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I Spent Thirty Years Working in a Factory So My Children Could Have a Better Life. For My Seventieth Birthday, They All Chipped in for a Flower Arrangement Delivered to My Door

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For thirty years, I worked in a textile factory so my children could have a better life. On my seventieth birthday, they pooled their money together and sent me a bouquet of flowers with a delivery.

There I was, standing alone in my empty flat, clutching a big basket of flowers from the courier, and I just started crying. If someone had told me forty years ago that Id spend my seventieth birthday like this, Id have thought they were joking, and not a funny kind of joke. But life has a knack for cruel punchlines it never asks if youre ready.

That Thursday morning, I woke up at six, just like I did for years, even though I had nowhere to go. Old habits stick. For thirty years, I used to get up before sunrise to make it on time for the morning shift at the clothing factory.

Id spent all those years sewing uniforms, aprons, and workwear. Back then in Manchester, there were a few factories like that, each filled with women hunched over their machines, their fingers worn from needles, their dreams all poured into their children. Because who else was it all for, if not them?

My late husband, God rest him, was called George. He worked on the railways. We pulled our little home together Im not complaining. At first we had a small bedsit in Salford, then later we swapped it for a two-room place with a proper kitchen in Stockport.

We had central heating at last, a little balcony overlooking the car park. The children always had clean clothes, a hot dinner, and the books they needed for school. Matthew had private English lessons, and Julia took a computer course. George took on extra shifts, and I earned a bit more in the evenings, hemming curtains and sewing dresses for the neighbours’ weddings.

And do you know what? It paid off. Matthew finished law school and now he has his own firm in London. Julia runs her own business in Birmingham something to do with marketing, though I still dont quite grasp what exactly, but people pay her for it and thats enough. I am so proud of them, I really am. Only lately, that pride tastes a bit like weak tea without sugar somethings missing, but its hard to say what.

George passed away eight years ago. His heart gave out it was quick, in the night. One evening he went to sleep and never woke up. For the first year, the children called every single day. The second year, it was once a week. These days, Matthew might ring after Sunday lunch, if he remembers.

Julia sends quick texts, two lines at most, like shes firing off a telegram: Mum, hows your health? Love you. I reply, All fine, darling. What else am I supposed to say? That I spend my evenings chatting to the telly? That some Saturdays the only person who speaks to me is the lady on the checkout at Tesco?

I spent a week preparing for my birthday. Silly old me I baked a cheesecake, the one with the shortbread base, from my mothers recipe. Bought a new tablecloth. Dug out the porcelain tea set we got as a wedding present and never used except at Christmas. Four place settings. Matthew said hed try to pop in, and Julia wrote, will check my diary.

On the morning of, Matthew rang. His voice sounded tired, as if he hadnt slept: Mum, I cant make it, Ive got a court case, they moved it forward. I didnt have a choice, really. But Ill definitely come on Saturday, all right?

An hour later, a text from Julia. Didnt call, just texted: Mum, conference in Liverpool, I wont make it, I love you, will visit at the weekend!!! Three exclamation marks. As if extra exclamations could fill her empty seat.

I stood in the kitchen staring at those four plates, at the cheesecake, at that bright new tablecloth Id picked up because the sunflowers made me smile. I put the plates away, folded the tablecloth, covered the cake with a tea towel.

At three, the buzzer rang. Delivery kid, no older than twenty, in a blue jacket. He handed over a huge basket roses, lilies, and some I didnt know and a card: Dearest Mum, wishing you health and all the best! Love, Matthew & Julia.

He grinned and said, Happy birthday! Youre clearly very loved. I took the basket it was heavy put it down on the hallway table, shut the door, and just sat on the little stool by the coat rack. Five minutes, maybe twenty, Im not sure. The flowers smelled so strong in that tiny hallway, almost overpowering.

Later, Hannah rang my only neighbour I still speak to. Shes seventy-five, lives one floor down, widowed too. Elizabeth, youve a birthday, come up for some tea Ive baked apple cake. So I went. We sat in her kitchen until gone ten. She didnt ask about the children. She knew.

Saturday, Matthew did drive over. Alone, no wife or grandchildren in tow. Stayed three hours, but was out on the balcony for at least an hour, glued to his mobile. Left an envelope of cash on the sideboard before he went. Julia cancelled the weekend: Somethings come up, Mum, but Ill be there for Christmas, I swear.

And thats when it hit me. Its not that my children dont love me they do. In their own way, in between their jam-packed schedules, fitting me in around court dates and conferences. They love me the way I once loved my sewing steadily, dutifully, but always glancing at the clock, always thinking of the next thing. I gave them thirty years so theyd never have to work like I did, and Im proud. But nobody warned me the price for their better lives would be a silent flat.

Hannah and I ate the cheesecake together. The flowers lasted a week, then wilted. The envelope from Matthew is in the drawer where George kept his old railway forms.

Yesterday, I bought myself a ticket for a coach trip to the Lake District. Two days, a group of other pensioners. Hannahs coming along. When I told Julia on the phone, she was surprised: Mum, since when do you go anywhere?

Since my seventieth birthday, love, I said.

She went quiet for a few seconds, then said, Thats nice, Mum, and changed the subject. But those three seconds of silence meant more than all the exclamation marks in her texts. One day, shell understand maybe when shes sixty and theres an empty chair by her table, too. But Im not waiting for that.

Im seventy. My legs still work, I have a bus ticket and a neighbour who bakes apple cake. George would have said, Liz, no moaning, go for it. So I am.

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