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Reactions — 17 Comments

  1. When someone offers to help, call them on it. Get them to do something you need doing but cannot be arsed to do. Lawn mowing, pruning, filling the bird feeder, trapping magpies, valeting the car etc etc.

    The reason I asked about herself is because she is still stuck in hell, sorry, the Irish healthcare centre, whikst you can fuck off and go measure yer length in the coffee shop amongst other wondrous things.

    • The main source of help at the moment is Daughter. She works in the caring profession and is using every contact she has to line us up with all the help we may need [and then some]. Not only that but she’s threatening to descend on the place over the weekend to try to tame the estate. There are some things that I fear are untameable though!

      The latest theory is that Herself is due for parole on Tuesday.

    • Resilience or foolhardiness? I would just call it pragmatism. If I could change things I would but life isn’t like that.

  2. I know what you mean, even the hospice nurse asked me if I was really casual about the cancer or was it just a front. It is exactly how I feel, no point in worrying about something I can’t change so take it day by day. I do hope your prognosis is better than mine though!

    • I suppose I could rant and rave against the world, but it wouldn’t do much good. Would it?

  3. Okay, I won’t cry for you…

    But as I sit here, riding this bike, I feel the thoughts going around your head, and wish I could help more, even by just giving you a bunch of sweet peas from our garden – and saying nothing!

    • I like sweet peas. Lovely scent. I doubt they would travel well though especially on a bike?

  4. At least you, Grandad, have some agency in this. You will be making decisions based on all the advice available, then handling whatever consequences those decisions bring.
    Out here across the Global Cobweb, we’re powerless, impotent, there’s f-all we can do to support someone we’ve come to know, respect and care about. If we could each throw $100 into a pot to make it go away, that pot would be full in no time, but that’s not the issue. We’re just bloody frustrated that, in your one time of need, after everything you’ve given us all over the years, we can’t reciprocate by helping to solve this very personal problem.
    If we’re crying at all, we’re crying for us, rather than you, because we’re just not able to do what we want to do, we’re failing, and that hurts.

    • You can chuck in a few quid if you like but in a strange way, invisible moral support is far more valuable. I haven’t really given that much anyway. apart from wearing out a couple of keyboards.

  5. Douglas Adams had Dirk Gently speak of the fundamental interconnectedness of all things. Penny … not good. The other things are a raw deal … commiserations, condolences, Grandad.

    • There was something very strange about Penny’s departure happening the day before she would have been virtually abandoned. Higher power? Fate? There was something at play there but I know not what.

  6. The highs and lows of life, we’ve all had them. We know the highs won’t last forever so we make the most of them. When we are low we fear that will never end and make things worse. Not you though, I gather from your writing that you are stronger than that. I will raise a glass to you and all those other old’uns who plough ahead regardless.

    • I don’t consider myself to be strong. Cut me and I bleed [as the coffee shop floor will testify] and I have my bad moments. I just try to put a positive slant on things and in a strange way, scribbling here helps a lot with that. I too will raise a glass tonight to all.

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