I'm aware more than most just how fragile the future is.
We all make plans that don't come to fruition and we all have dreams that we know will never happen for a variety of reasons.
It's been a year since Stephanie died. She was such a part of my future. She was my future.
As our adult children left home, including Stephanie and we became expats and our last two children left home, we didn't really know what the future would hold for us. We had plans, we had dreams, we had expectations.
Peter would retire, we'd move back to the UK, I'd resume my career. We'd travel. My father died suddenly without warning and life stood still in 2017 for 6 months. I'd just finished a job and was embarking on a new career due to start the following month. I never got back into a routine, I didn't get a life back for me. I just drifted for the next few years, just waiting to restart.
Grandchildren filled my time as I travelled between Dubai and the UK, relocating back here permanently in March 2020 in covid to be here for Stephanie, unsure of what the future would be again for the next 18 months.
We brought Peter's retirement forward, had an extension built and a new kitchen. I started working and it felt like for the first time in ages we had settled down, things were sorted. The kids were all settled and happy, we had been travelling, had travel booked, were spending time with our grandchildren. The house was sorted, we'd sold the flat and were rid of the stress of being landlords after living abroad. We bought a campervan. We started planning our new future.
We had a year with a grandchild needing surgery in and out of hospital and he still has moments here he is unwell, but no further surgery needed. Our lovely Bob the dog died aged 13 which upset us far more than we ever anticipated. Yes, we had some stress in our lives and we anticipated things would go wrong and there would be problems, but we knew we'd just have to cope with things and that together we'd be able to do this.
Day, to day, week to week, month by month and yearly plans and dreams were being put into place. The future was quiet, it was peaceful, it was what we had envisioned.
We didn't have everything planned for our future, we also acknowledged that things wouldn't always go to plan. We might have to move before we're ready to due to ill health or disability. We might have to sell the van and give up our camping trips earlier than planned.
There is however a natural order to things. The future was me in my 80's after Peter died (he's 14 years older than me) in a coffee shop with Stephanie having lunch. My granddaughter with her children having collected me and driven me there for our monthly meet up.
I'd even told my 6 year old granddaughter I'd buy her a car when she was bigger so she could drive me to see Aunty Stephanie when she was a big girl.
Whatever we had planned, however far ahead we had booked in our diary, the future was always me in the coffee shop with Stephanie.
That coffee shop will always be in my future and so will my granddaughter, whether it'll be in my old age, whether she will have children herself is to be seen, but as long as we can get to the coffee shop or at least get to each other, we can still have that future and I can make sure that Stephanie lives on in our family through our granddaughters memories of the brief time she got to spend with her.
Thinking of you on such a difficult week. We all have visions of what our futures will be but sometimes life is cruel and it doesn't quite work out as we hoped. I hope you get lots of coffee shop dates with your grandaughter in the future and raise a cup or two to lovely Stephanie x
ReplyDeleteI'll make the most of every moment with our grandchildren and make sure they have every question about their Aunty Stephanie answered
DeleteSending love and hugs.
ReplyDeleteWhen you list everything you have done in the last handful of years it has been a lot! I am glad your grandson doesn't need anymore surgery and I hope things go well for him.
Our future is so uncertain and it sometimes like Angela said can be so cruel. I am glad you have the coffee shop and the memories.
I'll not be putting anything off ever again.
DeleteGrief has a way of making you believe that the future doesn't exist anymore, or at least in the way you thought it would. Life is so hard when someone is missing. But, just look at what you have achieved, and I'm sure with time you'll feel calmer about the future. I dreamt of a future where I would get a camper van and travel the Country, maybe even further with my husband when my children were all grown. But the future is never written in stone. Be kind to yourself.
ReplyDeleteI'd been dreaming of a campervan for 30 years but finances and/or timing was never right
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