Sunday 17 July 2011

Grief, what is it?


Very few people ever actually want to talk about it; no body knows what to say or how to handle it. If you do break into a tear, they never ask again…

It’s a funny thing, no body gives you a book and says this is how it will happen, no body wonders what’s on your mind day to day.  How the tiny things effect you, like having welsh rabbit for lunch or finding out a bit of gossip that you would love to tell her but then remember she’s not there to tell.

Grief is there set stages you go through? Are there things you are or are not meant to think?

‘’Death is just death nobody understands it’’ My sisters keeper… film

Death… I’m not scared of death and never really have been, a lot of people fear it but I think that’s maybe because they know so little about it. Sometimes peoples bodies cant cope with being here any longer. They’ve fought all they can and they have no more strength to go on. As an on looker it’s the hardest thing to watch but deep down you know it’s the right thing.

At the end I felt a huge wave of relief, as my mum was in a lot of pain. I wonder if I started to greave from the time I found out? Did it start when we had to take over the caring, when our roles swapped? I was no longer the little girl, and no longer would we go for lunch, take sneaky shopping trips, or sew up a new dress from scratch just because we could and we had a mountain of fabric we shared a passion for.




Is it the worry of that at any moment the whole world will come crashing down….and then when it does happen what? For 7months that’s all I thought about, when would be the moment it all came crashing …

Mum knew she was dying but nobody new the date, no one could predict the future…

At the time I remembered every minute of every day the last week time seams to stand still, minutes felt like hours. Times when you’d be waiting for an ambulance to arrive and I felt like forever. When you went to visit in hospital but all you could do was hold the smile long enough to get to the car.
But after Mum passed that time between then and the funeral, I remember very few bits. I remember telling some of my closest friends, I remember being sat in a Chinese restaurant the evening that mum passed away, I remember the funeral and thinking what did people think of our family…

The whole time you feel like you are being judged, are you handling the right way? Am I? I don’t know but I guess?
Some days are bad days, you don’t want to see people, you don’t want to wear that smile and forget what happened. Some days you want to be aloud to sit and watch sad films and walk on the beach and allow your self to sink back into the past and remember all the good times…and allow a few tears. Is so bad to have bad days?

As time goes on you never forget, you reach mile stones many of which the people around you don’t remember …don’t need to remember. But for us they are major dates that will always be remembered.


Grief creates its own mile stones… being able to listen to a cd with out crying, being able to laugh about the good times… being proud to say you got though it and that is made you a better stronger person, realizing what life is really about.

Saturday 2 July 2011

Carnival time!


My friend and I drove up to Bristol this morning to spend the weekend cheering up our school pal, who has been having a bad few weeks. 

We had a packed day after a quick catch up and loo stop we headed down white ladies road and found a lovely little French place where we couldn’t decide what we wanted to eat so we picked three yummy dishes and shared! That’s the best thing about going for lunch with girls you share your food. I have a lot of good guy mates but I know that is never something we could do... yes we share food but in a different way... we all order our meals and what ever I or my other girl mates don’t eat the guys then swiftly then finish it off!






After our yummy lunch we took the bus down to broad meads and walked across to St. Pauls. It was the St. Pauls carnival, which is all about celebrating the multi cultural neighbours across St. Pauls.
Wow it was amazing! The atmosphere hit us as we got closer to a small park covered in beer tents and stands selling candy floss and jerk chicken! I was kind of regretting having our yummy lunch, as I had no room left for any jerk chicken, which is something I would love to try! Maybe next time...




The people of St. Pauls definitely did them selves proud in putting on a colourful prosecution of dancers and musicians and the costumes were amazing the bright colours shone as they danced to the afro Caribbean music with huge smiles across there faces! Take a peek at some of the pictures....






After seeing some of the main dancers we walked along the side of it back in to the heart of St. Pauls where we were greeted by stalls set up outside peoples houses, every thing from CD's to sugar cane to fizzy pop and sunglasses off the back of a lorry haha.






Every corner we turned we were greeted by smells and music and hundreds of people making the most of the carnival atmosphere.... I think this picture sums this up....




After a long day at the carnival we got the bus back and brought lots of yummy nibble food ready to fill us up for a night out. So let the girly night commence...