Europe needs to get real on defence; Britain needs to get real on Europe
13 February 2025
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13 May 2013
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I hope Dying Matters does make progress. It’s sad but true that it takes a bereavement to focus our thoughts on what happens at the end of our life. None of know what happens at the very end, but many of us have seen relatives before they have passed away. We shouldn’t need the wake-up call of a death but life gets in the way and we forget to make plans. A friend who I had lost touch with took his own life about 18 months ago. I wondered at the time if he had made the same plans that an older person would have made. Were his finances in order? Were his family supported? Even, did he get the music he wanted at his funeral? I think the most important thing to remember is that it’s ok to be frightened of dying, but you can still make plans to ensure you are cared for as you would want to be cared for.
This is the one area of experience in which it can be truly said, ‘We’re all in it together’. Over the last three years we’ve seen what a predictable fraud has been the application of that sentence to other areas of experience, especially austerity, but it is very applicable to mortality.
None of us actually know what life is all about or what happens after death. Nevertheless it’s good to have fellow travellers. Perhaps we experience a little death every night when we go into a dreamless sleep – not, I hasten to add, the ‘little death’ of certain song lyrics. The body is still ticking over but consciously where are we? In death the body gradually shuts down. We’ve all been there before, pre-natal, but we don’t even remember our earliest moments of childhood. Ultimately the honest answer to all this is ‘We don’t know’.
But yes, it’s obviously a good idea to sort out the practicalities relating to the inevitable.
if your relative died on the lcp with no consent though, their bereavement counselling is a bit …um…perfunctory!
Dying is one of those facts of life that nobody wants to think about, because, obviously, it comes to us all eventually. But when it comes very too close in calling, like in the passing away of a parent or close relative or friend, it does tax the mind when the mind tends to turn to thoughts of mortality.
My tactic is to say – YAH!, up yours God, and carry on regardless, what comes comes. I hope I just drop dead just like that, with my boots on, but sadly none of us can have such a wish, as things usually are. That is why so many people do adventure sports, to play sticking two fingers up at the grim reaper with his scythe.
Watched a WWII film from 1943 yesterday on C4 Film channel, with Gordon Jackson in it, “Millions Like Us”, as a heavy bomber Sergeant air radio and gunner – got married, and was gone the next day or so, just like that. It could have been me, gone at before 23, if time was different.
Death defines us in everything we do. We measure our success and failure by how we believe we will judge ourselves at ‘the end’.
When my grandmother passed away in early 2010 I was able to spend quality time with her in those final days (thanks in no small part to the truly inspirational level of care she received from the NHS). In her own home she was able to be surrounded by loved ones. Unable to speak following her stroke communication was made through the slightest of gestures: a squeeze if the hand, a smile, a sparkle on the eye.
In those moments we shared alone I wanted to so much to ask one simple question: “How do you feel?”
A question that, in one form or another, we are asked throughout our lives. We take it for granted.
But when it comes to ‘the end’, if we are able to be aware that it *is* the end, we shy away from asking that most basic, simple and true of all questions.
I regret not asking her.
I have already spoken to my own dad (it was his mother who passed) about this. We have agreed that when the time comes, and if there is an opportunity to do so, I want to talk to him about how he is feeling. How *it* feels.
If there is anything as fantastical and unearthly as life after death we have also agreed that I will be reminding him that it is his mission to try and let me know.
We spend so much of our formative years learning to communicate that to experience our final moments, no matter how long they may last, conversing in platitudes and small talk seems a betrayal of everything we experience as human beings sharing our lives together.
It’s good to talk. Always.
I’d not been aware last week was for Dying Matters Awareness although I caught a very interesting interview on Saturday afternoon during this programme :
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01shqch
(slide along timer bar to 37mins)
which was on while I was risking my own untimely end during a few hours sadly attacking a very high-up ivy ………..
It was about the profession of undertaker / celebrant becoming more and more occupied by women, I posted last year about an amazing funeral I’d just attended conducted by one such.
Coincidentally, also on Saturday, I was surprised to see the media had released a photo of the little girl who had drowned on holiday last week.
They had been careless (?) enough to not only release her name but also the photo of her wearing a badged school sweater which means some of her fellow pupils were more likely to come to know of her being dead during the weekend.
Hopefully that carelessness (?) will still have allowed at least some to receive as much comforting as their having found out with each other at assembly today could have.
I’ve mentioned above a funeral I attended last year that was for a lovely man who’d died of a heart attack while on life support, surrounded by extended family who shared the impression he must have been in pain and panic, hearing, feeling and knowing what was happening.
It was comforting a couple of weeks ago when a heartwarming programme about our Emergency Services was on TV and a man who’d been brought back from death (by his wife following instruction from a 999 operator) said his experience wasn’t as terrifying for him as he’d come to know it had been for those around him. He even described it as calm and painless.
Finally looked in at the OP’s link to final tweets, some grrrreat ones 🙂
http://www.dyingmatters.org/page/final-tweets
Another of life’s bigger moments / decisions etc is the one Grace has asked about why so many people presume marriage to be a default development and display puzzlement or even mistrust for those that don’t/won’t do it if in a settled long term relationship.
I hope she won’t be upset to think of being confused with someone who shares her name ! 😛
http://uk.linkedin.com/in/gracecousins1
Paxo did give FM the chance to describe her non-husband as a pussy cat.
[…] After this, I feel I can finally face Philip Gould’s account of his four year journey through cancer where the first half reads….almost like the thriller I have just finished. While the cover has the legend: A Sunday Times Best Seller, the first I hear of it is at the Dying Matters event 13th May 2013 at Millbank. […]
[…] may 2013 and I am at a Dying Matters event in Millbank to celebrate Philip Gould’s book: When I Die. Among the questioners, is a Labour MP in his […]