Six terrible birthdays you've had that are still infinitely better than Andrew's

WE’VE all had a miserable birthday at some point, but it probably wasn’t as bad as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s. Here are some unhappy ones that were great compared to his.

No one turned up 

Except perhaps a couple of old mates, forcing you to admit that maybe you’re just not that interesting or popular. Although compared to Andrew you’re Mr Popularity himself. People may have skipped your birthday, but at least they weren’t saying they hoped you ended up in prison with a burly cellmate who’s not picky about his sexual partners.

Recently dumped birthday

Your girlfriend or boyfriend decided they simply had to end your relationship just days before your birthday, forcing you to celebrate while wanting to cry. And inform people that Rachel/Steve had dumped you because you’re defective as a romantic partner. This was still a better birthday than dozens of police turning up at 8am and dragging you off to a cell before you’d even had a mouthful of Colin the Caterpillar.

Childhood disappointment

As a child, minor upsets like going to a local petting zoo for your birthday only to discover it was unexpectedly closed were crushing disappointments. But probably not as disappointing as your 66th birthday turning into a police raid and discovering the only person with any sympathy is Donald Trump, which doesn’t help your case.

Hitting 50 

Unlike 40, reaching 50 means admitting you are actually quite old, and not just technically no longer in your 30s. It’s depressing but at least you can go for a nice meal and stuff your face with crispy duck or whatever. That’s a big step up from Andrew, whose in-custody birthday meal would have been something like a meat slurry microwave lasagne and a sad little packet of three digestives.

You were unpleasantly shitfaced

Getting pissed on your birthday is hardly unusual, but starting too early can mean the evening is a complete blank or you behaved like an embarrassing twat. However, pathetic drunken attempts at chatting people up and vomiting in cabs are definitely less embarrassing than being questioned about the time you were great mates with a paedophile sex trafficker. 

Freak misfortune

You had plans, but something random and awful happened like your girlfriend breaking her arm, so your birthday consisted of seven hours in A&E instead. But at least you could just rerun your birthday a week later. Andrew could try this, but given the steady drip of horrors from the Epstein files he might find his replacement birthday rudely interrupted by the cops as well, and not over some boring documents this time.

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Cyclist bemoans lack of jeopardy in cycle lane

A CYCLIST used to weaving in and out of traffic has criticised cycle lanes for being too safe.

Lycra-clad Nathan Muir, 37, has slammed local authorities for wasting money on boring cycle routes with no interesting obstacles or the potential for exciting clashes with motorists.

Muir said: “What could take the fun and joie de vivre out of cycling more than allocating a section of the road purely to bikes?

“The thrill of cutting up cars by swerving across lanes has gone. Also the buzz of edging awkwardly through stationary traffic. There are even patronising little arrows telling you which way to go. Pure infantilisation. Why not just make me use stabilisers?

“Believe, me, I’ve tried to like cycle lanes. Me and my cyclist friends formed a two-abreast peloton for maximum obnoxiousness and not a single motorist cared. And stuck in the cycle lane you can’t enjoy coasting through red lights. No beeps, no screamed obscenities. I’m starting to wonder what the point of having a bike is.

“In traffic I go where I want, when I want. In a cycle lane it’s just so restrictive. Good luck flicking sweat onto motorists’ precious paintwork when they’re four feet away.

“It’s no wonder every cyclist I know refuses to use them. Although by taking up space they’ve made the roads more congested, which is how I like them. Oh God, it all makes sense now.”