...Well, what now, for me? Time can change everything, a flash of a second and a life can be gone, and another one's fulcrum shattered. The loss of a precious loved one creates only a void, and the process of grief is painful and slow. For me, my "auto pilot" of responding and listening out for the requirements of my dear mother are still active though she passed away seventeen or so days ago. Coming to terms with my loss cannot be rushed.
Saturday, 24 October 2020
24 October 2020
Monday, 5 October 2020
5 October 2020
Tuesday, 22 September 2020
22 September 2020
Monday, 31 August 2020
31 August 2020
Tuesday, 4 August 2020
4 August 2020
The relentless ongoing passage of time often denies us the opportunity to stand back to absorb and digest the life changing aspects that affect our futures. I know that I do not really do change very well, a case in hand, is that, I lived in the same flat in my adopted city of Glasgow for thirty-seven years. I thrive in a familiar comfort zone and the only move I made was to return home, over three years ago, to care for my mother. Though in reality I had been spending increasingly longer periods with my mother in my beloved Isle of Lewis. The actual shift when it came was not the seismic one I expected. But things never turn out as expected... The past year has been filled with health issues and challenges. I often wish I could just suspend time for the very briefest of moments, in order to understand it's effects. But one needs to be realistic and positive. For a host of reasons over the last few weeks, I have been in a most philosophical frame of mind with many thoughts focusing on the issues of mortality, usually a totally unspoken subject. But now since our global pandemic it is raised as matter of wide concern. Fortunately the human condition is to look on the bright side of life and seek out the most pleasant aspects of life and not dwelling on the things which threaten our very existence.