Clijsters: I've lost the guilt of the working mum as my kids grew up

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Kim Clijsters says the guilt of being a mother competing in top level sport has eased as she prepares to return to tennis at the age of
36.The Belgian, a former world number one and four-time Grand Slam winner, is quietly building towards one of the most unlikely sporting
comebacks in history.Seven years after quitting tennis and now a mother to three children - Jada, 11, Jack, six, and Blake, three - she
believes she can still compete with the best players in the world.Image:Clijsters practicing at her sports centre in Bree"Some people think
I'm mad but to me it feels fine because I'm following a feeling," she said."Something got triggered and I'm following that emotion
I wouldn't be able to do it if I felt I was pushing myself
But I have to believe I can do this."Clijsters had intended to return at the Australian Open this week but was delayed by a knee injury and
will begin what she is calling her "third career" in March.She is already the architect of one of the greatest sporting comebacks of all
time
In 2009, after two years away from the Tour - during which time she gave birth to her first child - she decided to return.The tennis world
was stunned when she won the US Open in her third tournament back as an unranked player, lifting the trophy while cradling daughter Jada in
her other arm."I remember when Jada was younger and I had to go to practice and she would be crying at the glass back door and I would feel
guilty," she said.Image:Kim Clijsters after beating Serena Williams in 2002"You lose a bit of that guilt as your kids get older and the more
kids you have
Now I'm a bit older and I leave and the kids are at school."They don't know I have hours of practice, because they haven't seen that and
their schedule hasn't really changed."She added: "I can now talk to Jada about whether she wants to travel with me, and she'll say: 'If the
hotel's nice and there's a really good breakfast, I'll come to the tournament.'"Clijsters, who runs a tennis academy for young players
bearing her name, has always preferred to live a quiet life and certainly doesn't court the fame which inevitably accompanies her
success.She was raised in the city of Bree in the Flemish region of Belgium, home to about 15,000 people and still lives there with husband
Bryan, a former professional basketball player, and their children.It was not Clijsters' intention to be viewed as an inspirational figure
to other mothers but she says that is a happy part of the venture.Image:Kim Clijsters at the US Open in 2002"I think if it happens
naturally, that's great," she said."When I think of women I look up to, it's when I feel there's a passion behind what they're doing
In the past when I started playing again after I had Jada, I got letters from women who were inspired."I've got women who come up to me now
who say they started running because of me
I'm sure there's other women who think: 'Why can't you just stay home?'"But I was just mum for a long time and it feels good to come back
and know that the kids aren't too impacted by my decision
I want to be able to be able to go running, play paddle and do basketball in the back yard."Some coaches of rival players have cast doubt on
whether Clijsters can cope with the increase in power in the women's game since she last played
But she points to the likes of Serena and Venus Williams and Roger Federer are examples of why tennis is an older person's game
presently."It certainly seems to be that way," she laughed
"I do feel that I have improved but it's been so many years that it's hard to compare to how I felt when i was 21 years old."I'm sure I was
a lot quicker, my reactions were better and my eyesight was better."Does she still believe she can win tennis tournaments? "I don't know,"
she said."But I would like to see if it's possible
I want to see how far I can push myself
I have to believe I can do it, I have to keep pushing."