Wednesday 6 April 2011

Graveyard Humour

As my regular readers will recall, my mother died, a short while ago. We (I and my sister, brothers, sister and brother-in-law) have been very busy in the intervening time, so much to do, so many people to contact, official forms to fill, appointments.
But on that night, shocked by what had just occurred, my brother and I left the hospital in the early hours, going to bed seemed.... inappropriate, so we walked, walked, and walked in the dark. It seemed a good time to go visit Dad's grave. The churchyard was locked. low walls though. I'm not sure which one of us said "Let's split up and go through the graveyard", but it's a good line, usually spoken in horror movies just before the flashlight batteries fail. In our case there was no flashlight anyway.
The old man had nothing to say. He did not materialise and say  "Why aren't you boys in bed?"  (On the night he died we walked too, until dawn).
Anyway, I took a pic of the church and the moon.
But I tried to post it and it was a tiny white spot in a black rectangle. My night vision must be better than the computer's.


I think the reasoning in the picture above is a little flawed. The graveyard in question is officially closed. Nobody maintains it any more. Monuments topple, history fades. But there are several generations of my forebears in there. None, so far as I know, was killed by a gravestone.

5 comments:

  1. So much paperwork for something so simple.

    (btw,picture links don't work.)

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  2. Sorry about your mother, geez! I can only imagine the emotional ride.

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  3. gz: One picture sorted. Post edited for spelling grammar and stupidity.
    Paperwork. Blechhhhh! I hate it and avoid it. just now it's compulsory.

    I sent the census form back "Occupant deceased".
    It returned.
    And the Reader's Digest just won't stop. I'll give them a change-of-address notice for the grave plot, see if that gets through to their tiny numpty brains.

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  4. Gary: Yes, it's emotional, but not all bad. like I said, she's been spared the predicted pain, and she almost made ninety years.
    I think she'd been ready to go for a while, ever since the alzheimers and lymphoma diagnoses.
    She saw it as being ready to move on, take the next step.

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  5. Aye after my mother died my brother and I went up for the funeral. We went to see her and afterwards walked along the shore. Partly this was to visit a place we rarely see now and partly the after effects. Losing parents is a major event in a life.

    All graveyards have such notices these days, ever since people began to sue for being hit by such things. Some councils now knock them down!

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