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She was the first close friend who I felt like Iâd reÂally choÂsen. We werenât in each otherâs lives beÂcause of any obliÂgaÂtion to the past or conÂveÂnience of the present. We had no shared hisÂtory and we had no reaÂson to spend all our time to gether. But we did. Our friendÂship inÂtenÂsiÂfied as all our friends had chilÂdren â she, like me, was unÂconÂvinced about havÂing kids. And she, like me, found herÂself in a reÂlaÂtionÂship in her early thirÂties where they werenât specifÂiÂcally workÂing toÂwards startÂing a famÂily.
By the time I was thirty-four, Sarah was my only good friend who hadnât had a baby. EvÂery time there was anÂother pregÂnancy anÂnounceÂment from a friend, Iâd just text the words âAnd anÂother one!â and sheâd know what I meant.
She beÂcame the perÂson I spent most of my free time with other than Andy, beÂcause she was the only friend who had any free time. She could meet me for a drink withÂout planÂning it a month in adÂvance. Our friendÂship made me feel libÂerÂated as well as safe. I looked at her life choices with no symÂpaÂthy or conÂcern for her. If I could adÂmire her deÂciÂsion to reÂmain child-free, I felt enÂcourÂaged to adÂmire my own. She made me feel norÂmal. As long as I had our friendÂship, I wasnât alone and I had reaÂson to beÂlieve I was on the right track.
We arÂranged to meet for dinÂner in Soho afÂter work on a FriÂday. The waiter took our drinks orÂder and I asked for our usual â two Dirty Vodka MarÂtiÂnis.
âEr, not for me,â she said. âA sparkling waÂter, thank you.â I was ready to make a joke about her unÂcharÂacÂterÂisÂtic abÂstiÂnence, which she sensed, so as soon as the waiter left she said: âIâm pregÂnant.â
I didnât know what to say. I canât imagÂine the exÂpresÂsion on my face was parÂticÂuÂlarly enÂthuÂsiÂasÂtic, but I couldnât help it â I was shocked and felt an unÂwarÂranted but inÂtense sense of beÂtrayal. In a deÂlayed reÂacÂtion, I stood up and went to her side of the taÂble to hug her, unÂable to find words of conÂgratÂuÂlaÂtions. I asked what had made her change her mind and she spoke in vaÂgaries about it âjust beÂing the right timeâ and wouldnât elabÂoÂrate any furÂther and give me an anÂswer. And I needed an anÂswer. I needed an anÂswer more than anyÂthing that night. I needed to know whether sheâd had a reÂalÂizaÂtion that I hadnât and, if so, I wanted to know how to get it.
When I woke up the next day, I reÂalÂized the feelÂing I was exÂpeÂriÂencÂing was not anger or jealÂousy or bitÂterÂness â it was grief. I had no one left. Theyâd all gone. Of course, they hadnât reÂally gone, they were still my friends and I still loved them. But huge parts of them had disÂapÂpeared and there was nothÂing they could do to change that. UnÂless I joined them in their spaÂces, on their schedÂules, with their famÂiÂlies, I would barely see them.
And I started dreamÂing of anÂother life, one comÂpletely reÂmoved from all of it. No more chilÂdrenâs birthÂday parÂties, no more chrisÂtenÂings, no more barÂbeÂcues in the subÂurbs. A life I hadnât ever seÂriÂously conÂtemÂplated beÂfore. I started dreamÂing of what it would be like to start all over again. BeÂcause as long as I was here in the only LonÂdon I knew â midÂdle-class LonÂdon, corÂpoÂrate LonÂdon, mid-thirÂties LonÂdon, marÂried LonÂdon â I was in their world. And I knew there was a whole other world out there.
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