Day 10 went well. I did nothing whatsoever to contribute to my forthcoming move to Australia. I guess there isn’t much left to do apart from see people and say goodbye. I did tick something off my list!
In continuation of ‘seeing people and saying goodbye’, my friend and I brunched in London and then spent the day talking. I couldn’t see an end to the talking, mainly because I don’t stop. Before I event left for brunch, I’d ticked something off my list. I needed to get a credit card as I’ve heard rumours that you need a good credit rating on a credit card. Regardless of whether that has any truth in it, I sorted myself out. You’d think it’d be harder to get a credit card but apparently not… and I was completely honest.
Rich Travels – Australia
When I was younger (18 with mindless thoughts), I thought only ‘rich’ people had credit cards. Ironic, isn’t it? It’s strange what we think being an adult should embody, but when the time comes around it’s different. Small things like a credit card don’t define me as an adult. I’m sure it adds different responsibilities, then again I find other aspects of my life as bigger responsibility than a credit card or owning a house. I guess my big things are the small things like jumping on a plane and living in other countries, or making sure I’m spreading some kindness somewhere. Everything changes depending on each individual perspective. I actually had a great chat about opinions with my family until 2am. The 10th day was definitely one to remember.
It’s hard trying to make the most of the little time left but then having such an amazing time doing it can make it upsetting. When you’re leaving a few of your favourite people, the last moments for a while are always a little bittersweet. Well, we joked, we talked, we shopped, we ate and we talked some more. It’s a good life when you don’t notice the time pass by.
I’m sure in a few years’ time we’ll be back at that table laughing over the small things, which are inevitably the big things.
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