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Today I’m 33, but I Still Cringe at What I Did When I Was 18, Almost 19 — An Embarrassing Memory That Haunts Me

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Im 33 now, but I still blush when I remember what I did at 18, nearly 19.
I was studying at university and had a very comfortable life.
We werent wealthy, but I never wanted for anything.
My mother taught maths at the local secondary school, and my father was a dentist.
Our home was always calm and orderly, with food on the table and a sense of security.
We even had a cleaner who came by regularly, so my only responsibility was to keep my own room tidy and focus on my studies.
Since I was little, I was always told that as long as I had good grades and didnt cause trouble, I was doing my job.
Id had a boyfriend at uni for more than a yeara quiet guy from a similar background to mine, well-mannered, hard-working, the kind my parents adored.
We went to the cinema, had ice cream, walked in the park.
Everything in our relationship was calm, predictable, free from drama.
Back then I didnt realise that this stability was a gift.
At a friends house party, I met someone else.
He turned up on a motorbike, dressed differently from everyone else, talking loudly and laughing even louder.
He didnt go to universityhe worked as a mechanic in a garage.
From that very night he started to pursue me, sending me messages, waiting for me outside uni, telling me that I was too pretty to waste my time with boring lads.
I started seeing him secretly.
I lied to my boyfriend, my parents, and my friends.
Life with the mechanic was a rush: bike rides at night, pints at scruffy pubs, loud music, quick getaways.
I felt alive like I was doing something daring, becoming someone new.
Only a few months passed before he asked me to move in with him.
I didnt manage to break things off properly with my good boyfriend I simply didnt know how to handle it.
But I said yes nonetheless.
One evening, I packed a bag while my parents were out, left them a note, and slipped out.
I moved into his place, where he still lived with his parents.
Thats when reality hit.
The house was tiny and always a mess; it was stiflingly hot inside.
Instead of getting up for lectures, Id get up to make breakfast, sweep the floors, mop, scrub the bathrooms, and wash laundry in the sink.
The only things I knew how to cook were rice or fried chicken.
His mum looked at me with suspicion if dinner was too basic.
His dad found fault with everything I did.
Id cry in the bathroom, feeling utterly useless.
I dropped out of uni I had no money for the bus fare, no time to study.
He began to change.
He was drinking beers every afternoon at the garage because of the heat, disappearing with his mates at weekends.
Hed come home drunk, shouting and complaining the house wasnt spotless, that I didnt know how to be a proper woman.
He told me I was spoilt, useless, that my parents had raised me to be incapable.
I felt trapped.
I had no money, no degree, and nowhere else to go.
Days and weeks passed, and I kept thinking of the life Id left.
My neat room, my comfortable bed, my university notebooks, my mum always checking if Id eaten, my dad dropping me off in the car.
I even thought of the boyfriend Id abandonedhow quiet he was, how much he genuinely cared for me.
I couldnt believe Id thrown all of it away.
One day I made a decision.
I didnt say a word to anyone.
They sent me to the cheap supermarket about thirty minutes walk awaythey expected me to be gone a while.
I left with an empty shopping bag, walked two streets over, and instead of turning towards the shops, I caught a bus back to my parents house.
My whole body was shaking; I was terrified of their reaction.
When I arrived, my mum opened the door and stared at me in complete silence for a few seconds, then burst into tears.
So did I.
Ten months had gone by without a single word from me.
My dad stepped out from the living room and hugged me tight without a word.
That night, I slept in my own bed clean sheets, safe, no shouting, no fear.
I never managed to win back the good boyfriend.
Hed moved on by then.
But I got my parents back.
I returned to university.
I took up my studies again.
And I learned something I didnt want to admit: I hadnt been unhappy before.
My life wasnt dull; it was secure.
I just hadnt known how to cherish what I had, until Id lost it.

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