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When I Was 23, I Worked as a Waitress in a Busy Central London Eatery—One of Those Always-Crowded Pl…
When I was twenty-three, I worked as a waitress in a busy café in the heart of London. One of those places thats always bustling cheap eats, loud pop tunes and queues snaking out the door at lunchtime. There was no contract. No benefits. Nothing. I was paid day by day. If I missed a shift, no pay. If I caught the flu, no one cared. Still, I was always first through the door and last to leave. I could recite orders backwards, handled rude customers, wiped tables with a rumbling stomach and aching arms, but I needed the money.
The day I found out I was pregnant, fear gripped me not because of the baby, but because of my job. Despite that, I chose honesty. I walked into my managers office, closed the door and said, Im pregnant, but Id like to carry on working.
She didnt even greet me. She stared straight through me, icy and unmoved: This isnt a crèche. Pregnant women slow down, get sick, ask for favours. I want reliable people.
I tried to explain I felt fine, that I could manage the rota, that I needed the job. But she cut across me, sharp: Do me a favour and hand in your apron today.
I finished my shift, sobbing in the staff loo. I left through the back exit, carrying my uniform and bits and bobs stuffed in a plastic carrier. Nobody said goodbye. Nobody asked anything. I went home, sat on my bed, and for the first time I was truly frightened how would I feed my child?
The months after were the hardest of my life. I scrubbed strangers houses, sold homemade jams, little pies and sweets at street corners. I was alone. Some nights, I slept upright, baby in arm, because I couldnt afford a cot. But in that strange midnight, I found myself cooking more earnestly. One neighbour asked for lunch for her husband, then another wanted meals for her small office. Five lunches a day then ten then twenty.
Eventually, I rented a tiny space a stove, two tables and an old fridge. I named it after myself: Emmas Kitchen. I started selling breakfast butties, box lunches, savoury pies, puddings. I opened at six, closed at seven, work never ended. My son grew up watching me in action. By the time he was three, he could pass mugs and help me count the change. Then I hired one helper. Then another.
Now, I run a small food business: quick bites and event catering breakfasts for companies, tailor-made lunches, simple spreads for birthdays and gatherings. Im not wealthy, but I live with ease. I pay rent, school fees, bills, and finally bought my own equipment.
Five years later, a woman walked into my cafe and asked for the owner. I looked up and recognised her: my old manager. The very one who let me go when I was pregnant. I was leaner now, dressed on the plain side. She looked at me with surprise and asked, Are you the owner?
I said, Yes.
She sat nervously, told me her café had shut down over a year ago. Her business collapsed. Shed switched jobs, but nothing steady. She looked me in the eyes and confessed, I need work. Its hard. I know we parted badly, but Im here asking for a chance.
I paused for a few heartbeats then asked, Do you remember the day you fired me because I was pregnant?
She dropped her gaze. Said “yes.” Admitted she had only thought about the business, not people. I told her on that day, she left me empty afraid, expecting, and with no explanation. Shed never given me a chance.
She asked for forgiveness. No tears, but her voice was trembling. Said life had handed her a tough lesson and now she understood plenty. I took a long breath and told her I held no grudge, but I now ran my business differently. My staff get clear hours, respect and dignity. I know what its like to work hungry.
In the end, I offered her a trial shift on my terms: punctuality, respect and zero humiliation for anyone. She agreed, leaving with misty eyes.
I stood behind the counter, gazing at my kitchen, tables, pots the path Id travelled to get there.
There was no revenge in me. Just the quiet knowledge that I wasnt the kind of person who heals pain by inflicting it on others.
