Showing posts with label death. Show all posts
Showing posts with label death. Show all posts

Thursday, 30 July 2015

Juxtaposed : Day 64 #100daysofwriting

I'm in an emotional jumble. In the space of a week I've felt so juxtaposed.

I've mourned the broken shards of a friendship lost because of rejection. But been told by at least three people that I am one of their favourites. I've felt afraid and cowardly, but had my courage praised. I've held a tiny life in my arms and felt heartbreak over life lost.

I could write more, but do you have any idea of the emotions contained in that single paragraph? How complex our lives are, how precious are the moments. And yet, here we stand, alive.

Monday, 19 May 2014

You #100creativedays Day 27

"I try
but then
without warning
someone says your name
and it hangs in the air
Salty
Dry
Crackly
as I hold my breath
and look away
sometimes I hold a hand to my chest
just above my heart
as I struggle to hold back
the tears
the flood of memories
the longing for you"

Sharon Paine 19.05.2014

Wednesday, 29 May 2013

Tell The World....

"I'm coming home
I'm coming home
Tell the World I'm coming home
Let the rain wash away all the pain of yesterday
I know my kingdom awaits and they've forgiven my mistakes
I'm coming home, I'm coming home
Tell the World that I'm coming"
                                                          - Skylar Grey (Coming Home)

I got addicted to the P Diddy version while travelling last year. I remember discovering it on the playlist on the plane just before I landed in London, tears pushing to get out as the fields rolled out beneath us. I felt so emotional, this was my first trip outside of CT, I was about to see my best friends from school (strange how so many of them ended up across the sea), I'd done something brave, and I'd been travelling for about 19 hours on a smidgen of sleep...

I felt like I was about to escape reality and that all my mistakes would be washed away, I'd be reborn in England. I was forever changed by leaving everything at home for a month. I grew, my eyes opened, I was inspired. 

It was my theme song on the way home, when I was really coming home.... almost like a prayer that I had changed for the better, that I would still be me, that my kingdom would remember me....

When Granny was sick and dying, she kept saying that she was ready to "go home"... I knew she didn't mean back to Pinelands. On the day that she died, I put the P Diddy version on and howled during the chorus.

And now, I have discovered the original Skylar Grey version by accident, and it is soooooo utterly moving.

Wednesday, 2 January 2013

Broken Hearted We Walk

Around my birthday weekend in November, my Granny was struggling with a chest infection, she was weak from coughing and hoarse, so I told her we could postpone celebrating my 30th. We never did get to have a knees up…

It’s almost a blur, she couldn’t quite shake the weakness after her illness, then her leg was very swollen, next thing she was in hospital for over a week with blood clots in her leg, and they discovered why she was so terribly breathless… her left lung was barely functioning, filled with water, with an embolism and evidence of a tumour. I remember almost fainting in the afternoon heat, holding Granny’s hand as she whispered “I’m dying” – I fought so hard to keep her spirits up while I was screaming inside. I remember driving to a friend’s house, tears streaming down my cheeks, screaming as loud as I could. I tried to explain what was happening to all my concerned friends, in measured tones… my voice sounded hollow in my ears. I didn’t handle it very well, I was cross, I was teary, my stomach cramped… I was trying to balance all the aspects of my life. I wanted everything to stop. I prayed and prayed.

 Granny went back to The Home, but wasn’t walking, and was so weak. We spoke about taking her to Christmas lunch in a wheelchair, we spoke about her 2nd great-grandchild, due in 6 months, we spoke about the things we would do, and we asked her to be strong. She tried, sometimes her wicked grin cracked through, she was her cheeky self. Other times she seemed so weakened and overcome with the December heat. She spoke of twelve’s; I told her she was staring at the clock too much. I felt so ill for the whole of 12/12/2012…. I didn’t want the twelve’s to mean anything. We got through that, but still tiny pieces of my heart were breaking off, I was exhausted, I was trying to move house, I was doing renovations… I needed everything to just be ok. I prayed and prayed.

The nurses tried to get Granny to walk, her legs just collapsed underneath her, we think that was the moment her left hip just gave way. Back to the hospital, talk of spending Christmas there, kind doctors telling us they wanted to get her comfortable. I felt so young and so grown-up as a doctor explained everything to me… I wanted to stop them, say “wait, my mommy will be here now… I’m just a kid” The hip replacement surgery was scheduled for Christmas Eve – we sat on nails the whole day, waiting to hear that she had come out of surgery – in the end they postponed the surgery, her blood was still too full of blood thinners. My heart sang as I held her hand and asked Brother to read her the Christmas story from the Bible, she would be “with us” for Christmas. I needed everything to be normal. We had a big family Christmas; we prayed for her, we smiled as her great-grandson opened the gift we’d bought on Granny’s behalf. We made a fuss. Mom took her a cracker and some chocolates. Dad and I went to her later, I told her all the stories, I fed her some ice-cream, and she grinned and closed her eyes in the sheer bliss that is slightly melting vanilla ice-cream. That funny, straight smile. I kissed her forehead and said I’d see her tomorrow.

Granny held on until about 4am on the 28th of December. God spared her for Christmas and spared her the pain of surgery. I couldn’t see her suffer anymore, and she really did struggle in those last two days.
 
"You are always in my heart"