I can't take credit for this story. The following pages I found in a notebook left at Bristol Temple Meads Station. There was no name or address so I couldn't return it. I enjoyed reading them a lot. I hope you enjoy them, because they took me ages to type up.
Mother, if you are reading this, stop now. This isn't for you, this is for me. I've read online that people who've been through traumatic and life changing experiences benefit from writing out what happened to them. Apparently, something about the process of writing things out helps you see things clearly. I certainly need some of that.
So, Mother, stop reading. There are going to be things I don't want you to know, and I am sure there are going to be things that you won't want to know. If you read any further then I promise I'll never speak to you again. I will know if you have read it. So please, for once, respect my privacy.
I am not a cow! Sure, I have confidence issues (who doesn't these days?), but I am still comfortable enough with my looks to say 'when I am made up and dress up I am hot!' Don't forget that I was a popular blogger. I had forty
thousand
followers. How could I possibly post all those pictures of myself to a blog if I wasn't confident? Also if I was so unattractive, then surely I wouldn't have received so many unsolicited dick pics. Guys (and girls!) like curves, and I have a lot of them. Big boobs, big hips, big ass, narrow waist, big hair and a pretty face.
So I'm not sure where I should begin. I suppose this story really starts on the day my life ended. Or at least my life as I knew it. I will never forget the 19th January 2015. Blue Monday, the most depressing day of the year. It might have ended that way, but it certainly didn't start that way. I was happy that morning. I had so much to look forward to.
I was planning on picking up my wedding dress on the weekend. Mum and I had chosen it before Christmas, and it had finally been delivered. My wedding was booked for June 25th. Both Duncan and I were on diets, so I'd only had a small breakfast. My diet was working, and I was starting to finally lose weight: something my blog readers had commented on. Duncan's diet hadn't been so successful yet. I still think he was snacking somewhere.
I'd had a delivery of gorgeous-looking underwear at lunchtime and I was looking forward to blogging them. I had the best job in the world. I would receive parcels of luxurious underwear in exchange for photos and a review on my blog, which had been getting more and more popular. Just the week before, I'd made the Independent Newspaper's list of "25 Plus Size Blogs that you need to follow." I was number twenty-four. Duncan was set to get it framed on the weekend.
He'd had even stopped being jealous of the blog, and had come to see it as a turn on. He liked seeing me in the new underwear sets, sometimes not waiting for me to get out of them before violating me in the naughtiest ways. His coming around had made everything so much easier.
We'd spent the night before working on the invitation design. We were on our tenth design and it still wasn't quite right. In the end, I decided to change a few of the colours, to make them perfect. The guest list was finally close to being sorted. Duncan just had to compromise on leaving some of his friends off the meal to accommodate some of my family, but I'd reminded him that my mum was paying a couple of thousand. I'd even finally got him to agree to not go into a strip bar on his stag do. Life was good.
Then it wasn't. I got a call from my mother that night.
"Duncan has hung himself," my mother said, without even saying hello. "I'm so sorry."
I always thought if someone close to me died, I'd know straight away. Maybe I'd get some sort of feeling, or inkling. My Duncan, my future husband and biggest supporter, died at 9:15am on 19th January 2015 alone in his childhood room. He remained there, alone, until 4.30pm when his 65-year-old father, Brian, found him.
Brian called the ambulance first, then his wife Cheryl, then the police. They forgot about me, his fiancΓ©, completely. Around 6 pm they left a voicemail for my mother. She didn't call them back until 6.30 pm and then she spent half an hour working out how to tell me. "Duncan has hung himself," was apparently the best she could come up.
I've never forgiven Brian and Cheryl for that. They didn't like me, but they still should have told me.
I'd spent the day dreaming of a life that was already over. I'd even planned what I would wear for him when he got home. It was a lace purple bralette and matching lace boy cut panties that looked fabulous on me. A whole day of preparing for things that could never happen. He was already dead and growing cold. Duncan, the life and soul of every party, the man with the smile that would light up the room, was all alone at the end.
"Duncan has hung himself." I don't remember much after those words. I don't know what I said, or what my mother said in reply. It was as if a black hole had swallowed me up. I can remember in detail the whole day before that call, but from 7pm onwards there is nothing.
Suicide is selfish. It is a simple as that. It does so much damage to the people left behind. Brian has never gotten over finding his son hanging dead amongst all his childhood memories. All of Duncan's friends will never get over the hole he left in their lives. I will never ever get over the failed dreams.
I don't know why Duncan didn't try and speak to anyone about things that were troubling him. It was just another Monday morning, with nothing to tell it apart from any other day. He left no note, no message. The police found nothing in his search history or in his emails. It was senseless. What am I supposed to do with that?
One moment he was my life, then he wasn't.
I don't remember the funeral. I know I wore a black dress with matching tights, black shoes, a wide shiny black belt around my waist and a big coat with a fur collar hiding it all. I remember getting sore feet, and I remember getting drunk at the wake, but that's all. I couldn't tell you what was said, or how I got there, or how I got home, or what happened in the days before and after. The only reason I remember the outfit is that I did a blog post that morning, complete with pictures.
I've tried rereading that entry, but it doesn't make sense. A string of unlinked sentences. Included in the post was three pictures of me in the underwear, though I've deleted that now. I don't know why I thought that putting a picture of myself from the neck down (as in all my lingerie posts), in underwear, on the day of my fiancΓ©'s funeral, was appropriate.
My blog is my memory for the six months after that. I took time off from my job, and I barely went out. I drank more. I'm not sure why no one checked on me to see if I was ok. Maybe they did. Maybe I pushed them away. All I have is a series of blog posts at random times and intervals, all of my body in more and more risquΓ© lingerie. I even stopped blurring my nipples in the sheer underwear.
A month later, I woke up in the hospital. The nurses told me that I'd tried to kill myself. My mum says she found me in my underwear with enough empty vodka and pill bottles lying around to have killed a small horse. If I'd been any thinner, I think I'd be dead.
When they released me, I went to live with my mum. I hated it. I had to leave my door open so that she could check on me. I couldn't even lock the bathroom door if I had a bath. It felt like I was on suicide watch. Which, I guess, I was.
There was no room for the four wardrobes full of clothes and underwear that I'd been sent over the years, so that all went into storage. The house sold within three months.
A year after Duncan's death, I went back to work. My easy job as a claims handler was gone, and I had to retrain as an administrator. A whole two grades down. One of the girls, Victoria, whom I'd trained, was now my boss and training me.
Victoria was in her early twenties. She was a thin brunette who wore too much makeup, loved to go out drinking and flirted with all the males in the office. In her first week, I spoke to her about her lifestyle when she had come in late with a hangover, and she relished the turning of the tables a little too much.