So much has happened since you crept gracefully out of life. I know you’ll be ecstatic that I finally
mustered up the courage to walk away from that relationship that was so
damaging to me, that you knew has become a mirror image of your marriage. After you died I tried many things to fix it
but in the end I knew that to stay with him would be like a betrayal of you. So I left and it was the best decision of my
life. You’ll be proud of me, I think,
for doing the thing you were never quite able to do.
I’ve started singing.
I know! I wish you’d lived long
enough, and been well enough, to come and see my choir. It’s been a lifeline for me and I now
understand how singing was such an emotional outlet for you, a release of all
the feelings you took care to hide from everyone. When illness took away your singing voice I
saw how painful it was for you; now I understand something of how soul-destroying
that must have been. I would love, so
much, to be able to sing with you. Oh,
that we could have the chance to do it.
I cook like you.
Throw it all in, one pot dinners.
My spaghetti bolognese and moussaka taste like yours but I’ve never
managed to match your roast potatoes – although let’s be honest, no one could
ever match your roast potatoes. I can
never eat cheese on toast (with seasoning salt, of course) without thinking
about you, with a smile. The same goes
for chicken noodle soup, our comfort illness food.
I’ve had a horrible year, mum. I’ve wanted more than anything to curl up on
your lap at your end of the sofa and have you make it all better; there were
times when I thought about coming to find you in the sweet hereafter or wherever
you may be. I know you’ll understand
that, I think you felt that way more often than you ever said. You knew there
was a dark shade to me and without you to talk to about it I’ve felt lost. I’m coming through the other side of it now.
Being a strong woman is as much my strength and yet my weakness as it was for
you and I’m learning when to ask for help, and accept it. I’ve learnt so much from what you did and
couldn’t do.
I wish you could have known B. You’d like him ever such a lot. He’s even got me interested in gardening, so
maybe I have got your green fingers after all.
He makes up silly songs and I can just picture the two of you together
in your garden, pottering about among the hardy perennials swapping ever-more
ludicrous rhymes! Yesterday he said “even
if you don’t believe in god, you can still believe in magic.” I think you’d love that as much as I do.
When you died I was terrified I’d never be able to remember
you as you were before illness, but I do, and I feel happy at these memories
more than I feel sad. I have this
picture up in my bedroom, you and your funny, shy little shadow. We had such good times you and I.