Boxing Day

Can you get a nice by-product from something horrible? You certainly can! But the conflicting emotions can sit uneasily on you.

Just before Christmas, some really good friends asked me over to their house on Boxing Day. I initially thought I was going to make an excuse – I couldn’t see any way I could better cope by going out on a day on which I traditionally stayed home – but I eventually relented and said yes.

Now this invitation may not sound particularly unusual; you might like to think friends would realise your situation on your first Christmas after you’ve lost your wife and offer you some company, but in fact circumstances made me see this another way, and that was because of several individual factors that made up an odd whole.

To explain: Firstly, the friends had initially been work colleagues who’d I’d worked with nearly 35 years earlier. In fact, I’d known them so long ago that they had visited my first wife and I at our then home on several occasions. You sometimes lose friends when you go through a divorce as people don’t like to feel they have to choose a side, these were decidedly ‘my’ friends though, and we stayed in touch over the years.

These friends had subsequently met Gail, but our friendship beyond that had evolved into one of those text, Facebook and Christmas card exchange type of relationships. In fact, I’d never visited the home they had shared for over 30 years and they’d never visited Gail and I in our last home of 16 years. Prior to July 2018 I’d be hard-pressed to say when we last saw each other.

Yet, after Gail died these friends kept in constant touch, offering support and condolences and, in one of those ironies that only strike you afterwards, made their first visit to Colchester when they attended Gail’s funeral. I wouldn’t have expected them to come nor would I have thought badly of them for a moment if they hadn’t attended (Funeral invitations tend to be open house), but they did take the time to support me and I was overwhelmed to see them.

Nevertheless, the fact remained that, had Gail been alive at Christmas 2018, there is absolutely no way we would have visited these friends nor would they have come to ours. Apart from a Christmas card and a possible Facebook post there would have been no communication at all. And that’s sad. Sad because I know we would have enjoyed each others company enormously and, certainly on our part, it would have been nice to spend some time with someone with an extended family who we barely saw. When you’re grieving you view these as wasted opportunities… Actually, wind that back – grieving has nothing to do with it barring forcing you to look at it in a different way – it is indubitably, a wasted opportunity.

In a parallel universe, one where Gail recovered, I know we would have certainly spent that Boxing Day at home on our own because that is what we did. You see, Gail and I were a particularly odd unit. Individually, Gail was always the life and soul, very gregarious, fun to be around and the type of person regarded as good company. I’m quieter, more reserved, but I like good conversation and I like to find out about people. Together though – and we know this because we were told – some people found us too close and intense. It’s hard to say why this was as we didn’t set out to create anything; it’ s just we continually sparked and bounced off each other in our own bubble – an odd couple – and some found it strangely intimidating.

But here I was on Boxing Day in South London playing card games and generally making merry with my friends, their four adult children and their respective partners and, though like most things tinged with sadness and regret, I thoroughly enjoyed myself and felt better for getting out. In fact – and here’s the rub – if I could eradicate the fact Gail wasn’t there to share it, then it might have been one of the more memorable and enjoyable Boxing Day’s I’ve ever had.

And there is is; that most unpalatable of facts. Asked about Boxing Day 2018, I can tell you what I was doing, who I was doing it with, how much I enjoyed it and how emotional it was. Ask about any other years and I’d be hard-pressed to tell you what happened or distinguish one from the other.

Perhaps this is what people mean when they talk about ‘moving on’? I’d say Gail and I had a good life and did most of what we wanted within our budget but grief has certainly made me feel the weight of lost opportunities – some I never knew I’d even lost!

Perhaps I’m overthinking this though – it wouldn’t be the first time! – missed opportunities are inevitable when you’re leading another life and others are bound to view an individual differently from a couple. Perhaps it’s more about making assumptions; not getting in touch with old friends because you think they may not want to hear from you when actually they would be only too pleased.

Probably, for sanity’s sake, it’s better to view this from another viewpoint and consider that it’s the staggering kindness of others when you’re going through torment that can really make you re-evaluate everything you thought you knew about people.

Home Alone

Christmas Day: Anyone who is grieving will tell you that this is the worst. A day made even more awful by the fact that, since you were a child, it has always been at best a high point of the year, and at worst a reference point on which everything hinges (“We’ll look into it after Christmas”). There is no getting away from the absolute hear-searing desolation the day brings.

And, of course, everything is the same: the radio, the TV, the internet – everything is full of the joy of a season that you can’t be part of. You’re so absorbed by grief that you are aware of things going on that you can’t possibly talk about. For example, Gail and I always exchanged a ridiculous amount of presents. Normally, watching each other in turn opening our gifts to each other would take several hours – with a reasonable gap for drinking and eating, of course – but those gifts aren’t there and you  realise they will never be there again; it matters little what you do with your life and how well or not you move through this stage of your life, never again will you get gifts from that person.

Of course, you can’t actually say that. It would sound puerile and self-centred, but don’t think for a moment that it won’t invade your life, because it’s not the actual lack of gifts that is the issue but what lies behind them. For me it was the knowledge that I would never get an After-shave or a shirt that I would love, but would never have bought for myself. Christmas was the time that Gail kitted me out in clothes for the next year and I loved the way she planned everything so meticulously so every item could be interchanged. Now? The thought of having to choose my own clothes filled me with dread.

As if that’s not bad enough, you will always be alone with your thoughts. Nobody asked me if I wanted to spend the day with them but I wouldn’t have done so anyway. Because Christmas Day is the one day you don’t want to impinge on anyone else’s happiness. It would be wrong to say that I didn’t get texts and messages asking me if I was alright but this was the one day I wouldn’t reply and say ‘Actually, I’m struggling a bit’. In fact, well-intentioned though the queries were, they were all pointless. Of course, I wouldn’t be alright -I knew and they did too.

My social media posts that day reflect the sense of forced joviality and were no more than a determined effort to not let anyone else worry about me. They were all having the Christmas that I wanted and it would be wrong of me not to let them have it.

I read my Facebook posts now and cry for the obvious pain behind the jollity.

Well, Lady B was a difficult woman to please sometimes, but I think even she’d be pleased with this first ever home alone Christmas dinner effort. Only one total meltdown today too! I’m trying hard, Pet. By the way, Jamie Oliver your chestnuts and brussels in chorizo; not getting the benefit at all.

And just in case I’ve not tugged on your heartstrings enough these past five months… The card is from last year but the watch is today; Gail’s final present she left for me. I love it, Pet. Time eh? Your first present to me was a watch, so we’ve come right around the face. 😢

This is Gail’s present: the crouching porcelain cat which went many years ago – frankly, because I was an arse but we won’t dwell on that – and I managed to find another this year. Hope you like him back Pet and…yea, sorry for being a twat 24 years ago. 😏

Christmas Day 2018

The Christmas Day post from the Billy Blagg Advent Calendar.  There are many – not surprisingly – who find my predilection for Christmas songs to border on insanity but the calendar that Christmas might be one of the things I’ve done I’m most proud of, and I was rewarded with a set of songs that just seemed to make the season for me. 

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No surprises as I flagged this in November. Jessie J has nailed this onto my heart with a sprig of holly.

Merry Christmas everybody and thank you for the astonishing messages, emails and texts, particularly from those of you who I have never met. You have shown a compassion and understanding that, sadly, doesn’t extend to some of my closer relatives. God bless you everyone!

And I hope she’s flying on this Christmas Day.

Christmas 2013

The Ghosts Of Christmas Past

It starts. 24th December 1987. Neither of them are where they are supposed to be. They know and feel the wrong in it, but can do nothing about it. The busy and merry day has given way to a hinterland of desolation. Others, more enlightened, are either where they are supposed to be or making their way there. The shops have closed, the pubs are emptying. Eventually even they have to give in to the inevitability of it. It’s High Wycombe station, under the clock. There’s a ‘Brief Encounter’ joke; a ‘speak after the break’ entreaty, they embrace for a moment too long, they kiss for a moment even longer, he turns to go and says ‘Merry Christmas’ then adds ‘I Love You’. He hadn’t meant to say it, it just came out because it was the truth. He looks at her to see what her reaction will be. Should he apologise? Explain he ‘hadn’t meant it’. She looks at him, she says nothing but doesn’t have to. She doesn’t need to say it back. It’s in her eyes, the eyes they say ‘I know you have to go, but don’t go’. The train is approaching. He turns to go. He knows she is watching him all the way onto the platform. He turns and she is still looking at him. He waves and gets onto the train. He knows she is still staring at it until it pulls out of sight. They’ve reached a point and there is no going back. Ever.

29th July 2018. It ends. But it won’t really ever end.

For anyone who is searching this Christmas Eve.

(Below are the lyrics to Gwen Stefani’s ‘Christmas Eve’ which was Day 24 on the Advent Calendar)

I can’t see in this darkness
So in need of forgiveness
Before all of my faith dies
Show me the way like a northern light
Come find me ’cause I can’t find myself

I’m looking for you on Christmas Eve
All over the world, the angels see
But I’m feeling lost, can you save me
I’m looking for you on Christmas Eve
I’m looking for you on Christmas Eve
Don’t know how I got where I am
Hurting so much, I need healing
All I have is what I can pray
Send me your mercy I need your grace
I’m looking for you on Christmas Eve
All over the world, the angels see
But I’m feeling lost, can you save me
I’m looking for you on Christmas Eve

Christmas 2005

Signs Of Madness

1/ Talking to yourself
2/ Looking for hairs on the palm of your hand
3/ Finding a Christmas present for your dead wife that she would have adored and having to have a good talk to yourself – See 1 above – because you actually wanted to go in to buy them.

Christmas Lights

The previous Christmas, 23rd December 2017, Gail and I had stayed overnight in Flemings Hotel, Mayfair in London so we woke up there on Christmas Eve. I so wished I had done this before.

Every year we spent Christmas Eve in central London but normally we travelled down during the day, wasting valuable time – although we didn’t see it like that to be fair – but the previous year, I’d decided to stay there so we could get into the day early our big occasion.

Back in the day when I first knew Gail, I worked just a few streets down from Flemings and I always loved the way it looked at Christmas. I’d vowed I’d stay there one day – it being above my pay grade back then – and I was so glad we did it in December 2017, as we had a lovely stay there. Quite why we hadn’t done it before I can’t rightly say, we’d been able to afford it for a few years, but these things – like many others – tend to be the questions you ask yourself after.

So, as the Mayfair stay had worked out so well, I though I’d do it again for December ’18 and surprise Gail with a two-night stay this time in another top hotel. It was a surprise she never saw. I’d actually booked the Chesterfield in January and I’d realised by the end of the summer I had a difficult decision to make. Did I stay as I would have, but without Gail, and face the poignancy of that? Or cancel and face the similar emotion of knowing I wouldn’t be where I’d planned to be?

Not for the last time, I decided to go, yet take Gail with me. Her ashes in the box, securely tied and in the suitcase, I went to stay the two nights I’d booked returning home late on Christmas Eve.

As I said; This is the surprise trip I booked back in January. We’re both here tonight.

Chesterfield 2018

Chesterfield 2018


As you might have expected, it was a hugely emotional experience. One of those moments where its like watching yourself in a home video on holiday somewhere; knowing it’s you who you can see, knowing how it feels but somehow removed from the reality of it. But I’m glad I did it and didn’t cancel. The staff were wonderfully understanding and I’m certain I’d not have felt as close to Gail as I did during those two days.

In fact, as it transpired, I found travelling back home from the West End to home late on Christmas Eve was perhaps the hardest part. This was our time. I stopped off at a country pub we used to like on the way back; sitting in front of a glorious open fire, laughter and jollity going on all around me, just marvelling at how incredibly painful loss can be.

The Final Hours

I’ve been dreading this one. Today is the interview with the Doctor’s to discuss Gail’s final hours. I need divine help on this one, Pet.

It was another hugely traumatic day. I posted later

Thanks for the support everybody but that was horrible, horrible, horrible. Addenbrooke’s were superb and I have nothing but thanks and admiration for what the Doctors tried to do for Gail at the end and I am grateful for the time spent by the Bereavement Care team and the Consultant who I met today, who was there at the end of Gail’s life. He explained in great detail what they were faced with and how they tried to save her.

I needed that knowledge, but the fact is that going through Gail’s final hours is more pain than I could possibly envisage. Knowing the man sitting in front of me has seen the love of my life breath her last while I hadn’t been there, just tore me apart. I was forced to ask questions that I knew I didn’t want the answer too. Did Gail ask for me? No, she didn’t. Then, inevitably, just as I got the rush of relief from learning she hadn’t asked where I was, I got the equally insane rush of ‘WHY didn’t she ask for me?’

I learnt she was ‘very confused’ before her vital organs began to shut down. I accepted that knowledge but at the back of my mind I was asking ‘How do you know?’. You didn’t know her, how do you know she wasn’t talking sensibly? How do you define confusion? I have been tempted to ring back and ask on many occasions but commonsense prevails. The Doctor told me they don’t record conversations so no-one is going to be able to tell me the specifics of what she said.

This was a savage experience; one few understood when I told them what I was doing and why I had to do it. Sadly, my parents showed a stunning lack of compassion; ringing me and insisting on discussing something that could have waited, even though they knew where I was. A bad day all round and one I wouldn’t wish on anyone.

I managed to get back to my car where I just broke down and sobbed uncontrollably for about 30 minutes. Being back at the hospital, at that time was…. Just one of the bad days.

An image burnt into my memory. Walking out of this door in the early hours of Sunday 31st July 2018.

O Tannenbaum

The Rules of Christmas Tree Engagement. Let’s start

1/ Squabble over whose car to use as it will have pine needles in it after.
2/ Squabble over where to go to buy tree (We prefer Fraser Fir as it has a more traditional Christmas Tree shape but not every Garden Centre etc. has them in). We could never remember one year where we eventually bought it the last. 
3/ Squabble over size and shape of tree to go in the pre-ordained space. This will take 30 minutes and I will always lose but have to go through the RoCTE anyway.
4/ Invite neighbours and friends round for that annual laughter fest that sees Blagg handle a saw and attempt to actually cut the recommended 2″ off the tree and trim the lower branches.
5/ Squabble over the fact I’ve cut too much off, why am I so useless with tools considering I have so many etc. and decide the time of tree entry and decoration schedule.
6/ Squabble over the fact I am not allowed to decorate the tree as I don’t have the requisite ‘skills’.

Well, as you may imagine 1,2,3,5 and 6 are not longer relevant. But – and bugger I here! – just while I’m coming to terms with that, I find that Homebase now actually offer to cut two inches off and trim lower branches in a fraction of the time it takes me! I now have a tree trimmed and ready to come straight in. This has completely blown my mind.

Having said all that. I’d happily go back to 4 to have 1,2,3,5 and 6 back again…. 

Then two days later

I’ve tried my best, Pet.

As an aside is there any heterosexual, single man in the country who has shoes and handbags on his Christmas tree? I suspect not…

Nobody saw my Christmas Tree beyond me and the cats but I was glad I did what I did.

On The Horns Of A Dilemma

And So This Is Christmas..

I’ve amused myself in grief today.

Gail was the interior designer – had she been well enough she could have done it professionally – and every Christmas the house was a coordinated colour of light, shimmer, white fur and glamour. I was responsible for the outside; something which every year Lady B disapproved of, insisting it looked as if a ‘ten year old had thrown them out’ and declared to be ‘gopping’ (Geordie for awful) – and that was on a good day!

Frankly, I didn’t much feel liking putting up lights this year but I was on the horns of a dilemma. If I didn’t do it then I could hear Gail say “Oh, so you wait till I’ve gone and then you decide not to be those bloody awful things up!”. So, this morning, watched only by four cats I put up the outside lights. Now, they’re done and I can stand back and hear her say “Fook me, they still look terrible!”

Next, to recreate her genius inside. Wish me luck on this one…

December

You can pretty much see my December journey by following the Billy Blagg Advent Calendar of Christmas Songs for 2018. I’m proud of that blog; I did what I usually do, so that those who enjoyed it in previous years got what they usually had, but it was done with a poignancy and love that kept me going right throughout the month.

Admittedly, this is isn’t something you may want to sample if you’re reading this in the summer, spring or it’s Easter or May Day but I hope you will return to it. The posting for Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and the additional posting for New Year’s Eve just nailed how I felt.

Every day was a different trial. Made unbearable because everything was as it was – in terms of my health, ability to get out, do things, enjoy places etc. – but nothing was as it was because Gail wasn’t there, and the hole she left threatened to suck me in every day.

I stuck at it though and eventually surprised myself and I guess it’s things like this, the subsequent trip to stay in the London hotel I’d booked the previous January and the later journey to Hong Kong that made people tell me that I did or was ‘doing well’. It certainly didn’t feel like that at the time though and, to be honest, it didn’t feel like it much later either.

 

The hotel I booked for us in January that only I got to stay in