We forsake a mid-week evening and attend a thoroughly informative night of people trying to sell us a mattress and they give us a free meal. Ordinarily this would be an impressively simple choice: I would not attend in a million years even if you gave me a pony called Stefan. Not going to happen. But my arm was twisted by my and my friends’ abysmal financial circumstances.
We were skint. I’m talking raided-every-festy-crevice-in-the-couch-for-spare-change skint. We couldn’t have bought two minutes on a parking meter between us, so the offer of a free meal in exchange for a blisteringly exciting three-hour bedding seminar was too good to pass up. Plus, it was held at a golf course, so it had to be good!
Our vision for a resplendent dinner in the Oak Room was dashed. The mattress seminar was held – I am serious – in the golf course mower shed on rickety tables. And the dinner? An insipid lasagne which consisted almost exclusively of sweet potato as thick as a redwood. Undercooked? Understatement.
Being poor might have been character building, but it wasn’t necessarily fun. It forced me to be far more creative and ingenious just to feed myself than would normally be required. Necessity might be the mother of invention, but it’s bloody exhausting. I’m pretty sure this is why my ancestors gave up hunting.
On another day I was stone broke counting out the last three-dollars-something my friends and I had between us. My wealthy friend was staying at a hotel and we were, err, boarding there too. On the floor. While we house hunted. We had enough for a loaf of bread which would go nicely with the bowl of hotel jam packets. They cease to be decorative when you’re starved.
But my friend had bigger ideas. She wanted something more … grand. And in a fit of fiscal conservatism she marched into the hotel corridor and began to steal the leftover food from outside other people’s doors.