| Scots pine and Dog (if you can see her), a couple of days ago |
The Scots pine in March |
| Scots pine and Dog (if you can see her), a couple of days ago |
The Scots pine in March |
I met Frog when I was 24, and we were together for 44 years
(until his sudden death in January this year). In other words, nearly
two-thirds of my life. Is it any wonder, I keep telling myself, that I’m now
struggling? Frog was my life and now I have to make a new one from scratch
without him. At the same time, dealing with grief and a host of other emotions
brought up by the turmoil.
A friend passed on to me this poem, by the thirteenth-century Persian poet Rumi. I carry it with me.
The Guest House
It’s helpful to me to remember that emotions – even if terrifying and often almost too much to bear ‒ are only guests, that they have a purpose and that each will leave in their own time. Thank you Trish.
Talking of guests, I shall mention again my wonderful brothers and sisters who have been taking it in turns to stay with me. Since Frog’s death, they’ve never left me alone for more than two weeks and each visit is a respite, a chance to catch up with eating and sleeping and – occasionally – to feel almost normal.
Last week it was the turn of my sister A, and we walked together to a nearby Iron Age hill-fort which Frog and I had visited for the first time during lockdown in January last year. I wrote about it in my blog here.
Then it was dusted with snow.
| The hill-fort, a circle of banks that once contained an Iron Age village |
| Frog and Ellie walk to an edge to admire part of the 360-degree view |
| Frog explores the ditch all the way round the outside |
| Ellie and me at the hill-fort last week |
Both times, we had the place to ourselves.
And here, just for fun, is a picture of Ellie waiting for her supper at the end of a hard day's walking.
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| Ellie, never more intent than when food is in the offing |
Today is Norwegian Independence Day, when Norwegians
celebrate the 1814 constitution which gave them freedom from Denmark and Sweden.
It’s their biggest national holiday and marked with parades and flags.
On the day after Frog died (four and a half months ago) a Norwegian flag arrived in the post. My grandmother was Norwegian and I have many relatives living there, so I knew that Frog had ordered the flag as a surprise present for me.
I haven’t flown a flag since Frog died and the Norwegian flag has been sitting on a shelf, still in its plastic wrapper. Today I hoisted it – not because of my new independence but because I know that seeing it will make Frog proud and happy (wherever he is).
At times, the seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks and months since Frog’s death have felt like one long nightmare, a black tunnel without an exit. Three things have kept me from going under.
The first, and perhaps the most important, is my connection – however shaky ‒ to a spiritual world. In particular, my affirmations. I won’t tell you what these are as that might reduce their power, but I can say that I first learnt about them from Louise Hay’s wonderful book You Can Heal Your Life.
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| My edition of the book |
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| The edition on Amazon at the moment |
My gateway to the spiritual world is nature, to which I'm led every day by my beloved Ellie, and in particular my secret wood, which I’ve mentioned many times before in this blog.
| My secret wood, with Ellie and bluebells |
Thankfully, it’s spring at the moment and, even though spring
doesn’t seem quite as glorious as usual and half the time I’m stuck in my own desperate inner world, it has its moments.
The wild cherry tree in my garden a few weeks ago |
| The version of the Wheel of Emotions that I'm using at the moment. There are many others, some with better words. |
Two days ago a former sister-in-law (she used to be married to an in-law of mine) dropped in with her now-husband on their way to Cornwall. They left me these flowers . . .
Every kindness, like that, does something to fill the hole left by Frog’s death.
Writing this blog helps too.
One of my favourite pastimes is what I call ‘customising clothes’. This involves making my clothes fit better, or altering their style, or dyeing them, or all of those.
I find this much more satisfying than making new clothes from bought patterns because it’s more creative and means that I have what feel like new clothes, but are also familiar comfortable ones perfectly adjusted for me.
Here are some recent projects.
These orange trousers had become flimsy with washing and no longer worked as straights. I turned them into flares with some stiff pale-blue denim, and now I love them even more than before. They suit my flamboyant streak and I know Frog would love them too because they hark back to the hippie era of our teens.
I gave this t-shirt to Frog for Christmas but he only
managed to wear it once. I’ve taken it in at the top and the sleeves, and now I
wear it all the time. It assuages my grief.
I bought these two pairs of trousers shortly after Frog died, when browsing the internet for clothes was a way of staving off panic. One was in shades of pale blue and one was white and cream, none of the colours practical for dog-walking through mud. I therefore dyed the pale-blue pair ‘denim blue’ and the other bright pink. Subsequently I lost lots of weight and they hung off me. I took the waistbands off, made darts in the top and attached a new waistband.
Note the bi-colour waistband here, which is
partly a homage to the trousers’ original design and partly because I
couldn’t decide between stretchy and non-stretchy denim so used a bit of both. |
| The (wonky) darts in the back |
| The bi-colour theme is still visible after dyeing, especially in the blue pair |
They both still hang off me but at least they stay up, and the wide waistbands come all the way up to my waist unlike the old ones which cut me off mid-stomach. I find that much more comfortable and do that to most of my trousers (including the orange ones above, as you might have noticed).
I’m now wondering what to tinker with next, and also how to conclude this post. Perhaps there’s a metaphysical connection. Perhaps I’m making something new from the old life Frog and I had together. (And that's as far as I can go for the moment.)