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I’m 66 and Since January I’ve Been Living with a 15-Year-Old Girl Who Isn’t My Daughter—She’s the Da…

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Im 66 years old and, since the start of January, Ive been living with a 15-year-old girl whos not my daughter. Shes the daughter of my neighbour, who popped off to meet her maker a few days before New Years Eve. Before that, the two of them lived together in a tiny rented one-bedroom flat, just three doors down from mine. The space was modest, to put it generously: one bed for the two of them, an improvised kitchen area, and a small table that did triple duty as dining table, desk, and workstation. Luxury had clearly skipped that household, and comfort hadnt left a forwarding address. They made do with just the essentials.

The girls mum had been unwell for years, and yet, stubborn as a mule, she worked every day. I, meanwhile, sold catalogue products door-to-door (a right slog, but someones got to do it). And when the ends didnt quite meet, shed set up a little stall outside the block, peddling sausage rolls, porridge pots, and cartons of juice. After school, the girl would help out prepping, serving, tidying up. Many evenings I saw them closing up late, knackered, counting out their coins to see if thered be enough for the next day. The mother was proud as punch and worked like a Trojan. Never once did she ask anyone for help. If I managed it, Id buy them a bit of shopping or bring round a casserole, but always discreetly, so as not to bruise her pride.

I never saw guests in that flat. Nor did I ever meet any relatives. The mother never spoke of brothers, sisters, cousins or parents. So the girl grew up with just her mum pitched in from a young age, never asked for much, always made do. Looking back now, I sometimes think I shouldve insisted more often on helping, but I respected the boundary her mother set.

Her mums passing was sudden. One day she was at work; a few days later, she was gone. No drawn-out goodbyes, no relatives swooping in. The girl was left alone in that flat with rent ticking on, bills stacking up, and school looming. I remember her face: she wandered around, lost and uncertain, worrying shed end up out on the street, unsure whether anyone would take her in or send her off somewhere shed never been.

Thats when I made up my mind: shed move in with me. No grand speeches, no family meetings. I just told her, simply, You can stay here. She packed what little she had into carrier bags and came over. We shut up the flat, spoke to the landlord, and he understood the situation.

Now shes here with me, and shes anything but a burden. Nor is she someone who expects things done for her. Weve divided tasks: I deal with cooking and meal planning; she helps out with the cleaning washes dishes, makes her bed, sweeps and keeps the shared spaces tidy. We know whats what. No shouting or ordering around. Everythings talked through.

I cover her expenses: clothes, exercise books, school bits and bobs, lunch money. The schools just down the road, a couple of streets away.

Since shes moved in, its been tighter financially. Cant say Im living the high life. But it doesnt weigh on me. Id much rather this than know shes on her own, trying to cope with the same uncertainties she had living with her poorly mother.

Shes not got anyone else. And I dont have family living with me either. If Im honest, I think anyone would do the same in my shoes.
What do you make of my story?

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