用户名/邮箱
登录密码
验证码
看不清?换一张
您好,欢迎访问! [ 登录 | 注册 ]
您的位置:首页 - 最新资讯
I won huge sum on Lottery but refused to give up my supermarket job stacking shelves at 2am for important reason
2023-07-26 00:00:00.0     太阳报-英国新闻     原网页

       

       MANY of us dream of giving up our jobs for a life of lie-ins, exotic holidays and carefree shopping trips if we won the lottery.

       But some humble folk who hit the jackpot choose to carry on with life just as it was before.

       9

       Elaine Thompson is still stacking shelves in M&S despite winning the lottery 27 years ago Credit: NCJ MEDIA

       That includes Elaine Thompson, who scooped an incredible £2.7million in 1995, but continued to work night shifts stacking shelves at Marks & Spencer.

       The Killingworth key worker, now 67, even kept working throughout the pandemic, despite being asthmatic and vulnerable.

       She said in 2020: “I did the 2am starts every day so I’m in from 2am to 9am.

       “The company was fantastic. They let me go at 8.30am because I’m asthmatic and I’m vulnerable so I was not with any of the customers.

       READ MORE LOTTERY STORIES

       LOTTS CHANGED Lottery winners who look unrecognisable as we reveal where they are now

       LOTTO LOVE How Lottery winners spent their cash - including one who flushed £300K down loo

       “I was leaving the house at 1.15am every morning, I get up at midnight.

       “A couple of times during lockdown it was really hard. I was driving to work thinking ‘What am I doing?’

       “I could not have done furlough. I’m coming up to 65 next week but I'm not ready to retire yet.”

       She explained that she kept working to be a good role model for her kids, who were five and 10 at the time of her win.

       Most read in The Sun

       KILLED BY BIG BRO Teen girl's evil brother GUILTY of her murder after vile sex attack

       HORROR CRASH Greek firefighting plane crashes after clipping tree while dousing wildfire

       BLINKING LOVELY Big Brother legend Helen unrecognisable 22 years after quitting fame

       'TERRIBLE IDEA' EasyJet pilot warns tourists to GET OFF his holiday flight to Rhodes

       She said: “It’s important that children see you working hard.

       “I absolutely love my job and just because I won the lottery, this didn’t make me want to give up work. It’s all about balance.”

       She hoped to inspire her children to be the first in the family to go to university, which they later achieved.

       Last year Elaine joined other millionaires in taking part in a charity beach clean.

       “Since winning the lottery Derek and I have loved being able to give time back," Elaine told Chronicle Live.

       Elaine and her husband Derek did allow themselves a few luxuries after winning the lottery - they splashed out on a new Ford Fiesta and later bought three racehorses.

       The couple also like to visit Las Vegas on holiday, and helped their kids buy their first houses.

       Here we look at other lucky winners who opted to keep modest existence - including a plumber and a family who bought a second-hand Volvo.

       Council house and dinner lady job 9

       Trish Emson stayed in her council house with partner Graham Norton after winning the lottery two decades ago Credit: Mirrorpix 9

       Trish happily continued working as a dinner lady after coming into money Credit: SWNS

       Trish Emson is believed to still live in her family’s old council house and has kept her job as a dinner lady, despite raking in £1.8million from the lottery in 2003.

       The down-to-earth mum, who is in her fifties, said she would be “bored to tears” without her beloved job serving up meals to primary school children.

       She has also kept up her frugal habits, driving a Kia and shopping in Primark.

       Speaking to The Mirror in 2021, Trish said she “doesn’t like showing off and bragging about money” and “can’t be posh anyway”.

       She added: “To look at me you wouldn’t think I was a millionaire, but if I have to dress up I feel fake, I prefer my jeans.”

       Instead Trish and her partner Graham Norton, who works as a decorator, bought two caravans and sun themselves on holidays in Benalmádena, Benidorm and Ibiza.

       Trish, who got pregnant just weeks after her win after five years of trying, said that was a “better feeling” than winning the cash prize.

       Second-hand Volvos 9

       Steve and Lenka Thomson bought a second-hand van and Volvo XC90 with their whopping £105million winnings Credit: Andrew Matthews / PA

       Builder Steve Thomson, 44, still drives his wife Lenka’s second-hand Volvo after scooping a £105million jackpot in the EuroMillions.

       After their unbelievable win in 2019, Steve bought a second-hand van for himself, while Lenka bought a Volvo XC90.

       However, the couple did splash out on a huge 14.5-acre estate which boasts a swimming pool, tennis court and party barn.

       Steve told The Sun in May how he still does his own DIY though and will be renovating the house himself.

       Just like the Thomsons, Joe and Jess Thwaite are driving a second-hand Volvo, despite winning big on the Euromillions in May last year.

       9

       Joe and Jess Thwaite have been moderate with their purchases since bagging an eye-watering £184,000 in May 2022 Credit: Andrew Matthews / PA 9

       Joe and Jess Thwaite with their Volvo by their home in Gloucestershire Credit: Marc Giddings

       The couple, who are 50 and 45, became the UK’s biggest lottery winners after bagging £184million, but spent just £38,000 of their winnings on an understated grey Volvo V60.

       Neighbours told The Sun in June 2022 they were not surprised by their “sensible” and “respectable” purchase.

       One said: “They’re mega lottery winners but first and foremost they’re down-to-earth people who have worked hard their whole lives.

       “You might expect them to go and buy a Ferrari or a Bugatti. Instead of living the high life, they’re pressing ahead with their original plan to do the house up and make sure things are sorted as they’d originally planned.”

       Mucking out on pig farm 9

       Susan Herdman is working on a pig farm run by her partner Andrew, getting down and dirty to help muck out Credit: Susan Herdman / Instagram

       Susan Herdman shunned a life of luxury to work on a pig farm, waking up at 6.30am to get and get her hands dirty mucking out the sty.

       The hairdresser from Hertfordshire had been struggling to pay the bills and couldn’t always keep the heating on when she won £1.2million in 2010.

       Describing how she felt at the win, she told The Mirror in 2020: “There was no hysterics, no running round the room screaming. It was just a big, ‘Thank God. Thank you.’

       “Just absolute relief that if I was careful, I’d be OK financially for the rest of my life. I wouldn’t have to just constantly battle against the clock, squeezing in appointments.”

       Susan, who was a single mum at the time, stayed in her job as a hairdresser for six months before starting to date pig farmer Andrew, who lived 220 miles away in North Yorkshire.

       She and her son Jake relocated to Andrew’s farm in March 2011 and she now spends her days helping out with the pigs.

       She said: “It’s a hard life, but it’s a good life. Once you’ve been a worker, I don’t think you’re ever not going to work. You need a purpose to get up. I have to think of my son’s future as well.”

       The few things she did splurge on include a large motorhome and she has treated her parents and sisters to holidays and cars.

       Dedicated plumber 9

       John Doherty continued working as a plumber after he and wife Alison scored a huge £14million lottery win Credit: SWNS

       A £14million win could not stop hard-working John Doherty from fixing up people’s plumbing.

       The tradesman from Elderslie, Scotland ran his own business, JDPS Plumbers, when he and wife Alison, who bought the winning lucky dip ticket after letting someone go before her in the queue, bagged the eye-watering amount in 2016.

       John returned to work fixing toilets and mending boilers just two days after his massive jackpot payout was announced.

       He even went 'back to school' to complete a gas training course.

       In 2021 he said: “I’ll probably slow down a bit but I still want to keep doing it.

       “That’s because it’s mine ? if I was working for someone else I’d be away.”

       Cook at Watford fire station 9

       Julie Jeffrey won the lottery, but she loved her job too much to give it up Credit: BBC

       Julie Jeffrey kept working as a cook in a fire station in Watford after raking in £1million in a lottery jackpot in 2002.

       She and her partner Chris made the decision to pay off their mortgage and make a trust fund for their two kids, but otherwise continued to live their normal life.

       Read More on The Sun

       SNACK ATTACK Mum shares her quick summer snack idea but parents warn it’s so dangerous

       LOVE YOURSELF Woman who is always skinny-shamed says strangers whisper about her appearance

       Julie told the Watford Observer in 2019: “It is true that life has become more comfortable, but we still live a basic life and I’m doing the same job.

       “We can use the money to help pay for bills or to enjoy ourselves, but if we gave up work, we would have to watch ourselves and what we spend.”

       


标签:综合
关键词: winners     Credit     Volvo     winning     second-hand     Trish     bought     lottery    
滚动新闻