Sometimes there's so much to say and no clear place to begin. Write
any daft thing down, but just start: over-the-shoulder advice from a parent
when bedtime was within sight and the homework nowhere to be seen. Even now, an
empty page balks back until cleaning the bathtub feels easier. Tonight is just
one of those nights, full of so much indecision that going to the pub and
finding words for a friend is a hardship. Even when it's not quite clear how
else you can spend the evening.
It's this feeling that has me pottering around the flat, doing
everything and nothing. I skipped the first track on an album and listened to
the rest of it over, as I have done all week. I laboured over a pot of daal,
only to freeze it straight afterwards. I wanted to lose myself in the cooking
like I might on another evening, cheeks flushed, radio on, wine glass in hand. Feeling
it all. But tonight I’m distracted and not at one with myself. This little pocket
of mine, this cosy flat isn't cocooning me like it normally does, and it’s
unsettling. This is my space, me,
champion of solitude, but I’ve found myself going from room to room, as
if I’ve put my keys down somewhere. Unfinished tasks spread across the place.
There’s a new hole that’s opened up and I hadn’t accounted for it being there.
But it’s there, and so lovely I want to sink back into it. It’s appeared out of
nowhere, this woozy little hole, growing and getting hungrier and becoming more
consuming and it feels alright to let myself get pulled in, especially now. My
family is gently shaking, there’s a small quake under the surface, measuring so
low on the Richter scale we can barely feel it, but we know it’s there. It’s
easier to ride through it when there’s someone else to hold onto, but that’s
not something I want to admit, because what if there wasn’t somebody else to
hold on? That’s not a very forgiving sentiment to have. But I want this other
who has recently started slotting into this space, my space, to be around. And
what for? So I can sit here and be equally distracted from my book in their
presence? Maybe I should just start this
album from the beginning. I look at the travel-sized bottle of eyewash in my
bathroom, so very glad it's there, and curse it for making my flat feel quieter than I feel comfortable
with.
"We've said everything we need to say, haven't we
lovey?" Granny said before I left her on Friday. These words left me with
such a deep comfort. I tucked them away along with "I'll always be close
to you" a line that in writing, looks lifted from a romantic comedy, but
which made me sob uncontrollably in the corridor outside of my work. Something
that she didn't need to tell me, but that felt truer because she had. People
don't really go away. I sat with these words, and the photos I took from the
big red trunk in her sitting room, and sat on the train back to Manchester
swimming in it all. I tried to put things down onto paper, into the very truest
eulogy possible. This was tricky in itself because the image of myself standing
in front of a crowd kept popping into my head, until it stopped feeling
terrifying and started feeling vain. A pre-emptive, self-congratulatory slap on
the back, like a drunken best man at a wedding, happier with himself and his
chosen words than the sentiment behind them. I wanted to get it right. This
wasn't going to be John Hannah devastating everybody, slewing them with e.e.
cummings. This is me, talking about my Granny and what she meant to me, to us,
to people in a crowd I don't yet know. A tug of war between the past tense and
the present, a crowd that isn't gathered yet but will be soon.
So we've said everything we need to say. Yes, and no. In a way.
When I'm back in Manchester, the line loses its power. There is so much left to tell you,
I think. There are things I have to say but I can't because they haven't
happened. Like, "Granny, my book is finished, here's the first copy."
or "Thank god, I don't feel repulsed any more. I'm happy and so in
love." I even realise now, quite bitterly that I don't know where that
bloody potter is! Somewhere near Tetbury, she couldn't even remember, she had
to drive around until she recognised the streets and found his shop. She bought
me that glazed pot with a geometric pattern for my last birthday, just weeks
before we found out she was ill. I opened it at work, telling Polly that it was
from "my Mum's Mum" so she would know it was from the writer Granny,
the one who writes me postcards about the changes in her garden, the peace of
the seasons adjusting. I wonder how many of those postcards she wrote to me
when she was ill and none of us knew it yet. I have a stack of them in a
drawer, in that tricky-to-read handwriting. Written mostly over the last four
years and it was probably growing inside of her the whole time, while she was
scratching an itch at the back of her head.
In February she wrote me;
She signed off take care my lovely girl and carry on living life to the full!! then there was an asterisk, and tucked into a tiny gap was written *it's a knack we both seem to have...
All well here. Life is full of good things. Yesterday I had lunch in the garden! The bulbs are coming up. Spring will be here soon.
She signed off take care my lovely girl and carry on living life to the full!! then there was an asterisk, and tucked into a tiny gap was written *it's a knack we both seem to have...
It's a knack we have because she gave it to me. She plonked it
right into my lap, along with the uncontrollable urge to pee whenever in a
bookshop, scrapbooking and being kind to souls; one's own and those of others.
The latter, a Christian relic from her upbringing as a vicar's daughter, is always
a work in progress, of course. Even when we want not to, there are always some
people we hurt along the way.
I sat on that train and spread the photographs out. Annie in
Mallorca. Tanned and glamorous, heavier and happy. Annie’s daughters sitting at
the dining room table, looking the same but also different. Annie standing on a
Cornwall coastal path, hair dyed chestnut red, framed by tall grasses and
eleven shocking pink foxgloves. A careless grin, the sort produced when the
person on the other side of the camera really knows you, and you really know
them. It was Joan behind the lens, one of Granny's oldest friends. This was
just one of their many trips together; Joan would fly over from Vermont and
they would set off on adventures typified by belly laughs and walking boots. As
they got older those protective knee-bandages would come along for the ride too,
but the Thelma and Louise spirit was still there. Though she was married to
Grandpa for almost 30 years, Granny has had dozens of mini-marriages too.
Enduring female friendships especially, with women of all generations. Goths,
health freaks, university friends, musicians, survivors, pragmatists, her
fellow welsh women and crop circle enthusiasts, all picked up along the way.
Annie has shared her warmth with them, given them hours over the phone, and all
together they created this bubble of incredible female energy, a power you
can't bottle, but can’t help but pass on. A bunch of gossips sharing this
not-so-great secret on. Surround yourself
with this energy, and everything will fall into place.
To call Granny a 'strong woman' doesn't seem to do her justice,
because nobody is strong really. Does strong mean you bulldoze through, not
feeling things, never making mistakes? If we change our conception of strength
to include flaws, hypocrisy, personal growth and a consistent loyalty it's a
much better fit. Granny is strong, flawed and glorious like all my favorite
women are. In her red trunk she has a folder labelled 'Life's Work
(Professional)' which for anybody else might sound dubiously ambitious, but
which for her makes total sense. She's been constantly working; on herself, on
her mind, her relationships and her beliefs about this world. The curiosity has
kept her young and active. She used to be a teacher, reading DH Laurence to her
pupils, and always willing them towards subversion and new tastes. But she's
always been a learner too, and I have always admired the fact that she isn't
scared to look like
a learner, or to look out of depth in her new chosen field of interest,
elbowing her way through to the experts as a visible newbie. She's been doing
this for as long as I've been here. In the trunk I also found a hand-drawn timeline
of 'Important Life Events', starting not at 1942, but at 1992. What had
come before was just as important; the Africa years, the births of Lucy and
Mary, that Christmas as a child when the popular girl at school got to dress up
as Carmen Miranda and Annie had to go as a fir tree. But 1992, aged 50 was when
an important chapter started for Annie. She didn't know it then but it would be
the beginning of a twenty-year period of getting to know herself again, after
her children had left home. She took herself on a six week tour of India, her
first trip alone and toed that line of cherishing beers beneath bougainvillaea
and then feeling quite melancholy, only to go back to feeling on top of the
world the next morning. It was during this time that Annie learned to be alone
after Dick died, and came to acquire that knack of living life to the full. She
would be formative in moulding my small mind, teaching me that a good life
could come from carving out a space for yourself, but also being open to
others. I watched her carving her space. She carved it when we walked down the
pavement, and she carved it in her little flat, where we spent afternoons after
she had picked me up from school. A photograph from the pile on the train table
showed a view her garden; courgette plants, yukkas and ivy sprawling in the
background, and at the front, a wicker table. Set for one, with a cup of tea
and a book open flat in a perfect pool of lunchtime light. I imagined her full of
the moment, jumping up to grab her camera so as not to forget that afternoon
and the others like it in A Garden of One's Own.
This is where I come stuck, because what do we mean when we talk
about living life to the full? She's only 72- that's
not full. When Granny first found out she was ill she wrote this
wonderful eulogy for herself. An alternative eulogy, packed with white lies and
great, big glaring additions. Me and my Mum always joke never let the truth get in the way
of a good story, a reference
to Granny's skill for exaggeration. So in that sense Granny's eulogy was
nothing but true. There was a trip to Mongolia, a fling with a yak farmer,
adventures in Morocco. All the while the continuing need for work to be done,
all the time out-witting illness.
Granny hasn't outwit this illness, and she knew she wouldn't from
the beginning, I think, even when she was making us mad by talking about living
for another 10 years, undoing it all by taking sea kelp medication. But the
peace and acceptance she has at the end show that she feels she has lived a
full life. Not as full as she might have liked but blooming close. And anyway,
what's this fantastical obsession we all have with the ideal death? The work is
never done. Very rarely is the last page complete. One of life's greatest acts
of mischief is that there's never a conclusion. It just yanks the carpet out
from under your feet. It's a wonder that we're always hunting for bookends, for
closure, when we know we will rarely find them. We all have to go, and Annie is
going. We don't like it one bit, but we loved her and she loved us and thank
god for that. "I'm going to ignore Dylan Thomas and go gentle into the
night." she said recently from her bed. She’s managed to stay in her own
home, and that’s been the best bit of all. She said that she’d been going to
some deep places during her naps. Going deeper and deeper. Dipping your toe in,
I said, taking a rekkie ahead of the journey. I always thought that watching
the deterioration of somebody you love would be the most harrowing thing; she's
gotten so very thin but I’ve been surprised it's not been so nearly as terrible
as I’d initially imagined, because she's still Annie. This is all par of the
course, we are all constantly changing on the surface, our bodies as vessels,
transforming faster at times than at others. Along the way we are ourselves,
great life-long projects, the work of us, and the others we choose to pass the
bricks to. She has this bell next to her bed, and she rings it when she needs
something. It’s actually pretty funny. She rings it, and summons whoever
happens to be pottering about downstairs. There's always somebody now, because she needs them there, and those friends, the energetic females have gathered, because 'in sickness and in health.' Whichever close friend or relative
will come up the stairs, like a servant ascending from the quarters. You see,
at least I know I’m not making it all up, she says.
Over Christmas I spent a lot of time walking around the park. It's
the triangle at the centre of our houses, between my Mum and Andy, and Mary and
her family, and Granny. It’s the park I spent three summers working in, making
coffees for people and doing the crossword and sweating profusely at times. I
walked along the paths feeling so sad, and stumped by it all, but also so alive.
That doesn’t sound like a tasteful thing to say in the context of the dying,
but there’s nothing like looking down into that strange void for blowing the
cobwebs away. When you can walk around a park aimlessly and just watch the
trees, and the changing light and go slowly, things add up. Small pleasures
announce themselves and the presence of time becomes more prominent. I watched
a pack of small boys doing loops around the park on their micro scooters, and
was tickled by the one falling behind at the back, absorbed by the tarmac moving
beneath his feet, not watching what was in front of him. I could see the blue sliver
of Granny's house at the bottom of the hill, and thought of her in bed where
she would be watching the tops of the trees, and the sky, with less time than
us. I looped around some more, passing the same dog walkers and the same Dad
gently saying ‘come on’ as he pushed his daughter uphill on her bike. I recognised
them as a pair I had sold ice lollies to.
Use your time and use your words. It's important to use your time
and use your words, because I think that's what we mean when we talk about
living life to the full. And they don’t even always have to be the right words,
because as we know, you always have to start somewhere, even if it feels daft. You
can’t always deliver a line that’ll knock somebody sideways with sadness,
though actually it’s pretty skilled if you have the knack. I'm back to feeling
comforted by Granny's line. We've said everything we need to say, and really
she already knows the rest of the words that are still to come. She knows that
what lies ahead for any of us is what lies behind for her. It’ll all tick
along, almost as before and I’ll still feel her here because we used our time
together, all 23 years of them, and it feels almost remarkable that it wasn't
twice that amount.
17 comments:
So sorry for your loss, it is the weirdest feeling losing a grandmother - I lost mine a few years back and though our relationship was not as close as your's appears to have been, it was still the most baffling feeling of sadness - your bit about walking through the park feeling both sad and alive sums it up pretty well. I have to add, even though I don't know you and didn't know your granny personally -so I hope I am not overstepping a line, I think you have done her a beautiful service through this piece. Just so perfectly put. You have a fantastic talent for writing and I hope writing this was somewhat cathartic for you but also that you are proud of it.
Despite the consequence, I thoroughly enjoyed reading this.
Sometimes we go through situations out of our control. Sometimes we do things for other people simply because they need it.
As a child I found it much easier to accept the world swirling around me, as an adult I find it much more difficult to stay centered. You sound centered.
Beautiful writing, thank you for sharing
Oh Stevie
Such beautiful sentiments for Annie,
thank you
Sending you loving thoughts too
eleni
Stevie I am in awe of your eloquence, and your sensibility. You do have a lot of Annie in you. I wish you and the rest of the family much love. Anna
Beautiful Stevie xx
This was beautiful. X
I don't think you could ever have found better words about loss and love and inspiration than these Stevie. I know they are about your personal grief but you took me straight back to the raw loss I felt when I lost my dad 6 years ago. Your Annie sounds incredible, and I can't help but wish I'd managed to squeeze in as many of those sorts of words with my dad. It is always a funny mix of regret and acceptance, of loss but their constant companionship. I'm sending you my love and two tips- 1. Read Joan Didion's Year of Magical Thinking, if you haven't already. She seems to say everything there is to say. 2. Be kind to yourself. Grief isn't a linear process which recedes in a neat line down to nothing. It raises its head at many an unexpected moment and you have to allow it to wash over you. Thinking of you and yours,
Laura
Chambray & Curls
This is so beautiful and touching. Keep living life to the full, carrying those bricks passed on from your Granny. From a long time reader x
Hugs. I know what you are going through. Her beauty already lives in you.
This is so beautifully wrote, and so touching. I'm really sorry for your loss, Stevie. xx
This post completely knocked me sideways with sadness. Utterly beautiful Stevie, Annie sounds wonderful and thank you for sharing your time that you have spent with her with us too. Lots of love from a long time readers of yours xxxx
I'm so sorry for your loss Stevie. This is such a beautiful and heartbreaking piece. Thinking of you xoxo
Stevie, this is so incredibly powerful, beautiful and real. Just like you x
Beautiful words, Stevie. I will never forget your lovely granny. I fondly remember her reading D.H. Lawrence's 'The Rainbow' and bringing Chaucer's 'Wife of Bath' absolutely to life during my A level years. There was never a shortage of laughter during Annie's classes. I am so grateful to have had her as my teacher. She's a really special lady. Love to you all at this difficult time.
This was beautifully written, and so, so moving. I wish I could find comforting words to send you, but I think the best comfort is to be found in having had such a beautiful, special person in your life. Sending you all my best wishes xox
My dear Stevie - those beautiful, touching words, so full of depth and feeling and love. You are truly gifted as a writer and have a wisdom about life far beyond your years. I know that much of that wisdom has been passed on to you from Annie. All my love. X
Stevie, I can't explain how much this piece of writing (and sad but beautiful story) has stuck with me since reading it all those weeks ago. Completely breathtaking.
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