Since Frog died (10 weeks ago) my two sisters and two
brothers have been taking it in turn to come and stay, keeping me company and
helping with the myriad practical tasks that have now come my way. Each brings
their own brand of support. Last week it was the turn of J, who is the admin
expert and also, since retired, turning out to be a pretty handy sort of person
all round.
On Friday, in driving rain, we filled a skip with all the debris
that had been collecting around the back door for decades.
I had no idea what most of it was
(other than mysterious electronic boxes, wires, lumps of metal, lumps of
plastic) and I had tried to sort it into piles for recycling at the tip but I
then decided, bu- - er it (as Frog would say). I have a bad back at the
moment, I didn’t have the strength to load and unload the car and anyway I
couldn’t work out how to put the car’s back seat down.
It was very satisfying.
We then moved to the carport all
the boxes and bags that had been cluttering up the conservatory.
The boxes were
the result of a preliminary clearing of Frog’s debris in kitchen and
sitting-room, mostly stuff that, again, he hadn’t used for decades (pens,
badges, frog ornaments, puppets and, again, numerous unidentifiable wires and
connectors).
The bags contained clothes and shoes. At the suggestion of my
sister E, I had kept my favourites of both, and Frog’s favourites, and all the
clothes that I had made for him. It wasn’t a question of getting rid of
everything; it was a question of keeping a selection to remember him by.
Frog was a hoarder and for 44
years I had lived in his shadow, keeping small areas clear for myself and
ignoring the rest of the house. Now, in order to move on, I had to make space
for myself. It was heart-rending but vital. Frog didn’t need the stuff any more,
he’d left it behind, and in order to join him – as, when and wherever ‒
I had to leave it behind as well.
These boxes and bags we covered in
a tarpaulin and left for a charity to collect.
The next day, we tackled some of
the dreaded admin (transferring savings and investments into my name, informing
utility and insurance companies, contacting the Land Registry about ownership
of the house etc etc). This again is heart-rending task, not made any easier by
the unpleasantness of some of the institutions who seem to go out of their way
not to help one, and by the fact that I couldn’t contact anyone by phone
because it made cry. J is a godsend.
Then we turned to the Tilley lamp
which I’d found in the shed and tried to use during Storm Eunice when I was
without power for 8 hours.
We had some experience of Tilley lamps from sailing holidays when we were children and I'd watched a video on YouTube and printed out some instructions.
However, after – with great difficulty – installing
a new ‘mantle’ (a sort of net that soaks up the paraffin and burns), spilling
paraffin all over the kitchen, and two abortive attempts to light the darn
thing, we decided that the pumping lever (which creates pressure in the paraffin
well and sends the paraffin up the tube to the mantle) was caput, and gave up. Watch this
space for the next instalment.
The next day, we went to the sea.
We left home in wind and rain and arrived on the coast in beautiful sunshine. It
was spring at last and wildflowers were starting to burgeon.
 |
| The first Alexanders, only found by the sea |
 |
| The first violets |
 |
| Ivy berries, one of the few things birds have to eat at this time of year |
 |
| In spite of the weather, we had the beach almost to ourselves |
 |
Ellie has found something interesting under the pebbles. (I had to alter the picture because the sea was flowing downhill and unfortunately in the process I lost my brother's top half |
 |
| Celandines, glowing in the sun |
That night, perhaps because that part of the coast was somewhere Frog and I had loved visiting together, and perhaps because I knew
J was leaving the next day, I had one of my meltdowns.
The counsellor I’m seeing
says that they’re a symptom of shock, the result of sudden traumatic loss. They
make me feel as if I have nothing inside me but panic and that I’m trapped in a
small black box by myself for ever and ever.
I went outside to look at the
stars and J stood by.