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My Parents Arranged My Wedding, But All I Wanted Was a Better Life!

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I grew up in a bustling rural English family, second eldest of ten children. From a young age, I bore the weight of countless chorescooking stews over the old Aga, scrubbing muddy laundry in cold water, minding my younger siblings as they tumbled about the orchard, weeding vegetable beds behind our cottage, and tending to the cattle at dawn. Exhaustion was a constant companion; most nights I would drift off to sleep the moment my head touched the pillow, hands still aching with the days work.

When I turned eighteen, my parents grew insistent that I marry. Another mouth to feed, theyd whisper, as if I were merely a burden waiting to be lifted. Sweeping aside my misgivings, they arranged for me to wed a man of twenty-seven, a certain Peter Williams, who lived in Oxford with his wheelchair-bound grandmother. The wedding was simple but proper, attended by neighbours and relatives. Afterward, I left my childhood behind and moved to the city, only to find that the daily grind followed meexcept now, instead of caring for siblings, it was Peters grandmother who needed me.

Peter provided for us, but kindness was beyond him. He lashed out over the smallest things, voice raised, insults hurled with no warning or sense. When his grandmother passed away half a year later, the house fell silent, save for the icy chasm that grew between us.

Not long after, I gave birth to a daughter and a son. My girl, Charlotte, had my heartgentle, ever offering love and comfort. But my son, Thomas, mirrored his fathers coldness, quick to scorn and impossible to please. Amidst this, I discovered solace in a pastime Id seen on the telly: making candles by hand. Quiet evenings found me pouring wax and scent, imagining a life where the glow of my candles could warm more than just a room.

Against Peters sneering jibes, I pressed on. Little by little, word spread through Oxford, and people began buying my candleseach sale a small triumph, pounds jingling in my own purse for the first time. Over years, my business blossomed, bringing both pride and independence.

Children grown, I still felt the divideCharlottes loyal affection, Thomas bitterness. One afternoon, I treated myself to a plain skirt from the market. Peter laughed cruelly, mocking my simple joy. In that moment, something within me finally fractured. I could not endure any longer.

By then, my children were near thirty, while I was not yet fifty. Quietly, I gathered my savings, found a modest flat on the outskirts of Oxford, and handed Peter my divorce papers. My heart sought only peacea sanctuary from the relentless contempt that had coloured my life for so long. There was no hatred in my departure, only a yearning for something gentler.

I kept making candles, pouring hope and future into every pool of molten wax, determined as ever to shape a better life with my own hands.

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