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Sparker
Death
Dear One's grandfather recently died.  He had a massive heart attack, died, was brought back, and eventually died again.  So now he is gone. 
It's always a strange feeling to know that you will never talk to someone again, or accidentally bump into them at the shops.  Seeing a person in the crowd and thinking "I wonder if that's them?", followed by the realisation that it couldn't possibly be.
We grow up with television and film, in which people stay their same age for ever.  Some, the lucky ones, keep working as they get older, so we see them age.  It is possible to believe they have grown and maybe passed on, but others stop (or are stopped) long before their looks have shifted from youthful sexiness to aged wisdom.  So we watch them again and again and have to remind ourselves that they have gone.
So when reality breaks into things, when we discover that people don't live forever, that they go away and don't come back, it's always strange.  Well, it is for me, anyway.  I'm sure some people have no problem with death.  People die.  It's a fact of life.  Some people actually believe this.  They might have lost so many, that one more is nothing.  Or they might be so stable that reality does not pose the problem for them that it often does for me.
We all grow.  We all age.  We, as a society, try damn hard to cover up the effects of time, we try to maintain the glow of youth long after it had obviously gone.  Death, a constant reminder of what aging brings, is hidden away and shunned. 
I have had very few people die in my life.  Some friends from school, who I had long since lost contact with, have died.  My grandparents died in the last decade.  I wonder if it gets easier, or maybe it gets harder.
A friend of mine had his youngest son die.  It has often been said that a parent should never have to bury their child.  I think this is so true. 
Which, of course, brings the flip side.  Life.  We all have one (even those of us constantly told to get one), and we should cherish it.  Age is the price we pay for getting to see things change.  We get older, but so do our children.  So, while we only have a limited time on this world, we are given so much during that time.  Yes, it all ends.  One day we will all discover it is our last.  I hope when that day comes I will be able to look back and think: Yes, that was good.  I know I do now.  Never regret.  You can't turn around and go back, so don't worry about what happened.  Learn form it.  Repair it if you can.  Move on if you can't.

Goodbye Grandpa.

Comments

my condolences to you and your family, Sparker.

Posted by: [0-0] on June 28, 2005 12:58 PM

Losing my Grandfather a few years ago was one of the most heart renching things that I have ever gone through.

Still see photos of him and want to cry.

My love and thoughts are with you and your whole family at this moment.

DK The Elder

Posted by: DK The Elder on June 29, 2005 12:10 PM

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