What is Dying ?
72This is not written out of some morbid fascination, but as a dedication to a dear friend, who may find some comfort within.
7th of November, the day before my birthday, I opened a parcel from my parents, it contained a little statuette of the 'Goddess of Love' and a note , wishing me a Happy Birthday and telling me that my father had chosen it and my mother had had no say. I laughed to myself, and put off phoning caus he would only tell me off for ringing during the day, "too expensive, ring in the evening"
After lunch , about 1 pm, I received a phone call , telling me that my Dad had died. I wished I had phoned, but things happen for a reason, maybe if I had I would have .... oh I dont know.
We travelled to Ireland to be with my mother and to pay last respects at his funeral. Me being me , I wanted to see before hand where he was going to be interred, and so walked to the cemetery. Upon entering , I looked at the crusifix statue and the Yew trees, and there, I saw that the trees had grown to resemble hands comforting the cross and all the other souls within the cemetery.
I went back to get my drawing pad and pencils , and drew .
Returning, to the cemetery, on a number of occassions , I have never seen those hands again, my drawing has circulated the village, and I have been told that many people have it framed upon their walls.
No Regrets
Maybe, life is too short, but personally I think that if we live it too the full and leave this world a happier place , life is complete.
Following the funeral , I wrote a poem, not too long, just six lines and one stanza -
No Tears have I shed
For my Dad, now dead
No regrets do I have
For the lives we have led
He lives within me, young Mark too
We are always together, as the Morning Dew.
Perhaps this may seem a little harsh, it was written 3 weeks after he had died, and I really couldnt cry.
- My Grandfather Frank , he joined the rank
- at the age of 82
- And here he was , reminding me
- That all is well and fine
- I cried and tried to hold him close
- "Not to be" he said and chose
- to run, he ran, I ran
- Up the stairs he ran so fast
- I could not catch him
- He turned and waved, a smile upon his face
- I smiled , I waved , I cried.
I had this dream, not long after he died, it comforted me, I think about him every day.
Do not stand at my grave and weep
Do not stand at my grave and weep
This poem was written by an unknown author. It was found in an envelope left by a soldier, killed in 1989. The poem was read aloud by his father on Remembrance Sunday, 1995, and evoked a huge and warm response -
- Do not stand at my grave and weep
- I am not there.
- I do not sleep.
- I am a thousand winds that blow
- I am the diamond glints on snow.
- I am the sunlight on ripened grain
- I am the gentle autumn rain.
- When you awaken in the morning's hush,
- I am the swift uplifting rush
- Of quiet birds in circled flight.
- I am the soft stars that shine at night.
- Do not stand at my grave and cry,
- I am not there;
- I did not die.
What is Dying ?
My mother received a well wisher card, not long after my father passed, she had the words photo copied and sent me a copy, I found it to be a beautiful anology and one that I will always recall.
As my grandfather lived by the sea and my father was a lover of the sea, it is to me just perfect ;
Written by Bishop Brent -
What is Dying?
A ship sails and I stand watching til she fades on the horizon, and someone at my side says,
"She's gone",
"Gone Where?" "Gone from my sight, that is all, She is just as large as when I saw her ... The diminished size and total loss of sight is in me, not in her,
and just at the moment when someone at my side says; "She is gone",
There are others who are watching her coming, and other voices take up a glad shout, "There she comes,!" ...
And , that is dying.
fur Elise
To conclude -
I do so help that this has helped you , my friend. Life is short, we need to live each day and to have no regrets. I know this is your favourite piece of music , and have included it , for your enjoyment.
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This made me cry, it's very beautiful. I think of death a lot these days. I'm the same age my mother was when she died and both of my parents died fairly young--my dad in his early 40s, my Mom in her late 50s. I'm 56. I had a troubled relationship with both of them. The whole family seemed unhappy to the point of being cursed in some way, so their untimely deaths and the resulting changes in my own life were actually positive. It doesn't make their deaths easier though--if anything it's harder when someone close to you dies and things aren't good. It's the end of any chance for it to change. I really did find comfort in this piece you wrote here. I really thank you, I don't find that much when it comes to death.
This is sooo beautiful, Hawkesdream! We are ever-flowing and rebirthing! :)
I like the bit about the ship. Both my parents have passed over, but I often have a sense of their presence about me.
Hawkesdream , this is a beautiful Hub and I love your sketch of the trees and the crucifix.
I bet you hold that statuette very dear to your heart.
And I hope your friend can get a chance to read this, I,m sure it will help.
Beautifully said. Your father I think would have loved this tribute. I hope your mother is able to read it.
A lovely tribute and something that I think we can all relate to - your father would be proud of you I think!
Hi Ali - a very thoughtful and gentle hub - I love your drawing and the poem 'Do not stand at my grave and weep' was sent to me by a friend when my father died in 1993, my friend said it was by an American woman called Mary Frye.
The poem that comforted my mother after dad died - and still does all these years later is "Remember" by Christina Rossetti : -
"Remember me when I am gone away,
Gone far away into the silent land;
When you can no more hold me by the hand,
Nor I half turn to go, yet turning stay.
Remember me when no more day by day
You tell me of our future that you plann'd:
Only remember me; you understand
It will be late to counsel then or pray.
Yet if you should forget me for a while
And afterwards remember, do not grieve:
For if the darkness and corruption leave
A vestige of the thoughts that once I had,
Better by far you should forget and smile
Than that you should remember and be sad."
Children sometimes get it so right - my daughter was 9 when dad died, we talked about him and death and dying over the course of two or three weeks. I eventually asked her if she understood what had happened to her grandad and she said "Yes, he'd lived all of his life and now we miss him."
Hawkes - What a gift to share with us, with me.. your beloved dad. This made me cry. That we should, could impact others so profoundly. You have done this in my life and I'm blessed to call you my friend.
Hawkes, thank you so much for sharing this with us. It's beautiful!
This is a beautiful article. The personal touch makes it so much more meaningful.
A loving tribute to Dad. And Fur Elise—how wonderful is that piece of music? It fits with your beautiful poetry. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you, Alison. I could not read this and the comments all at once. I don't know why, but I don't find comfort in anything. Death saddens me so much. Maybe it would be easier if I changed my beliefs, but it's not easy.
Dear this is a wonderful story and you drawing is spectacular. I do hope whomever you intended to see this has or will and I'm sure it will touch them as it has me. thanks dear. Fur Elise is one of my favs too. Oh, and great pictures too.
I didn't pay enough attention to the drawing earlier because of the emotions the hub evoked, but it's amazing. Well Done!
I read everything the first time. What I meant was I could not do it at one sit because of the overwhelming associations.
Thanks. I hope you are good!
Yes Ali, I like the drawing. You seem to have captured the moment well. Sadness can last for looong time with the passing of a dear one. I still am saddened by my brothers sudden death 7 years past now. I miss him terribly. Today is his birthday too. Your grandpa was a handsome fellow.
Alison, I did not know that you were an artist; the drawing is lovely. The death of a parent is so so hard. I had to wait to type this because I was crying. Of course, it reminded me of the death of my own dear Daddy, 11 years ago.
Death is so hard for us to understand. I felt so cheated. I kept some of his shirts to wear. I almost forgot his voice. You wind up thinking that the only thing left is the love. That works.
Alison, don't be sorry you made me cry. It was a compliment. When you can write something that makes the reader cry, you are doing it right!
Great analogy about dying. It kinda takes the pain away a little doesnt it? I draw comfort to know that others think that we are not really gone after we pass away. Our soul lives on and that is reason enough to keep living life to the fullest each day. Thanks for creating such a beautiful hub.
Really a touching hub.
Thanks
Your grandfather Frank's poem, made me feel like I was there. Very well written stuff. Very well written. Excellent.
Hi Hawkesdream.
What a beautiful hub and a most beautiful poem by the soldier.
Dying is never the end of anything.Living is not what we think it to be.We live in eternal mystery....
x
A lovely tribute and depth of meaningful love that does not go away. Your drawing was unique...The music in the videos was marvelous and haunting...
This is lovely, especially the ship story...so comforting to know that someone, somewhere is watching out for us.
This is beautiful! What is dying is hanging on our wall since mom's passing. Thank you for also being by my side. God bless you and I have marked this hub so that I could reference your words.
I liked this hub. I lost my brother in a motorbike accident. He was only 24.
I speak to a lot of people who have lost loved ones.
It is so very common, yet it still hits each person like a great thump in the stomach.





























Tamarii2 2 years ago
Enjoyed reading.Our loved ones always live in our heart.>PEACE.