З життя
For the Cash, I Pretended to Be Five Years Younger—Years Later, My Husband Discovered the Truth and We Split Up
I was born in a quaint English village in the Midlands. After finishing Year Eight, I enrolled at a local culinary college and completed my studies four years later. At that time, there was a great deal of talk and excitement surrounding the building of the High Speed Rail from London to Manchester. Inspired by the romance of the project and eager for adventure, I decided to join the workforce there.
Though I was employed in my trade, it only took five years for me to realise that romantic notions are all well and good, but theres more to life than chasing dreams without a plan.
During my stint on the railway, I met Thomas Brown, a resourceful impresario from London, who had plenty of connections in the capital. I took a chance, travelled to London, and found Thomas. I asked him to help me enrol at the Institute of Food Technology. He didnt refuse, but remarked that it wouldnt come cheap. Id managed to put aside a handsome sum while working along the rail line, so I agreed. I paid him £4,000a sizeable amount back then.
I also arranged to alter my school certificate and passportboth of which cost additional money. Now, according to my new passport, I was five years younger, and my new certificate boasted only As and Bs.
Thomas did get me into the institute, but he was taken aback when he saw my new passport, asking why Id bothered to change my birth year so drastically. I brushed it off, joking that Id find myself a younger husband. I told myself that, with papers showing I was eighteen, I could easily start as a first-year student at the Food Industry Institute.
Life changed dramatically after that. My surroundings shiftedI was now amongst fresh-faced college students, energetic and cheerful. A year later, I married Mark Johnson, who was nineteen at the time. He hailed from London, and I moved in with his family.
After finishing university, the country was swept up in the waves of Thatcher-era reforms. Mark and I adapted quickly, rented a modest space, and opened a small café. In time, we managed to buy the property outright and became proud owners of our own bar.
We lived fairly comfortably together, though we never had children. Eventually, we decided to revisit my old village for a little nostalgia. I caught up with old classmates and friends. Life had certainly set me apartI was in far better shape than most of my peers, and they envied my appearance and circumstances. One of my classmates took it upon herself to reveal to Mark that Id worked on the High Speed Rail and wasnt quite as young as my documents claimed.
After that, Mark accused me of deceit. He changed, turning to drink, and our relationship collapsed. We divorced, and our family business was split between us. I bought a flat with my share; Mark, caught up in financial troubles, took out risky loans from the bank that proved problematic after our separation.
Despite reaching retirement age, Im still working. I often recall Thomass wordshis surprise at my decision to make myself five years younger on paper. But whats done cannot be undone, and youth rarely considers the consequences of its actions.
On a recent visit to my mother, I bumped into a former classmate. Shes been retired for two years already, busy with her grandchildren and tending her garden. Ive got another four years to slog through, though my health isnt what it once was. When were young, we make choices that haunt us in later years.
Perhaps others have faced a similar dilemma, or know of someone whos tried to shave years off their age. I wish I could find a way to undo my foolish decision from all those years ago. If nothing else, Ive learned that shortcuts in life often come with a priceand its always best to be true to oneself.
