This is part of an autobiographical series that starts in Australia.
Click here for the first instalment.
The full list of instalments is in the sidebar to the right.
I
was beginning to panic.
My final exams were due to start in May,
only two months away, and usually by now I would have a revision timetable
drawn up. I would have acquired old exam papers so that I could work on the
different questions I might be asked, and have a stack of index cards so that I
could write down salient details for each possible topic. I had done none of
that this time.
Everything depended on the results of my
final exams. There was no continuous assessment and my exams at the end of the previous
year had been simply to test that I could continue to this year.
At school I’d loved exams. I’d enjoyed the
challenge. This time they were giving me nightmares.
It was so hard to concentrate, sitting at
my table in my room while John lay on the mattress and laughed over some book
he was reading. It was horrible sitting on my own in the library staring at a
blank wall.
In some of deep part of me I wondered if
this was really the direction I should be taking. Might not all this brainwork
be damaging? Studying was part of my old life, the old me. Should I not
be throwing myself wholeheartedly into my new life with John?
While we had our deep connection, in every way on the surface we were opposites. Could
I not be learning from that and enjoying it, instead of trying to stuff my poor
brain with the words of other people?
But I had to get my degree. I couldn’t bear
the thought of failing twice.
Then
there was our marriage to think of.
Did we run away and get married in secret on our
own? That tempted me, but my experience so far had shown me that running away
was a bad option.
I’d run away from university first time
round, and look how badly that had turned out. I’d run away from all the
disasters of London and, while Australia had been the best thing that had ever
happened to me, I’d come back. And I’d come back determined to fit in this
time, to engage with ‘real life’, whatever that was, to live like a normal
person.
But John wasn’t normal. Or at least not by the standards with which I'd been brought up.
‘I’d
like to tell Ma,’ said John. ‘I’d like her to come to our wedding.’
I knew, from what he’d said, that he was
close to his mother. His father wasn’t kind to her, and John had supported her
in many ways. I wanted to meet her.
‘OK,’ I said. ‘I suppose that means I ought
to tell my parents too.’
Easter
was early that year, at the end of the month. We decided to head east then, staying
with John’s parents first – the easy bit – and then going on to mine.
The prospect of telling my parents about
John was even worse than the prospect of my finals.
To be continued . . .