
THIS WEEK'S COLUMNIST Fashion designer and podcast host Amanda Wakeley
It's amazing to see your child having a baby!"
With a gorgeous granddaughter and another novel on the way, Lorraine Kelly has lots to look forward to
Our wise OLD OWLS
They're fearsome hunters, protective parents and among our most beautiful birds
A stitch IN TIME
Three women share their passion for embroidery, crochet and knitting
Here to help
LET COUNSELLOR KEREN LIGHTEN YOUR LOAD
Doctor Gill
This condition, known medically as lateral epicondylalgia, causes pain where tendons attach the hand muscles to bone on the elbow