Blog 54 (13) I had forgotten…
No I have not forgotten about you my dear, loyal readers…even
though it has been so long since my last blog…what I have forgotten is the
excruciating pain that losing a parent causes…without any hints or warnings my
father passed away…gone…forever…without a last goodbye or kiss… just suddenly one day in February...this
dreadful shock doesn’t seem to leave me…the sadness that after all these years
he was alone at what must have been a frightening time for him will linger with
me…yes I had truly forgotten the actual physical pain… the sadness…the lying
awake at night and the crying until the early morning…I had forgotten about the
need to weep silently in the shower and pretend to the outside world that I am
okay; that yes this is life and that yes we will recover but it has been such a
long time ago that I lost my mother and my 'big sister' that I think I had become
complacent…almost as if we would never be touched with such deep sadness again…it
has brought me sharply back into the real world and the fragility of our lives…here
today…gone tomorrow… I had forgotten how hard it is to face each new day
knowing that I will never see his smile or hear his voice again…I had forgotten how much it hurts to lose a link with loved ones and now he is gone the final link with my mother and all his memories are gone too...
Do not judge me for writing a blog… I just needed to do
something in these dark, tear filled days of regret and guilt that I had taken
my eye off my father whilst dealing with plumbers, leaks and floods; absent
kitchen fitters…you name it we are still stuck in the middle of such a bomb
site once again…and whilst I was self-absorbed in wedding preparations and
all things petty to do with the house…I didn’t notice if there were any signs
that my father would just simply die one morning whilst I was out shopping for
a hat… I wasn’t there for him like I had been so many times before over the
years…and no matter what people say to me this hurts…this is hard…this is quite
basically… shite…
I know from experience that one day I will be able to
talk freely again about him, one day I will be able to laugh at all the funny
times we had…but for now...for today here is a little piece I had written a while ago…not for
my blog…just something I was writing…
In all fairy tales…there’s a beautiful young princess and
a handsome young prince and they fall in love at the first sight of each other
from across the ballroom…in the early 50’s it was fashionable to go to the
local Church hall once a week for a dance and a non-alcoholic drink. Where the
young ladies would sit around the edge of the dance floor talking about the
latest fashion whilst trying to eye up the competition as well as the talent
and the young men would exhaust all conversations about football in an effort
to appear aloof, making them more desirable [in their eyes at least!]
Picture this...one night in December 1950 as the music played on in one of these church halls two dashing young Irishmen entered, suntanned, dressed in
silk shirts and soft cashmere suits handmade by a Jewish tailor in New York. Both
had just alighted their Merchant Navy ship in Liverpool and were on route to
stay over with a friend. The pulse of the music and the draw of the young
ladies had been too much to ignore and so they had popped in on the off chance
of an evening’s light entertainment. Spotted by a group of the young ladies one
of the Irish sailors decided to home in on the positive vibes he was picking up
and so with a smile, a slick back of his quiff, a slight swagger in his stance,
he made his way across the dance floor to the group, with every intention of
asking the extremely attractive dark haired girl if she would like to dance.
One of the other young ladies spotted him; she was
dressed in her old familiar blouse and skirt, nipped in at the waist with a
belt and a small brooch on the lacy collar. She was uncomfortable, being
reluctant to attend the Christmas dance and had really only come to keep her
friend company instead of staying in the comfort of her own home and listening
to the radio with her brothers. She looked up and smiled briefly, noticing his
gaze was on her friend and that her friend was freshening up her lip stick in
preparation. Great! She was now going to be the wall flower again whilst her
friend was whisked around the dance floor by this extremely handsome young man
with bright, piercing blue eyes…
However, having seen the preening in advance of his
invitation to dance, the young man was pompous enough to ignore the dark haired
beauty and ask her timid looking friend instead:
“Hello, would you like to dance?”
“Er, don’t you mean my friend?”
“No, I’m asking you to dance.”
“Oh, I can’t dance.”
“I’ll teach you.”
He took her hands and led her to the dance floor, placing
his arm around her waist and pulling her to him: he knew then that this was the
girl he would marry.She knew that this was the man she wanted to spend the rest of her life with...
If you haven’t already guessed…the Irish Sailor is my dad
and the timid wall flower is my mum. Oh, and the dark haired beauty is my
godmother…
Rest in peace dad…reunited with the only woman you ever
truly loved…xox
Blog 54 (13)
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