I still have a friend here that I knew when I was 8 years old. We sat together in Junior school but had vastly different lives. Her father owned two shops in the town and she appeared to be well off. I was living with my grandmother and two maiden aunts, we ate food grown on the old allotment and I wore hand me downs and in the summer my grandmother did B&Bs. But I didn't know how different our lives were, I didn't notice.
We do meet for a chat and a coffee, but not as often as she'd like because she is for ever saying to me.. 'You're lucky, with your husband, and no mortgage. I don't believe in luck and do point out to her, that she had a lot more than me once.
At one time she was managing one of her father's shops and had a husband, who had his own company and they lived well. Often visiting big gambling clubs where they won and lost thousands of pounds. At that time I was teaching, earning money to pay my mortgage and working hard to keep paying the bills myself, with my four older children still living with me. I had left and divorced my then husband. At one time I did some private math lessons to earn extra money just to make ends meet.
When I realised I wasn't getting any younger at 58 and didn't like where I was working and still had a mortgage; I resigned my Deputy position, sold my big house and down sized to get rid of it. It was a release, but hard, the three bedroomed house I bought needed quite a few things doing. But it had a nice sized garden and an open hall way as you entered it, so it won me over within minutes of looking round. I had all that needed to be done, bit by bit as I earned the money, doing part time supply teaching. It took 4 years but I loved that house. When I had a tax rebate, I bought what I had always wanted, a raspberry pink carpet for the lounge, hall, stairs and landing, I loved it! And just doing supply teaching was good. I did a regular three days in a local school, and really loved it. And didn't retire till I was 64, but that school was lovely.
I met my lovely lovely husband when I was 62 and we married 2 years after.. and so I am well off, not money, but rich in blessings and we have a lovely home here in S Wales and are enjoying living here.
So when she says.. you're lucky,' I do point out to her, that she spent 4 1/2 years 'dallying' with a married man, re-mortgaged her house because she liked her detached house in that part of town, which is now too far out. She still works part time for Carlton cards in different supermarkets, restocking the shelves and will be 80 in a couple of months time. Like me she has arthritis and walks bent, but too proud to use a stick.
She is now talking about buying something smaller if she can afford it, in town, so she won't have to worry about driving. I do care about her, but sometimes you have to distance yourself from some people. I really don't agree with her about being lucky, I earned every penny I have and worked hard. I do talk things over with her, but it's her decision and to be honest I think she is still thinking she'll be lucky and it will all work out for the best and even thinks her married man friend might come back.. WHAT??? ..
It's true, some people never learn!
Chrisxx
5 comments:
Hard as it sounds, I agree with you.
And well done for making your own luck through sheer hard work and personal wisdom.
xx
I understand what you are saying about hard work and good decisions playing their part in your good circumstances. Your friend is still working at age 80! That must be difficult.
Sometimes luck is actually hard work and taking opportunities as they come. My last job was high stress and long hours. but it had many good points and I stuck it out until I could retire. Along the way people I knew told me they would never do my job. Now they tell me how lucky I am for having the job they "would never do," because of the good retirement benefits that were part of the job. Not luck at all. You made great choices and so glad that things worked well for you because of them.
I do dislike the comment, 'you are lucky' we hear it as well, NO we worked hard and saved for when we stopped working, it's simple as that, and I know not everyone earnt enough to be able to save. When times were tough we both had second jobs, and worked our way through, we saved and went without to ensure our children had what they needed. So no it's not luck, just hard work and some common sense.
Life is what you make of it and the opportunities taken. Some decisions work out while others not so much. You are a good friend to this lady Chris, just a shame she doesn't see that you are where you are because of hard work not luck.
Post a Comment