Tuesday 30 April 2019

" .....how to live with our dead."

A  baffled squirrel.....






but he did find something else to eat... clutching it to his chest...so cute...even though I know he's a rodent and he steals the food meant for the birds....he's still adorable. Or she.



Today, as I've been cleaning, and cleaning out - the cupboard under the sink( a horrible mess) and weeding - pulling up strands of choking convolvulus ( although I love its delicate mauve flowers) I've been thinking about an interview I read on The Daily Good website with Stephen Jenkinson who is a death doola.
He believes that 'what modern people suffer from most is 
culture failure:
 amnesia of ancestry and deep family story,
 phantom or sham rites of passage,
no instruction on how to live with each other,
the world around us,
or with our dead,
or with our history'.

I would have liked some instruction on how to live with Robin in his dying, how to have accompanied him gently, authentically instead of trying to keep him alive with banana smoothies.

Stephen Jenkinson doesn't like to use the language of loss ...
"When you say " I lost someone", you are describing an immense degree of neglect of emotional and psychic duty, the consequence of which is that you are cast adrift - not because of what you did, but because of what someone else did - he or she died....
There is nothing wrong with the word 'dying'. Someone I cared about died and as a consequence of that I'm lost.

Yes, Robin died and now it's me who is lost without his physical presence to tether me to myself and my world.
And I do feel it  - this lack of instruction, of ritual, of" how to live with our dead.".... somehow to contain  it, expose it ...how to live without him but with him in another form...an unrecognisable relationship for me.


 Stephen Jenkinson - 
 "The reality is that the death of someone else has completely dislodged you from your life.
So it is a mystery obviously.
Underneath all the observations we can make about it, death is very mysterious.
It seems to me the death of other people can be much more profound for us than our own death tends to be, 
and maybe there is something deeply proper about that because the presence of other people
 has more consequence for us, it seems, than our own presence does.

It's the same with loving myself...why do I find that so much harder than loving someone else?
I find it almost impossible to imagine my own death anyway...so the best I can do is to imagine how to live well ....and that could include how to die well too.

From his experiences of being exposed to so much dying and human suffering Stephen Jenkinson says, 
...."I experienced it as an invitation to inhabit the days that are granted to me with a kind of depth and precision and faithfulness that may never have been available to me had I not seen the kind of dying that I did".

Depth. Precision. Faithfulness.
The way I want to inhabit my days, having lived with Robin through his dying and death,
is with,
Compassion. Tenderness. Gratitude.







Monday 29 April 2019

The Lettering Artist...An Invasion of Starlings...and Living with Brokenness


This morning my sister and I sit in my sunny lounge  pouring over small square samples of limestone and slate - pink, black, grey, green. And sift through lots of colour photos and drawings and sketches....looking for ideas that resonate with mine.
A lovely man is sitting in the big armchair talking us through what is involved in making a memorial headstone. He's called a Lettering Artist and I'm commissioning him to make a totally unique one for Robin's grave.
 This is just the first exploratory meeting. I was dreading it ...been  wobbly and tearful at the weekend.... plunged deeply back into our life...and Robin's illness and death.... and everything that surrounded that....trying to feel into how to encapsulate him -  the man and his open-armed loveliness -  in a memorial headstone.

But the Lettering Artist is so sensitive and inspiring and practical he makes it easy ...easy for me to imagine something that would honour Robin, represent him....that he would love.

And there could be a space at the end to add And Trish and my dates. When that time comes.

Drama at the bird station.
 Although I didn't see what happened - it could have been a rook or a pigeon or a squirrel - some creature knocked over Robin's ceramic Bird Woman head and broke off one of her side ear-wings.

And an invasion of starlings.
 Up to now I've only seen two at a time but today there was a great flapping of wings and a flock of at least twelve zoomed in to the bird station and set to with their long beaks, hoovering up seeds and suet nibbles in seconds.

They have been coming and going all day... 
cleaning out the feeders as fast as I fill them up.
A few robins and sparrows and great tits still fly in,
but I'm concerned that they will take over and 
dominate 
and frighten away the smaller birds....
I think they also eat baby birds...
and I here I was - worried about the Sparrowhawk which I haven't seen again.
Maybe the starlings are here to stay...and I'll have to find a way to adapt to them and their habits.

 Today I unpacked a few more of Robin's ceramics which have been wrapped up in boxes in the garage ever since I moved.....wanting to give the Lettering Artist a flavour of Robin's quirkiness.

I have been keeping them safe in the garage before any building work starts....they get broken so easily....he was always sticking bits back on...claws and tails and ears...but it feels good to have them in view again.
And if they get broken, I could mend them  - like sticking back the ear wing on Bird Woman  head - or maybe it's just their time to go ....or time for me to live with them with their brokenness. 

Some things aren't mendable...and I could learn to love them anyway.
 Like my broken life.



Friday 26 April 2019

A Caterpillar Day


I don't  know what this profusely flowering succulent is but it is trailing all over the wall of the  border  by the swimming pool....so pretty.

The lilac tree that escaped the chop...


The squirrel and Robin's ceramics...





He doesn't know whose head he sits on ...but I do.

Siskin and house sparrow sharing the bird feeder...

a pair of starlings are flying in more and more often....

but I rarely see  the beautiful thrush these days.

Today I make another small spring onion and smoked cheddar cheese quiche - this time to share with my lovely cousin who is coming to lunch tomorrow.

These words have helped a dear friend through her dark times...

"Just when the caterpillar thought the world was over....it turned into a butterfly."

It's been a caterpillar day for me...creeping along with my sore aching  body, but spending time with a dear friend and her adorable 7 month old grandson was a lovely distraction.

I can't hear the distant flap of the butterfly wings yet but I'm listening... 


Thursday 25 April 2019

I will kiss the face of my life again...




Another not getting better day...or a getting worse day. I know it's temporary....but have retreated to bed with the shivers.
So someone else's words tonight  ....this beautiful poem by Ellen Bass....  sent to me by a dear friend.

She says it all for me...and one day I will kiss the face of my life again (to quote Elizabeth Gilbert).....and maybe this blog counts ......just brushing my lips softly against it.


The best I can do tonight.



Wednesday 24 April 2019

Getting Better...Not Getting Better

All his own work - my great nephew's wonderful creative decorations on top of his grandma's cup cakes...( natural blue dye of course!)

My sweet great niece making a nest for her easter eggs in her father's lovely springy hair...

Easter Monday lunch - my Creamy Leek and Tomato Croustade ( an old Cranks recipe) for the vegetarians ...also appreciated by the meat eaters ( lamb) around the table...

and for pudding - Nigella's Clementine Cake - just boiled up pureed clementines, eggs, sugar and ground almonds...and my great nephew added the Lindt Orange Chocolate balls for the decoration.
Later we played football -  well, a version of football with  two very motley teams ( from a 72 year old to a 5 year old), in glorious warm sunshine...and later sat on the grass in the shade  and ate the left over eggs from the Easter Egg Hunt.


Today my wise and helpful therapist says,
"You don't have to let go of everything"....
I tell her about my "survivor's guilt"...Now I'm supposed to  enjoy all the fruits of Robin's hard work over the years...but without him it feels all wrong.
I see that I can let go of all the pain and suffering but hold on to all the good things about the past.....Robin's love.... take those with me into any future I can dream up.
I understand it with my head but the tightness in my lungs is constant...
I seem to be halted by pain at the moment....still invaded by grief...although I know this lingering illness is all part of transforming it....letting it evolve.

 So I think I'm getting better ... but not getting better as well....

In spite of lovely Middle Eastern lunch with dear friends it's a not-getting-better-day.
I long to go out in the garden with secateurs and weeding fork...but my stamina is minimal.

So I cut tall hyacinth bluebells, white lacy cow parsley, brilliant orange calendula flowers, pink spikes of London Pride,  a spray of acid yellow euphorbia, deep purple French lavender and soft  lime green hellebores and flop  them in a vase on the kitchen window sill ....and watch the birds instead.
Letting go of my longing. 


Friday 19 April 2019

The Heifers...The Clematis... The Quiche... The Coot ...and the Moon

The cows are back.

Or rather a new little group of heifers.

I watch them from the new bench while I'm eating my breakfast raspberry and banana  smoothie this morning in glorious warm sunshine.

I notice how aware they are of each other. When one of them decides to lie down suddenly a few of the others gather round and nudge him with their noses.

They lie together affectionately...

it's very touching ....they are still very young.

A starling keeping an eye out...

The bird feeders are nearly empty. I'm waiting for a RSPB consignment. I tried replacing the RSPB suet nibbles with another version by a different company and the birds won't eat them. None of the birds will eat them - it's amazing how they have such discerning tastes. 

Walking round the garden I discover a  whole rambling clematis Montana on a fence at the front which you can't see easily as it's at the end of  narrow passage at the side of the house...

and a lovely yellow azalea on the far bank of the stream breaking out into full flower.

It's too hot to eat my herby salad lunch on the bench... still in full sun...

but the sheets get dry on the line in a few hours - wonderful.

I walk into the village to post a letter - all the gardens I pass by are full of spring tulips and blossom trees - 

but it takes me a long time to walk back very slowly. I keep forgetting that I can't do all the things I want to as my energy is so depleted ...I feel l like a baby that needs lots of naps..
At least the nausea is subsiding and for the first time I actually want to make something to eat that isn't a salad or soup ....I find a clump of chives poking up  in the grass with the forget-me-nots and the dandelions and chop them up ( the chives) ....

with a spring onion and make a small oak smoked cheddar cheese quiche with a kefir yogurt custard. Just for me. It doesn't feel quite right - although delicious  - in my mind a quiche is always for sharing...
Tonight I sit on the sofa in the dark with the curtains undrawn, watching "Victoria" on catch up TV. Every now and again I glance up and see the moon -  nearly full I think  - rising above the plane tree in the field and I wonder if the heifers are still there, lying together in the moonlight - keeping each  other company.


And this is for Sage....
many thanks for clearing up the coot versus moorhen dilemma...I think I have it right  and the babies on the London Lake belong to this mother or father coot...

even though  they have the white caps their babies have little red heads...a bit confusing...

but I do love your description of them as " floating black dandelion seeds" - perfect!