Sandy, Bedfordshire: In between hospital visits, I go for a walk, accompanied every step of the way

Dusk came on unawares. A cry against the dark triggered our last conversation. “Can you hear the blackbird?” I asked. “Magpie,” she said. My mother has been dying by degrees this autumn, as surely as the shortening of our days. Perhaps this is a fitting time to bow out for a May child, named after the life-giving month of her birth. My own life-giver’s final journey accompanies me on every walk, colours every observation.

First light on her last day? A song jerks me out of solemnity, robins in stereo, one left, one right. One more from a bush a few steps on, another by the biggest oak.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘I feel hurt that my life has ended up here’: The women who are involuntary celibates

What is it like to go without a partner when you long…

The Guardian view on Joe Biden in Belfast: securing the Good Friday legacy | Editorial

The American president cannot solve the current impasse single-handedly. But US economic…

Nine out of 10 in poor nations to miss out on inoculation as west buys up Covid vaccines

Billions unlikely to get jabs as rich countries secure 53% of most…

Tory MPs threaten to rebel against UK bill banning boycotts of Israeli goods

Rebel group of 50 have voiced objections to the bill designed to…