Sometimes I wonder if life has brought me to a place where I'm really hard-hearted. Or if I'm actually just so deeply entrenched in denial, I'm not aware of the difference anymore...
One of my uncles seems to have lung cancer. Well - he's got an inoperable tunour the size of a fist, at the base of his right lung actually; and the reason it's inoperable is because there also appears to be infection elsewhere. My mother was at the hospital with him yesterday and they did some final diagnostic tests, but the writing's on the wall for all to see.
Now, I should explain that although as my mother's youngest brother he is technically my uncle; the two of us were always together as I was growing up, and we were often mistaken for brothers. We were each other's confidantes on family and various other matters. He made a great point of passing onto me what his older brothers had passed onto him: a love for, and a knowledge of the countryside, which has always been his greatest passion. In years, he is closer to me than my mother, or his older brothers; and as I'm an only child, he's always the nearest thing to a sibling I've had.
As the years have passed and my own life again has some order to it, my need for his support has lessened; but I've always taken comfort from the assumption that he'd always be there if I needed him. I've always known who I'd turn to in the event of any serious problems with my mother, for example.
Understandably, she's absolutely devastated - and probably all the more so as she offerred to help him break the news to their other siblings, and has had to witness them crying for the first time since their childhoods.
As yet though, I've not felt the need to cry. I feel very sad about it - and very unsettled; but for as much as I often cry over silly things, I've not shed many tears over late relations since my maternal grandmother died when I was in my late teens. Indeed, my counsellor remarked recently how he'd never heard me grieve for my father, and how he's left wondering if I've even begun that process. And, I don't know the answer to that, really...
I shed a few tears at the time of course, and I had several months of disturbed sleep, palpitations and other severe anxiety symptoms. And I often speak fondly of him and his ways - and take pride in perpetuating some of them. And occasionally I've wished we had a grave to visit or even a plaque: some quiet place where I could just go unannounced, and in secret, and maybe feel close to him (we had him cremated and my mother's grief was so apparent that no decision was ever made regarding any memorial). But actually grieve his passing? Maybe I'm just too pragmatic for my own good at times, for I'm not sure it would actually make a lot of difference to how I feel...
If and when my uncle leaves us, I'll have the opportunity of returning to those woodland paths and waterside tracks we tramped so often in our younger years. I expect I might weep then.
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