Thursday 5 August 2010

From here

So, where do we go from here? It’s difficult to know, to move on without you and a while ago it seemed an insurmountable task. A memory keeps coming back to me, from the night you left me. Your cousin and her husband had arrived and I will always remember them for the kindness they showed at that time. The funeral director had pulled up outside the house and as I looked outside, I cursed the sun for daring to rise, having already taken the battery out of the clock on the wall. However, despite my great efforts nine months have passed by and still you are gone.


I think it’s fair to say that not a day has gone by when I haven’t thought about this blog, just as not a second goes by when I don’t think about you, even now. I have desperately wanted to continue and have now got to the stage where I don’t know why I haven’t kept up writing. Writing is what I do, I write, everyone knows that. Sitting here tonight has been a stark reminder of why I stopped, remembering just how hard it is to talk to you in this way.


I think to continue this story further, delving into the past is going to be required so I’m going back to the story of how 1944 hurtled to 1977, continued on along side each other and then crashing into each other in 2004.


Bear with me if I repeat things I have already talked about, of course the benefit of hindsight may catch me too. You’ll also forgive me if my memory has failed me, as it often does.


Wednesday 12 May 2010

Life after death

I think about you every moment of every day, whatever I’m doing, wherever I am, I am never more than a few breaths from thinking of you. This is life after death I guess, so much finality in death yet no separation in love, it’s hard to bear.


The year is ticking on, the sun is shining, I think of how you loved it. School assemblies, Easter and my birthday have passed but still you’re there, every moment of every day. I go to sleep and there you are in my dreams but never here with me, never close, avoiding me and drifting away.


The garden is blooming, the birds are back, everything I do I wonder what you would make of. Every single time I drive up the long wide winding road towards our home, I well up, every single day, without fail I am choked. We worked so hard to be able to move somewhere so nice with our family and every day I am reminded of the first time we drove, so excited to see the house for the first time. I wonder if that will ever stop?


Is this a normal way to feel?

Tuesday 19 January 2010

Blue Tits

I'm reading a book right now, Tuesdays with Morrie. It's ok, if a little sentimental, about a man coming to terms with dying and a younger mans record of the journey to the end. I've just read a chapter in the book where Morrie talks about waves travelling across the ocean, bobbing along happily until they see the shoreline, one wave is terrified that he is about to crash to certain death but the wave behind him reassures him, he says "you're not just a wave, you're part of the ocean".

When I read it I was reminded of something we shared in the spring, when the blue tits came to call. They had wintered in our garden, a pair of them and we watched them and fed them through the winter and into the spring. One day you were tidying the garden and called me, the blue tits appeared to be building a nest in the bird box, in direct line of sight from our patio doors.

The weeks passed and we were looking forward to summer, watching the blue tits every day, first building the nest, then lining it all, then sitting on the eggs, back and fore from morning to night they continued. Eventually our patience was rewarded, especially the children's as in late May last year we saw the first fledglings peering out of the box. Jessica's 6th birthday was rolling around and the tiny morsels of birds, after much constant attention from who must have been by then two very exhausted parents chose that day to fly the nest. As you can imagine we were all very excited about the event, took many pictures and felt almost as proud as the parents must have.

Next morning, I got up and you were already up, out in the garden, out I wandered in my slippers and your dressing gown to see what you were up to. Two of the three fledglings were dead, you were removing them from the garden before the children woke. I was heartbroken and actually have a lump in my throat typing this, all day I watched the third bird hop around the garden, it's parents dismissing the fact that the other two had died and just getting on with things.

You reassured me, death is part of nature and we are part of nature too you said. We mourn it and make a big deal of things because we think we are above nature but we are not and what happened to those birds could happen to any one of us and most of us would do well to remember it. We are born, we live our lives busying ourselves with things that probably aren't important, and then we die and it's over.

There endeth the most important lesson you ever taught me.

However, you were wrong to an extent, as much as I hate to disagree with you now that you are gone because we are above nature. In every thing you did for me, in every way you touched my life, in every way you touched heart and in everything you are to me. Death ends life, not relationships and that's what sets us apart from nature, because you Geoff will live on, in every heart you touched forever, where those blue tits will only live on in us.

That last fledgling? It's never gone far and we've seen a lot of it over the cold weather, let's see what the spring brings this year. Everything that lives must die.

Is this a normal way to feel?

Thursday 14 January 2010

Death's suitcase

I've learned a lot in the last few weeks but it still doesn't cease to amaze me how someone as wonderful, charasmatic and larger than life as you could be gone without trace. And without trace it is, as it seems that as we come to the end of our lives we pack a case for our final journey, we put in death's suitcase all the things that are the essence of us.

These things are the unimportant things that we put no value on in life, your smell, your voice (although that was something I could never get enough of), the way your face creases up in expression, the little things you did, your mannerisms. All the things that made you, you all packed up to be taken in an instant like you were.

Thank goodness for photos, audio clips and old film, the memories we make along the way and the things we steal from death's suitcase to help us on our journey in grief.

These are the thoughts I had while watching an old film of us in Paris last year. I wish we'd had time to steal more from death's suitcase but the time to leave came too soon.

Is this a normal way to feel?

Monday 4 January 2010

When you just know

You know that moment when you just know you'll be with someone forever? Maybe you don't. I was cynical before I met you but you changed all that. There was a moment when I just knew I had to have you, it made no sense at all.

You weren't my type, at all. Anyone who knew us who reads this will be laughing now I'm sure but I soon realised you were perfect for me, we were perfect for each other.

You were a butcher, much older than me but I wasn't sure how much. In fact it took me quite a while to work that bit out. Christmas was approaching, 2004, you'd caught my eye in the summer.

You used to say that you'd hate to be remembered as a womaniser, it was a title you didn't think fitted you. I don't know why you worried but you used to say you had never chased a woman in your life. At that I'd laugh, you never needed to as far as I could see.

I came in to get my Christmas meat, one of the lads had mistletoe, much laughing and cheek kissing ensued and then suddenly you were in front of me. Earring in, Christmas hat on, collars turned up, laughing. You kissed me, square on the lips, a long lingering kiss. All the boys in the shop were whistling and as suddenly as you kissed me, you stopped, smiled and walked off.

I was and still am absolutely blown away by that moment, I fell in love with you on the very spot.

I'm smiling and laughing at the memory of that Christmas, the knot in my chest like a physical pain.

Is this a normal way to feel?

Thursday 31 December 2009

An Angel

My life probably wasn't in the best place when I met you. You were like an angel who appeared just as I needed you, you helped me get to a place in life I wanted to be and now you're gone.

Maybe that's what you were, maybe you were my angel. The question is how do I not fall back into that black hole of five years ago now that you're gone?

I don't want you to be an angel, I want you to be here, seeing in the New Year curled up on the sofa with a coffee and Jules Holland.

I miss you. As of tomorrow it will be last year that you died. That sounds so wrong and time is passing too fast.

Is this a normal way to feel?

Saturday 26 December 2009

Christmas without you

Ugh, Christmas Eve, that came around so fast.

I'm totally organised, my shopping is done, everything wrapped. You'd have been laughing at me, bringing me presents and telling me what a fantastic little organiser I am but you're not here. I'm alone and I can't sleep, Santa has been, alone, without his little helper this year.

Around 4am, unable to sleep I decide to open the gifts you bought. John gave them to me the week that you died, you bought them together but I haven't peeked. They have been safe in the bottom of your wardrobe. You always said you dreaded giving me gifts, I'm hopeless at receiving things and always appear ungrateful, it's because I'm embarrassed, I wish I'd explained to you. Opening them was bitter-sweet. They were beautiful by the way, as they always were. You always choose so perfectly, maybe I should have told you that more often.

I pull on the jacket you bought me and curl up and cry. The next thing I know a voice is calling my name. I wake up, on the sofa, it's you calling from the other room. I run to your bed, "Kath, tablets" you say and as you do you are looking right at me. You lay back, your breathing slows and you're gone, just like that. I can hear myself shouting "breathe, you have to breathe, I love you" the noise of my voice wakes me and then there is another noise. Little feet, "he's been, he's been!" It's Christmas, without you.

The day was ok, I think autopilot is the word. The children loved their gifts and dinner, with the help of my parents was delicious.