Death.... its a funny old game

3 minute read time.

Death. Its one of those things that's really final. No more to pass go, collect £200. No Do Over's. No come backs, no final countdown. Its pretty much MORE the end, than finding you've got to the bottom of a packet of Cadbury's clusters. And the emotional fall out is pretty heavy as well. (The death not the clusters)

And this is where I find myself sitting. A week on from the passing of my wonderfully brave father who lost his battle to lung and brain cancer on the 8th October at 8:12am Saturday morning. He is gone. Completely. Everything that made him walk, talk, tick and move has been removed from this earth in the short space of a last exhale. And it is the most painful shockingly sad thing I've experienced to date. However. We become so entrenched in the death of someone, so locked into that final moment or moments leading up to it that we seemingly forget the actual life that person led. The fun the laughter, the mad mad moments. Believe it or not it was writing my fathers eulogy that reminded me of this fact. My Father was Flipping funny. Don't get me wrong, he could be a cantankerous old badger who could be so momentously grumpy you would be hard pushed to not want to kick him in the knackers. H A R D........ And sometimes he created moments where you would genuinely want to suffocate him with a pillow. He had a temper that could light a rocket, and an arse that Sadam himself would have wanted to patent and use against us.

In the last year of his life, with the doom of the Big C lurking around him like a spectre waiting in the shadows, he became superman. He looked Cancer in the eye, and sized him up. And then said 'Right you rapscallion, you rumbustious little ne'er-do-well. Lets see what you've got.' In the end it beat him. But he gave it a flipping hammering all the way there. He even remain hair in-tacked and asked when given the option of radiotherapy if he would loose his hair. If he was going to, he said to me, he wouldn't have it. Because he would end up looking like a fucking trophy cup. He had dark days. But Chemo wrecks your emotions anyway.

I have always been a Daddy's girl. Not in the 'Daddy buys me everything I want' kinda way. More in the 'Dad buys me beer and lets me smoke' kinda way. So when he eventually shuffled off his perch, I was left standing there thinking, 'Balls. I've not got a Dad.' To be honest I felt like I had suddenly been orphaned and left standing in the middle of a supermarket at the age of 5 with no bugger to come and collect me. And the roller coaster you get on, for the 'Grief Train', is not one you can actually get off of once you're on it. You end up crying at times that are highly inappropriate, staring inanely at walls, and for me, I appeared to have lost the ability to think, speak in coherent sentences and even feed myself. I've lost half a stone, I've the agility level of a flattened skunk and I look like something pulled out from the bottom of a freezer.

Its like the weirdest cycle on the planet. The sheer wave of sadness knocks you off your feet, only to see you picked up by anger and tossed BACK onto your feet, to then have denial take you up the river in Egypt, only to be bought back down a passing river that's called reality who then hands you off to sadness who knocks you down again......... etc etc. I sometimes believe that I have wandered through the proverbial looking glass. Then there's the arrangements. Oh My SWEET Jesus. Coffin's and flowers, Orders of services, tea, cakes, sandwiches. Music, the service itself. The venue for during and after, the cars, and then the readings and the eulogy. Timings, the vicar, or in our case, where is our vicar....... The obituary in the paper, (that was weird) so that by the time you're finished doing all the above I don't know whether we are cremating Dad or getting him prepared for a wedding.

I'm going to miss the sarcastic charming bastard with a passion fit for cheering on Scotland in the rugby. He was my Dad. And to me, the only one fit for wearing that red cape of superness.

My Dad. 8th May 1939 - 8th October 2011

May there be nurses for you to ogle

May your glass always be full

May your pipe never be empty

And your farts still clear a room

May your cards fall as you choose them

May your feet still smell like cheese

and may Erimore mixture always be free.
(PS And your fridge be always filled with Cadbury's Fruit N' Nut)
Anonymous
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hi, you said it girl. That's how it is. I am so sorry to hear as I have followed your stories of dads and moving and love and life.

    I raise a glass to your dad Cheers Dad! and how proud he would be of you. It is everything you say and more, (and you put it so wonderfully well) but all I can say is that eventually the roller coaster evens out a bit and the days turn from crying to today I wasn't upset to one day you realise that the switch has happened and now you have the odd sad days and you remember your dad and smile and laugh at the cantankerous old so and so you loved so much.

    The biggest hug to you in the meantime and take it easy.... its a long road to walk.

    Little My xxx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Hey little My!!! (tackles you to floor in hug)

    Its been a road hasn't it! And what a difference a year makes. Its strange. Its sitting better a week on. Which i think is good. (the GF says it is. She is wise. We will listen.....) I know the road is long. But i am not alone. So many people have gone through the same experience and I am truly blessed that I have many people to whom i can turn in moments of sadness, and moments of happy. Many people walk this path alone and for them, my heart goes out to them. I've had people to buffer me, and lift me up. To feed me, and keep me watered. And i was able to be there for my Dad for a whole week holding his had, (although at the time it almost broke me) I was so glad that I did it.

    Its a hard and sorry thing. But sometimes things like this need to be spoken about. Not hidden in shadows. Death is a thing. Its part of life. As much as a beating heart is, so is a still heart. My internal jigsaw will adjust itself, and a piece will become a fit for Dad. He has not left me. Merely stepped into the next room (I may have stolen that from a poem, but I'm grieving so i have artistic licence.... :-) ) 

    Big hugs Little My and hope you are keeping well.

     

    K xx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Gasp, pant, wrestle over... phew thanks for the hug haha.

    I am glad you got to spend that week holding his hand. I did the same with my mum and although I also thought it would break me, it actually gave me strength. I thought, if I can do this, then I can do anything and as you walk your journey and someone throws a bump in your path, you can remember and think I did that. I can do anything. And you can. And I do.

    I remember your dad giving you some wonderful advice once. I can't exactly remember it now but it was something about living your life and having fun and being happy with GF or something. It was in a blog you wrote a while ago and I said to you listen to your dad... Anyway, you'll know. Always remember that and live your life with joy for your dad and take over that cape of superness, farts and all!

    I would wrestle you to the ground back, but I can't get out of bed ha ha   and I am not allowed to lift anything  ha ha (Just a slight hernia type problem. Keeping well otherwise. )

    xxxxx

    and if I can be a bit soppy, your jigsaw will have a golden shining piece in it  (though it might smell of cheese. Ah well, soppy nearly worked... )x

     

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    There are two things you can do with Fucking Cancer: you can lie down and let it trample all over you, or you can keep on kicking it in the nuts for as long as you can. Your dad chose the second way, and yay! for him. He sounds great - a real loss to you and the world.

    But the disbelief, and the sudden remembering in the middle of the night, and the grief, and the anger - it's not just a regular roller coaster, it's one of those Alton Towers things that I won't go on.

    Oddly, getting things sorted afterward, and especially arranging and attending the funeral, are cathartic. Just as well, as they're also unavoidable. The funeral, I found, really does draw a line under 'then' and move you on to 'now I get on with my life'. But then there are birthdays, and milestones - the first Christmas when you realise you've one less present to buy; bloody Father's Day, which my father hated anyway ... - and they rock you back and suddenly there you are, wondering how you ever stopped hurting, even for a moment.

    Did you ever watch Buffy? In a late episode, her mother dies, and her friend Anya, who used to be a demon but had become stuck in mortality and is not best pleased about it, says this:

    I don't understand how this all happens. How we go through this. I mean, I knew her, and then she's, there's just a body, and I don't understand why she just can't get back in it and not be dead any more! It's stupid! It's mortal and stupid! And, and Xander's crying and not talking, and, and I was having fruit punch, and I thought, well Joyce will never have any more fruit punch, ever, and she'll never have eggs, or yawn or brush her hair, not ever, and no one will explain to me why.

    And it may just be an American TV show, but ... yeah. That about sums it up.

    I am so very sorry for the loss of your father. I hope you make it through the days, weeks, months, years to come with more joy in his memory than grief at his loss.

    Fucking cancer.