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When I Was a Child, I Dreamed of Growing Up So I Could Do Whatever I Wanted: Eat Whatever I Like, Go to Bed Whenever I Choose, and Go Out Without Asking Anyone’s Permission

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When I was a boy, I used to dream about growing up so I could do whatever I pleasedeat what I fancied, go to bed whenever I liked, head out without asking anyone. Looking back now, I chuckle at that naïve little version of myself. Reality struck hard the day I started living on my own: cleaning, cooking, rent, bills, shopping all with one salary that barely stretched. I thought freedom was choosing my own dinner. I never imagined it meant figuring out if I had enough money for both rice and soap.

One morning, it hit meI couldn’t remember the last time Id actually sat down for breakfast in peace. Id get up, shower, make the bed in haste, and rush out to catch the bus. On the way, I’d remember I hadnt replied to a work email, I needed to pay for the broadband before Friday, and my debit card was nearly at its limit. Adult freedom, it turns out, is just a never-ending to-do list, not the dream I’d once imagined.

Eventually, when I would finally get home, the exhaustion settled over me like a heavy blanket. Id open the fridge, hoping there was something inside that magically prepared itself. Of course, there wasntI had to wash, chop, cook, then wash up again. Some nights, I settled for bread and cheese just so I wouldn’t have to touch a frying pan. Even then, rest was elusivebecause a little voice in my head whispered: the water bill is high, check the leak in the bathroom, the clothes from this morning will smell now since I forgot to hang them out.

My mates kept saying, Lets catch up soon. But every time we tried, someone had an extra shift, another was caring for a sick family member, another was skint, another just utterly worn out. As teens, we used to see each other nearly every day; once we were adults, a whole month could pass without a meeting. And when we finally gathered, conversation was all about tiredness, bills, and bad backs. We were young, but sounded like pensioners.

The toughest realisation was that theres never any real rest. Even the weekends were just another set of taskslaundry, cleaning, planning the week ahead, shopping, fixing something broken. One Saturday, I found myself crying as I mopped the floor, telling myself: Even when Im meant to be resting, Im not. As a child, Id called this freedom, when really, I had simply begun to take on everything adults once did for meonly now, there was no one left to lend a hand.

Work wasnt what I expected either. I believed a job would bring satisfaction. I didnt realise it also meant smiling when Id rather not, putting up with daft comments, chasing targets that changed every week, and watching most of my pay disappear on things I barely even saw. One day, I sat there calculating whether I could afford lunch or needed to save that £5 for the Oyster card. Nobody tells you this as a kid. No one warns you that adult life is a constant set of mental maths.

I once thought growing up meant freedom. The truth is, its a peculiar balance of exhaustion, responsibilities, and fleeting moments of calm. If Ive learned anything, its that real freedom isnt about doing whatever you wantits about making peace with the life you create.

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