A moment that changed me: last night a Polish DJ saved my life | Rae Earl
The world is full of interesting phobias. Consecotaleophobia, for example, is the terror of chopsticks. Aulophobiacs are scared of flutes. But the irrational fear of my youth – “fear of dying in Peterborough” – has yet to be recognised.
As a teenager, Peterborough was the furthest I could usually make it in the world. It was 15 minutes from my home and I knew I would die there. Nuclear war. Heart attack. Burst appendix. The cause changed but the fear didn’t. I could list a million ways to kick the bucket. All intricately thought out and very, very real. Platform 5 of Peterborough station was the sum of all fears.
Chronic anxiety made me mainly housebound. I tried to move on. I lasted five days at Essex University. They had a special freshers’ week showing of Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown. That was a portent of doom. I couldn’t cope. I wore the same clothes for nearly a week and took the world’s most half-arsed overdose – four co-codamol. I didn’t want to live. I didn’t want to die either.
I returned home a failure. I did some work, but not much. While my mates were raving in Ko Samui my daily routine was based around watching This Morning.
Then my best friend Mort told me that Unesco wanted people to go and teach in summer schools in eastern Europe. Would I like to go with her? I said yes. I was terrified, but at least I’d be terrified with my best mate. I knew I had to do something with my unexpected “year off” so we went to Świdnica in south-west Poland.
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