"I'll admit I may have seen better days, but I'm still not to be had for the price of a cocktail, "(Margo Channing)
Christmas prep
Today has been a day for normality.
Cleaning the kitchen, getting Christmas cards planned ( I have usually written and sent mine by the start of December!) and organising small, inexpensive gifts.
Traditionally I send small, sweet Christmas decorations to a couple of friends and to my mother in law every December...so these need to go off too, ..........
There is a chill in the air today too, the first time I think it has felt really cold....... Auntie Glad, back from a week's holidays caught me in the centre of the village and held my hand kindly and tightly as she mentioned my brother......
"Get inside Gladys" I told her" you'll catch a chill!"
"Oh I don't mind the cold" she said brightly "it kills the bugs!!!"
End Of An Era
It was odd going to a "family" funeral today with only two sisters sat in the pews.... It seemed lob sided somehow...and just a little bit inappropriate. and the feeling kind of wrong footed me as we filed in to the crowded Church.
I mentioned it to the congregation before I gave the eulogy....but I didn't have too much time to ad lib as the vicar wrong footed me too , and asked me to do my reading much earlier than the time shown on the "programme"
It went ok...I didn't stumble over my words too much ( thanks to a million or so rehearsals in the kitchen yesterday) and no one threw prayer books at me for saying anything inappropriate......
Mike Peters did a moving couple of songs .......we all sang a lusty "Bread of Heaven" and suddenly and rather strangely the whole day seemed suddenly over..........
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| Andrew (third from left) with some celebrity chums |
A Breather
I am going to take a few days away from blogging.
I have been making a somewhat eclectic "to do" list in the gloom of the kitchen and writing in my diary (albeit an online one) seems a million miles away
So far today I have written
Flu Jab (tick)
Arrange George's haircut (tick)
Buy methylated spirits (One of the Crackheads has leg mite)
Ring Work about when I am returning, (tick)
Deliver Eggs (tick)
Find a pair of decent funeral trousers (not ticked!)
Organise a brief jaunt to Sheffield before Christmas ( almost ticked)
Ring abattoir re pigs (not ticked)
Kill rat which is lurking under back shed (organised though not ticked)
Write Christmas cards and send overseas gifts (whatever!)
Write my Brother's funeral eulogy (NOT ticked)
Yes....I will hopefully be back in a few days
hey ho x
I'm a Lady
We were sorry, we missed "The ladies Charity Night" ( the biggest thing to hit the village since the onset of talking pictures) which took place on Saturday, but by all accounts the night was a resounding success for Claire and Jason Randa, who organised the evening. I have been told that a few of the village ladies were reported to have suffered from very sore heads on Sunday morning and that ribald shrieks and laughter was heard as far away as Marian Garage at the height of the evening's festivities!
It doesn't surprise me....
whoever said that the Welsh idea of fun was to wear a striped shroud, didn't know the women of Trelawnyd
It doesn't surprise me....
whoever said that the Welsh idea of fun was to wear a striped shroud, didn't know the women of Trelawnyd
When I was told of the event, I did complain to Jason that a "ladies only" night was a little discriminatory in this age of the god awful Loose Women and another such "bash the male" type programmes...and he kindly relented to let us support the do on the night.....I am only sorry that I was a little under par on Saturday, and could only muster a vague interest in Harry Judd's pneumatic buttocks in Strictly Come Dancing from my position in the arm chair- the thought of socialising with the village hierarchy was all a little too much for me
Fair do's to Jason and Claire though, a phenomenally brilliant 3000£ was raised by their event....money that will, I am sure, be used productively at the local Cancer Centre in Glan Clwyd Hospital.
Well done them! Sunday
Back to some normality today, and what a bleak, damp and cold day it is.
In drips and drabs condolence cards have arrived at the cottage, from village friends, the Rector and the Parish Council, and the flower show committee... and Pat (my unofficial animal helper) dropped off some flowers as did Sylvia from Byron Street.
People have been very kind
I would have liked curling up in front of the fire with a good load of dvds today, but alas....the usual and the comforting circle of jobs all still have to be done and so.......
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The goose house needed a clean , so the usual onslaught of gander bites had to be endured
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Mabel had to be taken out with the others for her daily dose of dog walking practice
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| I look like shit |
Boris looking more chipper than I did at 8am this morning still needed carrying out to the field... note: his eye has miraculously improved
The Crackhead Whores still looking rough as a bear's arse..all needed their "build up" treats
Beatrice, the hen with the stroke , still needed some of her own physiotherapy as her coop is opened up
hey ho
This lovely piece of music by Ludovico Einaudi, is the order of the day
Somewhere Over The Rainbow - Judy Garland (London Palladium)
we saw this performance on a tv programme tonight and were touched by the fragility of it so I watched it again on youtube after chris went to bed and cried like a baby!
Gaining Comfort
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| The Gray Family circa 1963- Andrew is on the far left |
My brother and I could not have been more different.
I wear my heart on my sleeve, have a rather indulgent way of what Chris calls "emotionally romping" my way through life's ups and downs and despite assurances to the contrary love a "bit of a fuss".
My brother, on the other hand was a private man, who kept his inner most feelings to himself. Unlike me he was not frivolous but, could , when he was well, share a frivolous story with the humour, timing and sharpness of Joan Rivers at her very best.
His preparation for death was a private matter. He shared a few requests with his much respected consultant who ensured ,with the unwavering tenacity and strength of his wife , Jayne, that they were carried out to the letter...and when the time came, Andrew died at home, without pain or distress and with his wife and son at his bedside.
I found a great deal of comfort in this fact.
I also found a great deal of comfort at being able to complete a few small personal duties before the Undertaker arrived. I gave Andrew a wash, and a shave and I brushed his hair, so he was all "neat and tidy"
It was something simple that his beloved gran would have done.....and it was of her that I was thinking of as I pottered away.
After I had finished , it was Jayne, his wife that realised what I had subconsciously done, as she laughed how much his hair resembled the "slicked over" style Andrew always had as a boy.
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