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I've been thinking a lot about those no longer with us recently, and those whose days here are short. I'm pretty sure that the coverage of the Queen's death in Scotland last week has reached all corners by now and the grief in the country is palpable. Everything is a little bit reserved and quieter in deference to her loss and the grief of her family - not many people can command the mourning of an entire nation, but it seems to be genuine and freely given. It brings some perspective and a sense of scale to the grief of my own family though recent days.

My life seems to have been touched by the death or illness of several key people recently. I wrote last year of the loss of my sister-in-law and since then I have dreamed of other deceased family members several times. My grandfather, a funny, king, family-loving man in particular has been a presence in my dreams a couple of times. I find such meetings unsettling but rewarding and calming too, on reflection. I guess it is just a time in my life that my older family members are beginning to reach an age where some of them will sicken and die naturally.

My mother in law was born in the same year as the Queen. Her life is winding down; she is tired and introspective, trapped in a world where she is a part of life and yet not. She is very deaf and her memory is short yet she loves to see us all, on Skype or in person. She has lived a long and amazing life, with a wealth of stories and memories and a big family. She speaks openly of having lived too long now and we smile and chide her for her dramatics but there is a genuine feeling behind her words. Her friends are mostly gone and her beloved husband left us a decade ago  - she still misses him, I think.

Now she has to face the fact that she might outlive her son, who retired age sixty at the beginning of the year to focus on his fight against a cancer that he has been battling for a decade or more. My brother in law moved to the other side of the world to start a new life thirty years ago, and now he is there and we are still here, waiting for news on his condition, how he is that day, what he is feeling and how much pain he is in. It's brutal and upsetting for them and for us. His wife, despite the support of all the visitors and their neighbours and friends, is facing a life alone in a place filled with memories of her soul mate. He loves fast cars, beer, cycling,  sailing, the environment and the Stranglers. He is not old. He worked all his life for nine months of illness instead of retirement.

So what is my point? I'm not sure, to be honest. Other than my grandparents when I was quite young, I haven't had to face a lot of deaths, and only once, devastatingly,  of a young person. My feelings are the classic mix of anger, confusion, despair, guilt and a hollowness that no amount of words will fill. I tell myself it is part of life - I know it is - it is the surest part of the human condition - it happens to all of us and we all experience it when it touches those who we know and love.

None of these things help right now.

But in a few months, I will be listening to the radio, or be walking by the sea, or working in the garden and some aspect of their lives will flicker across my mind - a rose, a song, a recipe, a sailboat, a phrase or an old joke,  a moment that has made it into family lore. A word. A dream.

A memory.

And I will smile as I realise that they have not travelled so far away after all.
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The world is in tough times, there's no two ways about it. War, climate crisis, hate, intolerance, poverty - the lesser or greater degrees there are very few people right now who can say they are living the sweet life. There are even those who, like, me, find it impossible to put up emotional barriers against the onslaught of desperate news that we are bombarded with, day in and day out. I find myself so affected by the suffering and the inhumanity of some that I have to actively avoid the news or workplace chat or social media to protect myself from it. And if it's not humanity as a whole, it's on a more personal scale. Within my circle of closest friends I have a divorce after 30 years, an advanced case of breast cancer and someone who has had their life's saving scammed from them by people purporting to be their bank. Some days are just too hard to bear.

This week I was looking forward to meeting up with my reading club friends who I met at work some years ago and found a mutual appreciation of a good book. We gathered at our usual pub, bought pots of tea and settled down to catch up with each other before we discussed our last read. I was asked first, so I explained some stress and tension at work, some minor health issues that were niggling, my plans for the year - normal stuff. My friends however had such terrible stories to share that I was left in shame that I had even imagined that I wasn't one of fortune's favoured ones. One lady has a sister in law in a flat in Kyiv, remaining with her elderly and ill parents as the bombs explode all around them, waiting for the one that doesn't miss. Another friend has a partner who has an unidentified wasting illness after a brush with Covid - she herself had it over Christmas and had lost so much weight from being forgotten up in her bed and feeling too ill to get up to feed herself.

They both did their best to steer the conversation away from these awful stories but we were a subdued bunch that discussed our last book and chose the next. I drove home depressed and sad, and had nightmares, back to back all night.

I got up early the next morning and took my dog for her usual walk. I knew that this would most likely clear my mind and give me some peace. I had already decided to donate to a refugee charity that I have supported in the past but walking along the streets of my village as the sun began to rise, I saw that there were already notices about collections points for donations and people who had left boxes outside for people to leave items for babies and hygiene necessities to pass on to people in the local town who had hired vans to drive to Poland to deliver what was given.

My heart was already filling with hope as I walked towards the field path to home, the crows making their noisy way to their day's haunts. The trees which had been felled by the terrible winds of the week before were neatly chopped and snacked, their driveways cleared by neighbours and friends after the massive trunks had blocked the routes and as the hedges ended and the field opened ahead of me the sun was visible, low on the horizon and partially hidden by clouds, but a beautiful pink/red that streaked the sky and made even the tattered, grey rain clouds glow purple and magenta.

I made my donation online when I got home and added items to my shopping list to take to the donation points, took a deep breath and carried on with my day. Not better, but hopeful.
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