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Katie is a 21 year old girl geek from Manchester. She likes photography and books and people and knitting and bellringing and computers and games and bad jokes and STUFF. If she could, she'd have an Internet connection implanted in her brain and caffeine on prescription. Yes, she's one of those.
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Remember With A Smile

Last year, my stepfather was diagnosed with a Grade IV Glioblastoma multiforme brain tumour. It was inoperable, although he was able to undergo intensive radiotherapy and a single course of chemotherapy. He was given two years, but went on Saturday 1st March 2008, after 11 months.

We held a humanist funeral this afternoon, and had him cremated in a bamboo coffin. My mother and sister cycled behind the hearse on their tandem trike, with all his friends from the cycling club, and I travelled with him in the hearse. He entered the chapel to “Don’t Worry, Be Happy” and left to “Always Look On The Bright Side of Life”. People laughed as they left, and during my eulogy.

It was exactly as he’d have wanted.

 
I don’t have many childhood memories, but those that I do have all have one thing in common: my dad.

One of my first memories is sitting in the driveway at home, upset because the stabilisers had been removed from my bike. I hadn’t quite grasped the concept of balance, but I was supposedly too old to use them. He arrived to find me in tears, and on hearing what had happened, he put the stabilisers back onto my bike for me so that I didn’t have to be scared of riding it.

When we lived in his cottage in New Mills, I would spin around in his black leather chair, lights dimmed, listening to Chris de Burgh’s A Spaceman Came Travelling over and over.

There’s a photo of me in our living room, stood at the top of Mont Blanc, aged eight. I’m clutching a sheet of ice and have a big grin on my face; I’d just asked if I could take it home for a souvenir and everyone within earshot who understood had cracked up laughing, him harder than everybody else.
Earlier that same day, we’d been sitting in a crowded lift room waiting to get to the top of the mountain, and in a moment of boredom, I started singing Frère Jacques to myself; he joined in and soon the entire room was singing with us.

He was so easy going; walking around the house singing Always Look on the Bright Side of Life. My mum and I were eating strawberries in the kitchen once, and he came downstairs after a shower. I’d dropped a strawberry on the floor, and he stood on it with his bare feet. It squished between his toes, but he wasn’t angry, or annoyed: he laughed. We still joke about it as the tasty cure for athlete’s foot.

He taught me so much, and together, we taught Elizabeth to crawl, and later, walk. He showed me how to use a camera, and when I began studying photography in 2005, he gave me his Olympus OM2 and all his lenses. When I was 14, I said I wanted to go abroad and practice my French, so we cycled around France together, and he stood on Champs-Elysées in the glaring sun, keeping a space for me at the railings so that I could watch the Tour on its the final laps of Paris, and tracked down the Postal Service team bus so that I could meet Lance Armstrong.

When I left home 18 months ago, he got up at 6am and drove me to Derby, spent the day helping me to unpack, then returned home, only to drive back again a few days later when I was taken into hospital with abdominal pain.

Six months before that, though, he took two days out of our holiday in Pembrokeshire to drive me 100 miles from Manorbier to Cardiff so that I could get a train to Derby for my university interview. When I got off my train back in Cardiff that evening, having found out I had a place on the course, he ran at me with such excitement that he nearly bowled me over.

Nobody ever asked him to, but he loved me and treated as though I were his own daughter, and for that, I love him.

He pushed through this last year with the words of Lance Armstrong: “If children have the ability to ignore all odds and percentages, then maybe we can all learn from them. When you think about it, what other choice is there but to hope? We have two options, medically and emotionally: give up, or fight like hell.”
Even at the lowest points, my dad remained positive, and I’m certain that that is what kept him going. I know that he wouldn’t want us to be upset about this. When I remember him, I want to remember all the good times we had together, how happy he was and how happy he made us.

He asked me to read A Navaho Prayer for everyone;

Grieve for me, for I would grieve for you.
Then brush away the sorrow and the tears
Life is not over, but begins anew,
With courage you must greet the coming years.

To live forever in the past is wrong;
It can only cause you misery and pain.
Dwell not on memories overlong,
With others you must share and care again.

Reach out and comfort those who comfort you;
Recall the years, but only for a while.
Nurse not your loneliness; but live again.
Forget not. Remember with a smile.

Comments

Comment from Sarah
Time March 10, 2008 at 5:38 pm

What you read is lovely and has made me cry. It is so hard to go through and so hard to deal with. Just remember all the good things and try to make him proud.

Comment from Fish
Time March 10, 2008 at 6:07 pm

That’s wonderful, it really is.

Comment from Kari
Time March 10, 2008 at 6:43 pm

It’s so sad, but it sounds like a really lovely service. I’m glad it happened the way he wanted it to.

I’m around if you need me: usual number, usual email.

Lots of love from me to your whole family. :)

Comment from barakta
Time March 10, 2008 at 6:46 pm

I’m glad you can have such good memories of your dad, he sounds like he was a great person. I’m a believer in memories of the dead being a way of them continuing to live inside our hearts and minds.

You and your family are often in my thoughts right now.

Comment from Michael Preston
Time March 10, 2008 at 8:39 pm

I can honestly say that what you wrote really touched me. I love the entry it’s honest and beautiful, and I feel very honoured that you shared it with us.

Your dad sounds like a really special person. I’d love to have made it to the summit of Mont Blanc at eight. Wow! I think you’re so lucky to have known him.

Comment from Semaphore
Time April 18, 2008 at 9:37 am

Hi Katie,

I remember reading this when you first posted it but not commenting. I just had to come back to say that I think this really beautiful. I’d like to say that I think he would have been proud of you (even though I never met him, obviously), just on the basis that any parent would be proud of something so mature and appropriate and moving.

I hope if you get a notification about this comment that I haven’t dragged up memories and made you sad about it, and I’m worried about posting this because of that possibility, but I do really want to say well done. x

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