I now have a small number of carefully chosen images, in
one place, so the rest of the house is free for me to put whatever I want,
where ever I want. It sounds fairly
obvious that I have carte blanche to layout my own home as I wish, but actually
making decisions, and the type of decisions I've made form a major part of this
last year. It is one year to the day
since Charlotte died and it’s time to review the last twelve months.
First off, Florence and I are doing very well. I know this because people keep telling me
what a good job I’m doing. I wonder how
many single mums get told they are doing a good job? Few, I expect. Not because they aren’t, but because no one
tells them. I have noticed an implicit
assumption in society that a man cannot raise a child on his own. Apparently, only women have an instinct for
this; well that’s fine. I have
intelligence; intelligence trumps instinct every time. I know I’m doing a good job. I can see it.
I spend a lot of time trying to be an honest judge about our life
together. It’s probably why I can write
so candidly.
My life is at the very least smoothly functional. I am happy, my house is tidy, I’m not in
debt, there are a number of kind and helpful people around me, and I have a
little girl who is happy and lively and vivacious, and for a two year old, well
behaved. Certainly her eating, and
sleeping, and playing present me with no great parenting workload. The last year with her has been highly
enjoyable, teaching her, learning from her, and watching this being form before
me. I don’t remember what I did before
Florence, or why I did it.
Florence learns very quickly. She might not manage something at first, but
she sticks at it till she’s got it. In
the last year she has mastered scooters, tractors, peddling, and her balance
bike. She dresses herself, takes herself
to the toilet, and puts DVDs away when she takes them out the PlayStation, even
if it’s not in the right case. Her
talking is constant, and her sentences ever more sophisticated. The other night she even washed her own hair
while I was fetching her bedtime milk.
That went fine until she rubbed her eyes with soapy hands. I didn't know she could reach the
shampoo. She is in the 87th
percentile of height for her age mind.
Wonder where she gets it from?
A lot of this smoothly functional life stems from the
decisions that this last year has presented and how I've gone about making
them. It possibly all starts before the
funeral. I had a talk with a very dear
friend, themselves experienced with close loss, and they were surprised, and perhaps
a little relieved, that I had already accepted that I had permission to live.
I was with Charlotte for fifteen years, but I will be
without her for fifty. To try and dwell
would be unworkable, and harmful, certainly to Florence. I am, as my friends, and the friction it has
induced, would testify, relentlessly practical.
A situation that is impractical and destructive would simply not be
permitted. I live my life, not because I
have to, but because I want to.
I was helped in this by us being a very close couple,
that Charlotte was very clever, and we knew she was dying. Combined, this allowed us to talk, and plan,
about the what-ifs and the what-nexts.
Charlotte chose to go to the Countess of Brecknock hospice
as she was very clear that the place where she lived, and the place where she
died must be separate. Florence and I
required our home to remain just that.
It was a noble act and typical of her.
Incidentally, in the weeks after the funeral, her friends raised £1,300
for the hospice. Well done everyone.
I am still under official instruction from Charlotte, not
to mope. I’m not a moper anyway. I like to get on with things. I enjoy getting on with things. I become frustrated if I can’t get on with
things. I have frustrated myself quite a
lot recently.
When you are on your own permission has to come from
yourself. There is no one to ratify or
counter your decisions. The only
perspective you have is your own, and that allows for some fantastically bad
choices. I’ve not made any, or at least
can’t see any with hindsight, because my strategy to making these decisions has
been to do it very slowly. Because I
lack another person’s context, the only option I have is to wait until my context
has changed and then see if the decision still stands.
I can’t decide if Florence is so well suited to this single
parent upbringing because that is her personality type, or because she has been
shaped by losing her mum so young. But whichever
it is she is so so, good, at it. She has
been a pillar to me for the last year, and I don’t think it has been a burden
to carry her father at all. And now she
is no longer a baby, she is a companion, and I am utterly grateful for it. She has spent quite a lot of the last year on
her own, as I can’t be there in the room supervising or playing with her full
time; I have so many other things to do to.
But she just gets on with it. If
she wants me she will come and find me and talk to me or have a cuddle, and
then go back to doing what she was doing.
Florence is a very independent little lady, and while I’m very glad of
that and will encourage that self-reliance throughout her life, I do wonder if
she’s had to find this skill a bit quickly because it’s just the two of us?
But we’re a team now.
Just us against the world; and we have it outnumbered.
Around our home I've done a lot of throwing out, and a
bit of decorating. My bedroom was first;
very important to get my identity stamped there as quickly as possible. Now I’m planning in other areas of the
house. The lounge will be next. The disco lights and lasers are already in;
next the massive sofa to form the core of a social hub. It’ll just have me and Flo in it, but it’ll
look like a social hub. That may be an
example of a man lacking female supervision?
Would Charlotte have allowed it, perhaps not, but my sofas are quite old
and looking worn, and replacing them will do no actual harm. There are worse ideas.
There is a very strong desire to sell my house, leave,
and not tell anyone where I've gone; the full ‘clean slate’. The feeling comes and goes, but it returns
regularly, when I’m angry with people, or disappointed with people, or none of
those things. I’m not going to do it;
the emotional side of me has never been in charge, I’m too rational. It’s a bad plan; the nuclear option is always
a bad plan, that’s why it’s called ‘the nuclear option’. I have spent a good amount of time this last
year trying to understand my emotional decisions, but act on my logical
decisions.
Despite outward appearances, it hasn't all gone to
plan. Florence has started play school,
and it is going very well, she loves it.
On the way home she will talk about when she can go again. I take her swimming on Saturdays and she
can’t wait. As soon as she is changed
and the armbands are on, she’s off and in the water. With her legs going for it, she propels
herself from one end to the other, climbs out, on her own, and jumps back
in. There’s no fear in that little girl,
or big girl as she describes herself, but then she is ‘nearly out of two’.
My troubles lie in the minutia; the trivial side issues
we all have to deal with; opening my post to see if there are bills in it,
remembering to return calls, that manner of thing. My evenings have become incredibly
unaccomplished; I do nothing. I don’t
mean I watch telly, then I would be entertained and learn something as I’m the
guy who watches BBC4. No, I do
nothing. There has been a lot of going
to bed at half nine in the last year.
For example, while I am not a sports fan, if I have a sport, then it is formula one, but as an
engineer that is unlikely to be much of a shock. I like the technology, and the innovation
required to make your car better than the others, while been constrained by the
same technical regulations. But I also
like the interplay of the teams, and how they are run and what effects these
different methods have on the side stories in each season. Ferrari, for instance has a lead and a second
driver. If they have an aerodynamic modification
that they think will make the car better, then the second driver gets it; if
they know it makes the car better, then the lead driver gets it. The main job of the second driver is to not
get above their station; to be publicly hit over the head by the lead driver
every weekend. It must be a crap job, in
an awesomely great way? McLaren don’t
play favourites; both drivers are equal.
They have their own technical team and each is trying to beat the other
every time they strap in. Charlotte was
a big fan too, and we would watch the races together and talk about the
politics between in-between. We both
liked and focused on different areas, but over fifteen years you get very
familiar with how each other’s perspective runs.
I haven’t
watched a single race, or read a single article since she died. If I hear of a controversy at the grand prix
on the news, I make no effort to find out what it was. It has just turned off.
I haven’t
watched Doctor Who in a year either; although I have now decided to catch up in
time for the fiftieth anniversary. Which
may be tricky as it’s not far off.
This is
symptomatic of the psychology of scarcity.
Humans, at least in our modern world, require three main things; health,
wealth, and social contact. If you feel
you are very poor in one of those areas then the brain can become distracted
and focus on the missing element, which makes it very hard to move forward and
solve the problem. When Florence is
around or friends are about, or I’m at work, then I’m fine and get things done;
it’s when I’m alone that the inertia kicks in.
Fortunately
I’m a clever guy, so once I know something is happening and why it is
happening, I can compensate for it. The
decision to overcome has been made, and as a result I feel that I have improved
my situation and manage to put that extra bit of push in to keep myself going.
I’m going to
the gym again. I’m determined to keep
the blog going. I’m outlining a
novel. I used to write ultra-violent
shorts, but I've decided to go for science fiction, as it’s science and it lets
me write about things that don’t quite, but could well, exist.
A particular
plus is that I've managed to stop been angry with people for no actual
reason. Some of the things that have set
me off in the last twelve months I refuse to admit to. It didn't suit me, and I didn't understand
it, which really didn't suit me. And
it’s not penny psychological nonsense like, your wife is alive and mine is
not. That’s very silly reason to be
angry, and you’d have to be angry at an awful lot of people with that
reasoning; comfortably over a billion.
Now, when something that did anger me happens then I relax, and accept
that it’s happened, and that other human beings have other lives.
I am helped
in this, as in so many things, by Florence.
She is not an angry person. She
is a very outgoing little girl. Only the
other day we were out in the street on our scooters, when she noticed one of
our neighbours, whom she know a little, was working on his car. So she sets off down the road, pulls up
alongside him and launches in to a conversation about something or other; all
smiles and curly blond locks. I like
gregarious Florence and I can’t have angry David spoil it, so he had to go
before she started copying him.
On balance I
feel I have coped well. It would have
been our wedding anniversary recently, and if I’m honest I had to be reminded
what day it was. That weekend I went to
Mottisfont, where we were married, and sat on her bench, which I had arranged
for the National Trust to provide. I sat
quietly with Florence, before our friends arrived for a picnic and gave her a
big hug, and wiped a tear. It’s a nice
setting and I like visiting it, then we climbed trees and had fun. I’m not moping you see. There is a future to take a firm hold on.
My STEM
ambassadoring is moving along, and I may have a gig, well two actually. And I’m a Bloodhound ambassador too, so I can
now officially bang on about how cool a one thousand mile per hour car is, and
that Britain does make things; awesome things that other countries can’t make.
And I’m
cooking. I’m trying to make things I've
not made before, while also improving some old favourites. My bolognaise is fabulous, I know this, and
I've tried to make gravy like Charlotte.
The first time I did, it was brilliant, every time since then, I've
decided to go without gravy. Having been
left with a cupboard full of every type of sugar and flour that there is, I
have started baking too. Not made my own
bread yet, but a step I feel will be coming soon. It’s very gratifying, and someone has to
teach Florence how to do it; it’s what mums do.
There is so
much to teach her. I’m really looking
forward to it.
Heigh-ho, heigh-ho, it’s in to year two we go. Don’t worry; you’ll all get dinner invites.


I read this with interest. I'm glad you are enjoying Flo's young childhood. In my experience (3 daughters – 32, 30, 12), it's one of the best times. Only one of them, mind!
ReplyDeleteSo you can identify me a little, I'm "baggythecrust" on Twitter. I came across some of your tweets somehow or other.
Dear David I've just read this amazing account of what happened in your life and about Charlotte's passing. We did our A level photography together and I bumped into you and Florence at the poppy parade. I didn't know then about your loss and I'm feeling both shocked and saddened. I met Charlotte while we were doing our photography and she was so lovely. It must have been unbearable for you.
ReplyDeleteWriting this must have been cathartic for you and it's brilliantly written.
I don't know what else to say other than it sounds like you are doing a wonderful job being a great father to Florence, and it's lovely that you are enjoying her company and watching her grow.
Love to you both
Maureen xx