Rachael Blyth writes:
With the cost of a single room in
London now reaching the realms of the utterly unaffordable,
increasing numbers of tenants are being forced to rent just half a room, with a 71% rise in searches for shared bedrooms
reported over the past
two years.
Several years ago, while (barely)
working as an actor, I accepted a live-in bar job at a busy Soho pub, lured by
the proximity of West End life.
The fact that I’d be sharing a small room with
another girl struck me as romantic – a tad Moulin Rouge with
only a hint of EastEnders.
Aware of my hermit-like
tendencies, I saw the interruption of my private space as an interesting
experiment rather than the miserable economic necessity it was.
Soho’s sex and sleaze formed a
huge part of the attraction, and in terms of filth I certainly wasn’t let down.
The room was disgusting, filled with the remnants of all those gap year
boys-on-tour who’d occupied it before me.
She seemed pretty unfazed by the
mice, the cockroaches, the gross stuff growing in the fridge an inch away from
my nose. I hoped her nonchalance would be contagious.
We spent long days smoking on our roof terrace and
admiring the Soho skyline. Viktoria would order drinks to be sent up from the
bar in the dumbwaiter.
Our boyfriends came to visit, and sleeping over they too
practised the art of nonchalance. Sex was hush-hush but not hidden, and if
friends came round they’d sleep on the floor, insulated by a cosy cloud of
Rentokil cockroach spray and cigarette smoke.
We once heard that a nearby West End landlord had been
sacked by the brewery for allowing his staff to sleep on the floor while porn
was being filmed in the rooms they were meant to be sharing.
In comparison, we
felt blessed. When it came to each other and our Brewer Street abode, Viktoria
and I had lucked out.
Of course, it wasn’t all bohemian bliss behind the
Piccadilly lights.
Despite our miraculously low rent, like everyone else I knew
both Viktoria and I were up to our eyeballs in debt.
Every change of landlord
threatened to unhinge our entire existence, and the thought of being able to
ever afford a room of our own remained an impossibility. Unlike our friends, we
had no deposit to act as a springboard into the rental market.
I started to
avoid phonecalls from my mother for fear of the dreaded d-word (“drifting”, for
the non-acquainted).
In fact, when my parents came to visit I was too
embarrassed to let them see my room. Sometimes, listening to the sordid racket
in the alleyway below I felt nothing short of completely screwed.
After a year or so, the guy living upstairs moved out and
Viktoria was offered his room. We both breathed a sigh of relief and returned
to our private worlds.
I bought an armchair and a little desk to fill the newly
empty space where Viktoria’s bed had been. I took down posters and put up
framed prints. My boyfriend came round more often.
Shortly afterwards, my room was broken into and burgled –
that roof terrace hadn’t been so secure after all. No longer feeling safe and
unable to face the rental market, I left London shortly after.
For those of us who never had any intention of climbing
the graduate career ladder, seeking out alternative living arrangements has
been the only feasible way to sustain life in the city for much longer than
these recent trends would suggest.
But London is closing in on everyone now,
not just the least wealthy.
But fear not, there is life outside London, off the
ladder, if you look for it.
As for me, I quit acting and started teaching yoga.
And after a brief foray into normality, I’m scoping out the shared life again.
Looking back, it seems that of all my gurus, Viktoria has been the finest of
them all. It’s not the stranger who is suffocating you, it’s something much
bigger than that.
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