The A-Z of things I cannot do

A. Aroooo quietly during bitey face.

B. Be sad. I am a naturally happy Beagle Harrier boy. Unless I have poorly pals.

C. Calmly watch squirrels cavorting in my garden.

D. See Dixie, I would love to meet her just once but New Jersey is a long way.

E. Eat my dinner in peace and quiet. I seem to have a vampire permanently watching me.

F. Feel happy when my friends feel sad or unwell.

G. Get extra treats. Dad has a heart of stone.

H. Have off lead fun outside of my house.

I. Ice Cream. Because my parents don’t allow me any. This may not be true.

J. Jet around the world to see my friends, sadly.

K. Knit things. Opposable thumbs you see.

L. Love Lenny and my parents any more. They are the best.

M. Moan about my life as it is allegedly very good.

I cannot sit still.

N. Needles. I don’t do needles, they are horrid things. I can’t look.

O. Open cupboard doors as I don’t have those opposable thumbs.

P. Patrol the garden without smelling squirrel.

Q. Quiet. Apparently I don’t know the meaning of the word.

R. Ride a bicycle. Opposable thumbs.

S. Sleep past 6.30 in the morning. Boing boing boing arooo.

T. Tell Lenny off when he steals my dinner. He was an orphan like me after all.

U. Understand why there aren’t extra treats.

V. a(V)oid having fun during the day.

W. Wait patiently whilst my paws are cleaned after a really muddy walk.

X. e(X)amine my brothers ears without wanting to clean them with my tongue.

Y. Yell quietly. See Q, apparently.

Z. Zooms with too many friends who have crossed the Rainbow Bridge.

Cheeky boy.

What are your things you cannot do?

The frailty of life

I am going to let my dad write on my blog today as, in the early hours of this morning, my nanny passed away in hospital. She made her longest journey to the Rainbow Bridge, as it were. I loved my nanny, she was the best.

Watching the person who gave you life, who then preserved and progressed your life, gradually deteriorate is a strange and slightly surreal experience. Seeing my father shortly after he had died was somewhat of shock to the system and I suppose the only redeeming factor to his death was that he did not apparently suffer toward the end and indeed the end came quickly.

Conversely I, along with my siblings, have watched as our mother at first slowly and then more recently deteriorate markedly to what is sadly the inevitable conclusion. Looking at the person who gave you life, now being relieved of pain by medical means at the very end of her days is a thought provoking thing. It is said that as people near the end of their life, they seem to become a shell of their former selves and this seems to ring true in respect of my mother. Seeing her in the last seven days she seemed at once to have no cares in the world, yet at other times had her life etched upon her face. We were assured that she passed away in peace and was not in pain. This provides a modicum of solace to us all.

My mother and father had five children in eleven years. They watched as one of their children died at far too young an age. The family was raised in the age when predominantly dad went to work and mum kept the house, along with the children, in line until they flew the nest. In addition she managed numerous jobs for around fifty of her eighty three years on this earth.

Born prior to World War two commencing she was evacuated and then returned to her home in south London at the time of the Blitz. She was one of four children (the others were boys) so she would have been used to the general disorganisation of life that conflict brings to any scenario as well as having many children in the same house at the same time.

Malta

She met my father who then served his National Service in Malta between 1958-1960 and they returned to the UK to set up home and start their lives together. Along with my father they worked hard to ensure that the children had a roof over their heads and that they would grow up with a good moral compass and a clear understanding of right and wrong. Maybe I messed about along the way with some of their efforts at showing us the good from bad, but overall their teachings have succeeded I hope. In her later life, as her health failed to a constantly greater extent she relied more and more upon my father until his untimely demise in December 2017. Dad had been, to all intents, an unpaid and on site member of the wider care team that looked after her needs all day and night. At the point of his death both of my sisters stepped up admirably and assisted mum where they were able to do so. Without their help, she truly would have been lost. Problems with mobility as well as various further health scares and the odd fall meant there would be a move from their house of some 50 years to a flat where it was easier for her to get about. Subsequent visits to hospital for various ailments ended with her being looked after in a nursing home for the final 8 months of her life. It seems to have been a fairly painful end to a life lived fully by someone who felt that her task was to try and ensure her children were level headed, reasonable and didn’t get into trouble. My mother, along with my father, achieved these goals.

Best mum in the world

The inevitability of the end doesn’t dampen the feeling of emptiness in your stomach, the knowledge that you will no longer be able to call and tell of good and bad news, to be able to sit down, have a cup of tea and chat about whatever comes to mind. The contact with the past is broken, abruptly and permanently. However she said she doesn’t want sadness, foreboding and a sense of navel gazing. To her life is to be lived. We get one chance to get it as right as you can so we have to take it.

Thank you mum, for giving me and my siblings that chance.

I love you nanny. Fly free.