Four years ago yesterday, my gran died. She spent her last few months living in a
care home with dementia. Grampy had died
four months earlier, just before Christmas, and until then they’d lived
together in their own home, largely independently but with support too from
family. I only visited Gran once in the
care home – the last time I saw her, a few weeks before she died – and it was
funny, poignant and sad. I was
wonderfully lucky that until then, she had still been pretty lucid when I’d
seen her, confusing me with my brother at times but still conversational and
still good company. Her condition
deteriorated a great deal after Grampy died and when she last saw me, it was as
if a thick fog separated us. I’d baked
cakes for her and naively expected her usual enthusiasm for them even though
they were decidedly average, but she was suspicious of them and refused to eat
one. She’d spent the night camping in a
tent on Dartmoor, she told me, and did I recognise the old man sat opposite
us? She was convinced he was her own
father. Sadly, this time she didn’t know
who I was. Nonetheless, I think she knew
I was someone important to her; we held hands and there was a lifetime of
recognition in that touch. In fact, she
never let go.
If Gran and Grampy were alive today, she’d be ninety-seven
and he’d be ninety-four. I miss them
both, but I’m glad they’re not living through coronavirus.
Were they alive, they may well have been living in a care
home, probably among those at highest risk of dying of Covid19. We would have been desperately anxious for
them and the thought of them isolated in a small room, shielded from the virus as
best they could be, would have made us desperately sad. I’ve tried to find words to describe how it
would feel not to be able to visit them, have a cuppa with them, reassure and
comfort them, and hold their hand; the fear that the inconsequential previous
time we’d seen them could be the last time we saw them. I can’t find the words.
I’m reminded again of a woman on the television news, trying
to talk to her confused father through the window pane of his care home, their
hands touching only the cold glass, their kiss on the glazing and the tears she
shed when they parted. There are so many
heart-breaking stories like this as we endure this pandemic, and many are
worse. Every day, bereaved family
members tell of how a mother, father or grandparent passed away alone in
hospital, comforted only by kind nurses; of the awfulness of final words spoken
only over a telephone or through an intermediary medic; of grief exacerbated by
not being able to give a final kiss or hold hands for one last time. It’s utterly tragic.
If Gran and Grampy were in a care home now, we’d have
enormous admiration and gratitude for the carers looking after them. Remembering those who cared for Gran, we’d have
confidence in their understanding and compassion and know they would do their
utmost to stay cheery, setting aside their concerns and fears for their own
safety and their own families. We’d be
worried for their safety though and frustrated by the lack of PPE available to
them and the lack of testing in care homes.
They’d be our heroes alongside the doctors and nurses of the NHS.
This week ninety-nine year old Captain Tom Moore has
captured the nation’s imaginations and hearts by raising £18million (and
counting) for NHS charities by walking lengths of his garden. NHS Charities Together has set a target of £100million to raise altogether; I predict they’ll smash it. It’s a very worthy cause but it’s also
highlighted the plight of the country’s other charities. It was reported at the end of March that UK
charities expected to lose a-third of their income over the next three months –
approximately £4billion. Charity shops
have closed and major fundraising events like the London Marathon have been
cancelled whilst demand for support from some charities has soared directly as
a result of the pandemic. Many charities
have been left fearing for their future.
We’re all reminded of the importance of the work they do and how much,
as a society, we rely on them.
I think it’s time to do my bit! Organisers of mass-participation events like
the London Marathon have launched the 2.6 Challenge and it’s a brilliant initiative. To plug the gap in charitable donations left
by coronavirus, the challenge is to raise money by doing something on the 2.6
theme on or from 26 April, which would have been the date of the London Marathon. I’m setting myself the goal of walking 26,000
steps on 26 April, which – judging from the walks I usually take – will equate
to around thirteen miles or a half-marathon.
The money I raise through my JustGiving page (https://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/mrmikeparker) will go to the
Alzheimer’s Society, to honour the amazing work of carers at this most
challenging of times and in memory of my lovely Gran.
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