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Eulogies

Some of the most moving and brilliant speeches ever made occur at funerals. Please upload the eulogy for your loved one using the form below.

For Matt Carney: 'Here was a man who could take sharp edges and soften them to a curve', by Emily Rowe - 2011

July 20, 2021

30 June 2011, St Mary’s Church, North Sydney, NSW, Australia

Hi everybody. What a life! I need to say that again.

What a life!

We all wander on through our days and hours and minutes and live with this assumption that it will all keep ticking over.

That tomorrow will follow today, that we will pick up the dry cleaning on Tuesday and have a picnic on Sunday.

Last Saturday night, Matt, Cal and myself sat up and watched Kung Fu Panda together. At a very poignant moment in the movie the shaman turtle said,

“Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery and today is a gift . That is why it is called the present.”

Matt and I locked eyes over Cals head and smiled at each other.

Matt and I met almost 10 years ago. October 2001. At the time I was living in New York.

I met him at a major sculpture show in Chicago. My sister was in from LA exhibiting and I went along to support her. Only weeks before the World Trade Center had been bombed and I was numb, dazed and grief stricken as all New Yorkers were. Matt had booked his trip to the states before that terrible day, but being Matt, bravely set off to America, despite the climate of terror.

The first part of Matt I saw was his leather clad butt up a ladder. I remember eyeing him off and watching him descend.

He was introduced to me in a group of people and when our eyes met I felt like I had known him forever.
Cos Matt was like that. When he gave you his full open smile,

His direct eye contact, you felt like you were the only person in the world. He made everyone feel like that and that’s why you are all here today.

I felt so safe with Matt because although I was in America, the show was full of people from everywhere. Having come from New York people didn’t know what to say to me. They all avoided me. Except Matt.

We talked a lot over those few days and when he kissed me on the forehead goodbye as I went off to New York and he to London he said, ”This is the start of a very long conversation.”

And so it was – the rest is history. I came back to Australia in January 2002 and we were married in January 2003.

Calpurnia was born May 2004. We didn’t muck around.

We had the most fantastic life together. Full of art, and music and literature. Little girl cuddles, bushwalks, Zhenya the husky and closeup our perfect white cat with different colored eyes.

We dove off the rocks at Adventure Bay for abalone, scaled the heights of Fluted Cape.

I watched him nurture the exotic trees in the garden of his mother Natalie’s dascha on Bruny. The arrangement here on his coffin is made up of those trees. The tortured willows, the blue spruce, the grevillieas and filberts.

He loved nature. Loved its force. He would rig up his windsurfer and head out to Simpsons Bay when the roaring 40’s came through and race the cars along the Neck doing 80kms an hour.

He’d come home salty and sandy and cold with a huge grin on his face and yell “I’m alive!” as he came through the door.

And he sure was. He didn’t waste a minute.

His whole life was a celebration. His quest was for meaning.

In his sculpture he worked patiently, conjuring up such beauty for people. Everything boldly declaring,’You are not alone.

His schools of fish, the woman holding the world in the palm of her hands. The filigree leaf of exquisite perfect fibenaci detail.

His bronze woman pouring. The woman offering the cup of life. Woman in Space. Obsession. I could go on forever – better to google him and cruise his website – such a massive body of work for one so young.

He had an amazing work ethic. In the studio 6 days a week. Even when inspiration was slow in coming, he kept working.

These pieces here, the crescents are part of a series he started back in November 2001. He started with the huge pile of scrap metal under his bench and set to make something beautiful from the unwanted.

Here was a man who could take sharp edges and soften them to a curve, rusty sharp lines became the moon. What a gift.

After Cal was born, we started playing music together.

Matt on flute or guitar and I sang. I went back to the piano so I could accompany him on the flute.

And he got serious about the guitar. He fell in love with his guitar and would get up at 4am in the morning to practise before Cal and I awoke.

When we moved to Sydney we started getting some gigs and he encouraged me to start writing songs for us to play. So I did.

And writing from what I knew – they were love songs.

“Hello lovebugs of loveness” he would say to me.

Together everyday, talking art, playing music, raising our daughter we were rarely apart. And to the last , I still swooned when he kissed me.

Matt also unearthed a new passion in the last few years. Technology had advance to a place that now allowed my dyslexic husband to read through audio books. What joy he found! The wisdom of living with immediacy of action blew beyond the stratosphere as he discovered history, science, literature. Down in his workshop he would shape his waxes for casting with his ipod plugged in, soaking it all in.

He had always felt so compromised by his dyslexia and here he had found a way to feed his mind.

The amazing kind father and husband grew.

The already empathic, sensitive, intuitive soul grew.

And when he left us last Thursday, he was perfect.

I blessed him the night before he died. I anointed him with oils and kissed him all over his face.

We didn’t know he was going. He did. He had made peace with relationships he had found troubling, he had been given a chance since he was diagnosed with cancer to really think about what his life meant to him.

And he was happy. Really happy.

He said to me only a few weeks ago,

“Em, If I die, that’s okay. I’ve had an amazing life. I love my life and I have loved all of it. Even the dark times.”

Another time as we were working through the shock of his diagnosis he said to me,

“I don’t have a bucket list. I am doing exactly what I want to be doing. I love my life.”

And last Thursday morning he cupped my face in his hands , kissed me deeply and said,

“I love you more than you will ever know,”

He was a prince among men.

I know that you are all so sad he is gone, but be glad he was a part of your life.

Learn from him. Explore your desires, challenge yourself.

Make beauty. Love freely. Be who you are.

Because this is it. The present .

I have this brief time here to try and capture him . And I could go on forever. And when I sit down that moment will be passed. Don’t waste your moments.

I’m looking forward to talking with you back at Mum and Dads. Sharing our unique precious moments that we had with Matt.

This song is a song Matt and I wrote together and we recorded last year.

It’s called life on love alone and Matts guitar rocks!

I’ll end where I began.

What a life! What a life!,

Emily Rowe is a grief counsellor (The Good Grief Coach) who posted this beautiful speech on Twitter on the tenth anniversary of her husband’s death. She was a guest on the 24th episode of the Speakola podcast, a beautiful chat. She recorded the speech for us too.

Enjoyed this speech? Speakola is a labour of love and I’d be very grateful if you would share, tweet or like it. Thank you.

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In SUBMITTED 4 Tags EMILY ROWE, MATTHEW CARNEY, HUSBAND, WIFE, TRANSCRIPT, SYDNEY, SCULPTOR, ARTIST, GRIEF COUNSELLOR
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For Kobe & Gianna Bryant: 'Babe, you take care of our Gigi', by Vanessa Bryant - 2020

February 25, 2020

24 February 2020, Staples Center, Los Angeles, USA

Vanessa Bryant spoke movingly about her husband, Kobe, and daughter, Gianna, Monday at the Staples Center in Los Angeles.

Thank you. Thank you all so much for being here. It means so much to us. First, I’d like to thank everyone for coming today.

The outpouring of love and support that my family has felt from around the world has been so uplifting. Thank you so much for all your prayers.

I’d like to talk about both Kobe and Gigi but I’ll start with my baby girl first.

My baby girl — Gianna Bryant is an amazingly sweet and gentle soul. She was always thoughtful. She always would kissed me goodnight, kissed me good morning. There were a few occasions where I was absolutely tired from being up with Bianca and Capri and I thought she had left school without saying goodbye. I'd text and say 'no kiss?' And Giana would reply with 'Mama, I kissed you but you were asleep, and I didn’t want to wake you.'

She knew how much her morning and evening kisses meant to me, and she was so thoughtful to remember to kiss me every day.

She was daddy’s girl, but I know she loved her mama. And she would always tell me and show me how much she loved me. She was one of my very best friends. She loved to bake. She loved putting a smile on everyone’s face.

Last August, she made a beautiful birthday cake for her daddy. It had fondant and looked like it had blue agate crystals. Kobe’s birthday cake looked like it was professionally decorated. She made the best chocolate chip cookies. She loved watching cooking shows and "Cupcake Wars" with me, and she loved watching "Survivor" and NBA games on TV with her daddy. She also loved watching Disney movies with her sisters.

GiGi was very competitive, like her daddy. But Gianna had a sweet grace about her. Her smile was like sunshine. Her smile took up her entire face, like mine. Kobe always said she was me.

She had my fire, my personality and sarcasm. She was tender and loving on the inside. She had the best laugh, it was infectious. It was pure and genuine.

Kobe and Gianna naturally gravitated towards each other. She had Kobe’s ability to listen to a song and have all the lyrics memorized after listening to the song a couple of times; it was their secret talent.

She was an incredible athlete. She was great at gymnastics, soccer, softball, dance and basketball. She was incredible dancer too. She loved to swim, dance, do cartwheels and jumps into our swimming pool and GiGi loved her TikTok dances.

GiGi was confident, but not in an arrogant way. She loved helping and teaching other people things at school she offered the boys' basketball coaches to help give the boys' basketball team some pointers, like the triangle offense.

She was very much like her daddy, in that they both liked helping people learn new things and master them. They were great teachers. Gigi was very sweet. She always made sure everyone was okay. She was our shepherd. She always kept our family together. She loved family traditions; family movie night and game night on vacations were important to her.

Gigi always looked out for everyone. She was very much in tune with our feelings and wanted the best for us. Gianna was smart. She knew how to read, speak and write Mandarin. She knew Spanish. She had great grades and kept them up, all while becoming an incredible basketball player.

She was president of school spirit, on student council. She was directors assistant for her school play, just like her big sister. She was looking forward to graduating eighth grade and moving on to high school with her big sister Natalia. I’m so happy she was given the opportunity to know that she was accepted to the same high school, she was really happy.

Gianna made us all proud, and she still does.

Gianna never tried to conform. She was always herself. She was a nice person, a leader, a teacher, wearing a white T, black leggings, a denim jacket, white high-top Converse, and a flannel tied around her waist with straight hair was her go-to style.

She has so much swag and rhythm ever since she was a baby. She gave the best hugs and the best kisses. She had gorgeous soft lips like her daddy. She would hug me and hold me so tight.

I could feel her love me. I loved the way she looked up at me while hugging me. It was as if she was soaking me all in. We love each other so much. I miss her so much.

She was so energetic. I couldn't keep up with her energy. She lapped Natalia and I on a track once. She was about 6 years old. We let her have a head start. She still bested us.

I miss her sweet kisses, I miss her cleverness, I miss her sarcasm, her wit, and that adorable sly side smile followed with a grin and a burst of laughter. We shared the same cat-that-ate-the-canary grin.

Gigi was sunshine. She brightened up my day every day. I miss looking at her beautiful face. She was always so good, a rule follower. I knew I could always count on her to do the right thing.

She was the most loving daughter, thoughtful little sister, and silly big sister. She happily helped carry the little's diaper bag or played with them. She liked helping me with Bianca and Capri. Bianca loved going to the playground, swimming and jumping on the trampoline with Gigi.

I used to tell Gigi, CoCo considered her favorite sister. Capri would smile from ear to hear when Gigi walked into the room, and Capri reminds me a lot of Gianna; they look alike and just smile with their whole face, pure joy.

We will not be able to see Gigi go to high school with Natalia and ask her how her day went. We didn't get the chance to teach her how to drive a car. I won't be able to tell her how gorgeous she looks on her wedding day. I'll never get to see my baby girl walk down the aisle, have a father-daughter dance with her daddy, dance on the dance floor with me or have babies of her own.

Gianna would have been an amazing mommy. She was very maternal ever since she was really little.

Gigi would have most likely become the best player in the WNBA. She would have made a huge difference. She would have made a huge difference for women's basketball. Gigi was motivated to change the way everyone viewed women in sports.

She wrote papers in school defending women and wrote about how the unequal pay difference for the NBA and WNBA leagues wasn't fair. And I truly feel she made positive changes for the WNBA players now, since they knew Gigi's goal was to eventually play in the WNBA.

I'm still so proud of Gianna. She made a difference and was kind to everyone she met in the 13 years she was here on Earth. Her classmates shared many fond memories about Gianna with us and those stories reminded me that Gianna loved and showed everyone that no act of kindness is ever too small to make a difference in someone's life.

She was always, always, always, considerate of others and their feelings. She was a beautiful, kind, happy, silly, thoughtful and loving daughter and sister. She was so full of life and had so much more to offer this world. I cannot imagine life without her.

Mommy, Natalia, Bianca, Capri and daddy love you so much, Gigi. I will miss your sweet handmade cards, your sweet kisses, and your gorgeous smile. I miss you, all of you, every day. I love you.

Kobe was known as a fierce competitor on the basketball court. The greatest of all time, a writer, an Oscar winner, and the Black Mamba. But to me, he was Kobe-Kobe, my boo-boo, my bae-boo, my Papi Chulo. I was his Vivi, his principessa, his reina, his queen MambaI couldn't see him as a celebrity, nor just an incredible basketball player.

He was my sweet husband, and the beautiful father of our children. He was mine. He was my everything. Kobe and I have been together since I was 17 and a half years old. I was his first girlfriend, his first love, his wife, his best friend, his confidant and his protector.

He was the most amazing husband. Kobe loved me more than I could ever express or put into words. He was an early bird and I was a night owl. I was fire and he was ice and vice versa at times. We balanced each other out.

He would do anything for me. I have no idea how I deserved a man that loved and wanted me more than Kobe. He was charismatic, a gentleman, he was loving, adoring and romantic. He was truly the romantic one in our relationship and looked forward to Valentine's days and our anniversaries every year. He planned special anniversary trips and a special traditional gift for every year of our marriage. He even handmade my most treasured gifts.

He just thought outside the box and was so thoughtful, even while working hard to be the best athlete. He gifted me the actual notebook and the blue dress Rachel McAdams wore in "The Notebook" movie. When I asked him why he chose the blue dress, he said it was because it's a scene when Ally comes back to Noah.

We had hoped to grow old together like the movie. We really had an amazing love story. We loved each other with our whole beings — two perfectly imperfect people, making a beautiful family, and raising our sweet and amazing girls.

A couple weeks before they passed, Kobe sent me a sweet text and mentioned how he wanted to spend time together; just the two of us without our kids, because I'm his best friend first. We never got the chance to do it. We were busy taking care of our girls and just doing our regular, everyday responsibilities. But I'm thankful I have that recent text. It means so much to me.

Kobe wanted us to renew our vows. He wanted Natalia to take over his company, and he wanted to travel the world together. We had always talked about how we'd be the fun grandparents to our daughters' children. He would have been the coolest grandpa. Kobe was the MVP of girl dads, or MVD.

He never left the toilet seat up. He always told the girls how beautiful and smart they are. He taught them how to be brave and how to keep pushing forward when things get tough. And when Kobe retired from the NBA, he took over dropping off and picking up our girls from school, since I was at home pregnant with Bianca and just recently home nursing Capri.

When Kobe was still playing, I used to show up an hour early to be the first in line to pick up Natalia and Gianna from school, and I told him he couldn't drop the ball once he took over. He was late one time, and we most definitely let him know that I was never late. So we showed up 1 hour and 20 minutes early after that.

He always knew there was room for improvement and wanted to do better. He happily did carpool and enjoyed spending time in the car with our girls. He was a doting father, a father that was hands-on and present. He helped me bathe Bianca and Capri almost every night. He would sing them silly songs in the shower and continue making them laugh and smile as he lathered them in lotion and got them ready for bed.

He had magic arms and could put Capri to sleep in only a few minutes. He said he had it down to a science: eight times up and down our hallway. He loved taking Bianca to Fashion Island and watch her play in the Koi pond area and loved taking her to the park.

Their most recent visit to the Koi pond was the evening before he and GiGi passed. He shared a love of movies and the breakdown of films with Natalia. He enjoyed renting out theatres and taking Natalia to watch the newest "Star Wars" movie or "Harry Potter" films.

And they would have movie marathons and he enjoyed every second of it. He loved your typical tearjerkers, too. He liked watching "Step Mom," "Steel Magnolias," and "Little Women."

He had a tender heart. Kobe somehow knew where I was at all times. Specifically, when I was late to his games. He would worry about me if I wasn't in my seat at the start of each game and would ask security where I was at the first time-out of the first quarter.

And my smartass would tell him that he wasn't going to drop 81 points within the first 10 minutes of the game. I think anyone with kids understands that sometimes we can't make it out the door on time. And eventually, he was used to my tardiness and balled out.

The fact that he could play on an intense professional level and still be concerned by making sure we made it to the game safely was just another example of how family came first to him.

He loved being Gianna's basketball coach. He told me he wished he would have convinced Natalia to play basketball so they could have spent even more time together.

But he also wanted her to pursue her own passion. He watched Natalia play in a volleyball tournament on her birthday, on January 19th, and he noticed how she's a very intelligent player. He was convinced she would have made a great point guard, with her vision of the court.

And he told me that he wanted Bianca and Capri to take up basketball when they get older, so he could spend just as much time with them as he did with GiGi. And Kobe always told Bianca and Capri that they were going to grow up and play basketball and 'mix they ass up.'

Now they won't have their daddy and sister here to teach them, and that is truly a loss I do not understand. But I'm so thankful Kobe heard CoCo say 'Dada.' He isn't going to be here to drop Bianca and Capri off at Pre-K or kindergarten. He isn't going to be here to tell me to 'get a grip, V,' when we have to leave the kindergarten classroom or show up to our daughter's doctor's visits for my own moral support.

He isn't going to be able to walk our girls down the aisle or spin me around on the dance floor while singing "PYT" to me. But I want my daughters to know and remember the amazing person, husband and father he was.

The kind of man that wanted to teach the future generations to be better and keep them from making his own mistakes. He always liked working and doing projects to improve kids' lives. He taught us all valuable lessons about life and sports through his NBA career, his books, his showed detail, and his Punies podcast series, and we're so thankful he left those lessons and stories behind for us.

He was thoughtful and wrote the best love letters and cards. And GiGi had his wonderful ability to express her feelings and take paper and make you feel her love through her words. She was thoughtful like him. They were so easy to love.

Everyone naturally gravitated towards them. They were funny, happy, silly, and they loved life. They were so full of joy and adventure. God knew they couldn't be on this Earth without each other. He had to bring them home to have them together.

Babe, you take care of our Gigi. And I got Nani, Bibi and Coco. We're still the best team. We love and miss you, Boo-Boo and GiGi. May you both rest in peace and have fun in Heaven until we meet again one day. We love you both, and miss you, forever and always. Mommy.

Source: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/sports/kobe-b...

Enjoyed this speech? Speakola is a labour of love and I’d be very grateful if you would share, tweet or like it. Thank you.

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In PUBLIC FIGURE D Tags KOBE BRYANT, GIANNA BRYANT, TRANSCRIPT, VANESSA BRYANT, BASKETBALL, HUSBAND, DAUGHTER, WIFE, NBA, LAKERS, PUBLIC MEMORIAL, HELICOPTER TRAGEDY
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For Natasha Jones: ‘Such a beauty, such zest for life’, by Riley Jones - 2019

December 30, 2019

4 December 2019, Memo Music Hall, Melbourne, Australia

Some of you might think of me as a funny bugger, and may have even seen speak at Natasha’s Dad’s funeral back in 2015, where I managed to sneak in some Slovenian swear words and get some laughs. I’m not sure I can manage that today, though.

I’ve actually been dreading this for a long time. Basically, since the day that Natasha received her terribly cruel diagnosis, and if not that exact day then definitely that first week, I’ve lain awake at night, time and time again, wondering about what I might say at her funeral should she pass away. And now here we are, a little over 15 months later.

My thoughts ran the gamut from just angry ranting, to hysterical crying, to just focussing on the positives, to everything in between. I think today we’ll get a mix of all of those.

I should start by saying that we shouldn’t be here. She was only 43.

And apologies in advance to anyone who has survived cancer or who is even just over the age of 43, because I keep thinking: why do you get to live and she didn’t? And that includes me, I’m the sweet age of 46. Here’s an actual example of this thought process from yesterday: why is Moby alive? Nothing against him, by why him and not Natasha? I know Tash wouldn’t want me to feel like that, but she was much nicer and better than I. It’s just not fair. She should still be alive.

But her cancer was horrible, more horrible than I think we realised. In retrospect, I can now see that this was almost a certainty to happen, but we tried to keep hope alive, to try to ensure that she could be with us for as long as possible. And as it turned out, that was nowhere near as long as we expected. None of us, not her, I don’t think even her medical team, expected her to go last Tuesday. Only two days beforehand, on the Sunday, she’d told me that she wasn’t going to die this year.

But it looks like it WAS her time to go, and as I’ve noted in a pretty distressing post on the Tash Tribe on Facebook, she went relatively peacefully, probably unaware of my desperate attempts to revive her. And many people have reassured me that, if she had to choose a way to go, as opposed to the timing, it was almost perfect. She was in her bed, having just had her first shower in days, warm under a blanket in her dressing gown with the love of her life looking over her, caring for her. Her last words were in response to Declan saying “I love you”, and she whispered back “I love you, too”.

And then a few minutes later, she was gone, and all of a sudden, it was just me and the kids left. I must say that, if I didn’t have the kids, I don’t know what I’d do, because there’s a big Natasha-shaped hole in my life, that can never be filled. I’m so lost. I keep wanting to tell her stuff, or watch a TV show with her, and then remember that I can’t. I still can’t believe she’s gone and I bawl my eyes out every day. And it’s only been a week. How can I do this for the rest of my life?

A life that used to be pretty great – only a year and a half ago – and which is now just miserable.
But, there is some light, because Natasha gave me you three beautiful creatures. And even with that, it seems like she was planning ahead and looking after me – which is very Tash. Y’all may not know this, but Xander has been comforting me, quickly coming over and giving me a hug whenever he sees me tearing up, and Elektra and Declan have been wonderful as well. But it’s my job to look after you guys, and that’s what I’ll do. I just worry I’m not going to be as good at it as she was, or anything else she did for that matter. But there are a lot of people in this room who have offered to help me, too.

SO, apart from my kids, I struggle to find any positives in this, but here goes.

The main positive is – she’s no longer in pain. Ever since the chemotherapy started, she required pain medication, and the pain only got worse towards the end. She was willing to endure it to be with her family as long as possible, but now, thankfully, she’s no longer suffering.

Another weird positive is that, once she was diagnosed, I had to step up and do all of the things she used to do, which was an astounding amount. And taking the kids to their dermatologist one day led to discovering that I had a small skin cancer in my scalp – it was benign, but could have got a lot worse. If Tash hadn’t been diagnosed, I wouldn’t have gone to that appointment, and I wouldn’t have had that skin cancer cut out, and then who knows.

Also, thanks to her diagnosis and treatment, I got to spend pretty much every minute of every day for the last 15 months with her, and a lot of time with the kids, too. Much more intense time than we would have had otherwise. And I must thank my work colleagues for being so flexible with us and giving me that opportunity – I don’t know what I’d do without you guys.

And that brings me to another positive, not of her death, but her life - we all got to be with her at some point during her 43 years on this planet. And I think we can all agree that makes us very lucky, because she was amazing.

I guess that makes me even luckier than most, as I was with this incredible woman for 23 years – half of my life, and more than half of hers.

For those of you who don’t know the story, Natasha and I got together 23 years ago in around November 1996. We had passed each other on the stairs in the Union Building at Monash Uni, our eyes had met, and we knew straight away there was a connection. We later chatted at a Union Night, trying to work out if we’d met before, but there was nothing we could pin down, so it just must have been destiny.

And then Natasha introduced me to her friend, Jade, and Jade told us that she had actually had to pull us apart at the Chocolate Ball at the Palace, here in St Kilda, many months before. So it was either destiny, or a drunken pash that neither of us remembered, but it turned out that we had fortuitously each found our respective soul-mate.

She was my wife, lover, travel companion, fellow music aficionado, partner in all things and, most of all, my best friend. We did pretty much everything together and I can confidently say that pretty much every good thing I’ve ever done and every good memory I have – she was there.

I loved everything about her – the obvious stuff that you all loved – her kindness, her smile, her thoughtfulness and generosity. But I also loved weird stuff – I loved her taste and her smell. She used to complain sometimes that she hadn’t had a shower and thus would smell, and I honestly told her numerous times that she had never smelt, never had an unpleasant odour, EVER. I meant that very seriously. It’s a pity the feeling was not mutual… (Let’s just say that she didn’t think my natural, aluminium-free deodorant from Byron Bay was very effective.)

Another thing I loved: her voice. Not just her singing voice which some of you may have heard – she sang like an angel. But her regular voice – I told her that I loved listening to voicemail messages she left, because hearing her voice just gave me a little thrill.

And I loved her feet. Not in a fetish-y way. But her nerves were a bit damaged from the chemo, and something she really appreciated was her feet being rubbed. So I would volunteer every night to massage her feet, and she looked surprised every time, and then happily thrust her feet at me, nearly kicking me in the face, and I would massage her feet and calves for an hour while watching one of our many TV shows that we mutually loved. Because we didn’t have as much alone time together, it was something I looked forward to.

Also, she was super-hot, but we all know that.

Another thing we all know is that Natasha was the nicest person you could ever meet, and so thoughtful. Even when going through the worst things personally, she would think of others.

As a very weird example, she kept suggesting women I could be with after she died, who would be good for me and the kids, and maybe even put up with my comic book movies. Some of her suggestions are in this very room! But I had to beg her to stop thinking like that, and pimping me out to her friends – I was married to her, and I didn’t want that to end, or to even have to think about it. But she was still just trying to look after me.

In that respect, the timing of her passing also seems like she planned it. In particular, she completed her magnus opus – the renovation of our house. She had been driving that for almost two years – getting permits and dealing with heritage issues and so forth, so when she was first diagnosed she asked me, if she died, would I complete the renovation. And I said “no”, because I’m an idiot. But she just went “Right!”, and decided to get it done. And for most of the last year, while she was dealing with everything else, we’ve been living in our partially renovated home. But it was finally completed so that we were able to move back in in late in October. And she loved it, and got to enjoy it for her last month, referring to it as her legacy, while snidely remarking that my next wife had better appreciate it.

She also stuck around just long enough to teach me most of what she knew about running the house and raising our three beautiful kids.

The first day that I drove the kids to a school thing after last Tuesday, Xander said to me “Dad – it’s lucky we’re all so used to you doing this for us”.

So that’s small comfort, but more importantly, the kids also got to have the best Mum ever. She devoted herself utterly to them. She fought tooth and nail to get them into their school, to help them with any health or other issues, to encourage them and drive them to whatever activities they were interested in. She was so proud of you all, even though she might ask you to play outside, or clean up your pig-sty room, you were still her pride and joy. OUR pride and joy. You three are truly greater than the sum of your parts – you’re like Mum, you’re like me, and ultimately you’ll be better than both of us.

There are so many other things I’d like to talk about, if I could go all day. Her love of books and the fact that we were hoping to one day to open a book bar for her to run. Her love of photography – she was so talented. Her love of travel, of course – she’d famously been to 56 countries. Her connection to Slovenia and Australia’s Slovenia: Tasmania. I hope she would appreciate that her coffin is hand-crafted Tasmanian Blackwood. Her dog, Indy, who gave her so much joy. And, of course, her many, many friends. She has SO many friends, and many of them have written very touching tributes to her online and on Facebook. A common thread with all of them is that Natasha made everyone she spoke to, everyone she dealt with, feel special. Because she thought you were special.

So when it came to organising today, I honestly found it too hard to pick even a few friends to speak – it would just always leave someone out, some group out, which is why I basically just went with Myshell to talk about Natasha pre-Riley, and me to try to cover everything post-Riley. But know that she loved you all, individually, and cherished the time she spent with each and every one of you.

Everything about this has been hard, so I want to just quickly thank some people who have helped me and our family through this. (I then went into some personal thank-yous...)

And that brings me to possibly the hardest thing about this service: choosing photos for the upcoming Tribute. How could I fit her life into 80 photos? She’s in so many AND looks great in all them. In the end, I just had to pick a selection from the ones already on my computer, so I know it’s not representative of her whole life. There are numerous trips around the world that are completely missed. But fortunately the booklets you’ve received today include some of those photos plus many others.

Also, I deliberately chose not to have any photos from the last month and a half, when she really started deteriorating.

These photos remind us of Tash in her prime. Such a beauty, such zest for life. A shining star.
I also want to explain the two songs accompanying this Photo Tribute. They’re both by Biffy Clyro, a band Natasha and I saw many times and which we even managed to take the kids to, back in 2014. The first song is called Folding Stars, and it was written by the lead singer when his mother, Eleanor, lost her battle with cancer. It’s very on point and will likely make you cry. The second song is Mountains. This song is a bit more uplifting, but also has a special connection to me and Tash. She bought this picture here for my birthday a few years ago, with some of the beautiful lyrics from Mountains on it. “Nothing lasts forever, except you and me. You are my mountain, you are my sea. Love can last forever, between you and me. You are my mountain, you are my sea.”

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Source: https://rilestar.blogspot.com/2019/12/its-...

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In SUBMITTED 3 Tags EULOGY, FAMILY EULOGY, HUSBAND, WIFE, TRANSCRIPT, CANCER, LOVE
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for Kimberly Walker: 'You move towards the open door and the silent night beyond', by Ben, Talia, Toby & friends - 2018

July 17, 2018

25 June 2018, Heidelberg Golf Club, Melbourne, Australia

Ben Cook (Kim's partner)

Kim was born on February 26, 1972 in Toronto, Canada to parents Barry and Jeannie.

I think fo r Kim the most memorable aspect of her childhood was the snow. She always remembered the thrill of waking up to the hush in the air that follows an overnight snowfall, where all the usual sounds are muffled, and looking out the window to see the magic of a world made anew. Then barracking against the snow plows being able to clear the roads, in time for teachers to be able to get to school, and the excitement of hearing her school named on the radio as closed for the day. Then breakfast would be wolfed down, into the snow suits, and outside to get started on a snow man. The big advantage of living in a court was that the snow plows would come in and circle the court, pushing the snow into a central pile that would gradually increase throughout the winter. Then this pile of snow was perfect for a snow fort and even a little toboggan run with a hard icy landing.

Kim also loved heading to her grandparents’ farm in outback Alberta for her summer vacations. As she describes it there wasn’t much to do on the farm, but it was a whole world. She’d play in the wool pile hammering nails and searching for critters, she’d spend hours lying on the dock of the pond staring down at the waterbugs. She’d help her grandma with the clothes wringer and stoking the giant cast iron wood stove. She’d wonder through the enormous vege garden picking and eating carrots and peas. Raspberries and strawberries would also be picked and eaten with fresh cream from her uncle Allen’s cows. There were also the odd trips down to the peace river, where her grandad would tuck bread between their toes for the fish to nibble.

Kim just adored her grandparents. Her grandfather Bern for the way he could wiggle his hears, and for when he’d wink at Kim and turn his hearing aid down when getting nagged by his wife. And her grandmother Pearl who had to work so hard as a farm wife and also the district nurse, but nonetheless devoted energy into her epic flower garden simply for the beauty of it.

From an early age it was clear that Kim was a really bright kid, loving reading, using it as a sanctuary of sorts. She was also very athletic. When Kim came up to bat on her school softball team, the opposition would yell “heavy hitter” and the outfielders would move back, often an exercise in futility. She won the interschool sprints and long jump, and was a very talented gymnast.

Her friend Debbie Green writes:

In my mind you were my first real friend way back from Grade 4 when we were is Mrs. Zeidenberg’s glass together. It was a pretty scary experiences going to the “gifted” class but as soon as I saw your smile and heard your laugh I knew we would be fast friends. We went through 5 years of grade school in the same class and I remember thinking that if I could have picked a sister in this world it would be you. In my memories you are the woman who knew what she wanted, knew what she deserved, knew what mattered and had a laugh so contagious you just couldn’t help but be happy when being with you.

But on the whole Kim wouldn’t have described her childhood as a happy one. She remembers being worried a lot as a child, cripplingly shy and often feeling like she didn’t fit in.

Despite everything she had going for her, Kim remembers being devoid of self-confidence. Mostly attributable to her mother, who criticised her constantly, told her she was worthless and asked why she couldn’t be more like her younger sister. Her mother would regularly drink herself to a stupor, and get more cutting the drunker she got. Her father Barry was considered the fun dad of the neighbourhood and was king of the kids, but somehow was not able to recognise or address the seriousness of what was happening under his roof.

When Kim was 14 she got her first job working in a nearby ice-cream stand, and this was followed by a job at a local video store and at Canada’s Wonderland  running the SkyRider rollercoaster. She loved to torment the patrons by announcing that there was something wrong just as ride was beginning, and pretending she couldn’t stop it. She worked hard and relished having her own money and being able to get her own things. I think it was a huge step in the development of her self-worth. By this time she had to put a padlock on her bedroom door to stop her mother tampering with her things.

Now Kim’s friend Jacque will read a tribute from Nicki Balfour Smith, a dear high school friend of Kim’s.

Jacque reading Nicki Balfour Smith (Kim's friend)

‘I first met Kim in Grade 9 at Unionville High School, a brand new, strangely pink school that specialized in the Arts. Although neither Kim or I had anything to do with the Arts program we attended this pretty school with tree’s and pink everywhere, not a colour either of us fancied. I don’t remember when exactly we first met since I was a jock and spent most of my time in the gym, and Kim was never to be seen in those places except for maybe a mandatory gym class. I do remember being in English class with Kim where I would listen in fascination as she explained the authors deep philosophical sub-plots, all the while wondering if I was missing some pages in my copy. I never quite saw the things Kim did in our books, especially with Shakespeare. I found them quite simply painful to read while she loved the hidden stories and deeper meanings to the dialogue.

I do know that Kim and I became fast friends mostly because we had the same sense of humour and outlook on life. Kim had an infectious laugh and loved dry British humour. She loved Monty Python and anything with John Cleese, especially the movie ‘A Fish called Wanda’. I grew to appreciate her off the track shows and whimsical takes on life. I recall many lunch hours, evenings and weekends with Kim just chatting and ending up with a sore stomach from laughing so hard.

In high school Kim was fearless. She didn’t care about conformity, had a take it or leave it attitude and you had to like her for who she was. Kim was a strong woman, believed in herself and was one of the most loyal friends I ever knew. She had your back no matter what. Not everyone liked this, but it was another reason Kim and I became such good friends.

One of Kim’s favourite places to visit was my cottage, just 2 hours north of Toronto in Muskoka. We spent many cottage weekends there with our group of friends swimming, tubing and always having a great laugh. When Ben first came to Canada about 14 years ago, this was a place he too had the chance to visit and fall in love with. I hope one-day Toby and Tali can come to this magical place as well. I know Tali is excited to see a Moose, and there was one there this past Spring.

Kim had a quirky taste in music in high school and I clearly remember her having me listen to Jethro Tull and I was puzzled and amazed by their strange lyrics. She was also the first to make me an all-female tape of mixed songs (someone may need to explain this to Toby and Tali). She didn’t like the fact that my music was mostly male leads and bands, as the strong feminist she was, she needed to steer me on the right path to support more female singers.

When Kim travelled the world, she always stayed in touch with a postcard and usually a quirky story of something that had happened to her. I always worried about her, but at the same time always knew she would be safe. She was well read and well cultured knowing how to fit in wherever she landed.

One thing I always remember Kim saying is that she never wanted to own more than she could pack up in a few boxes and move on with when it was time, and she was okay if these boxes were all books. Kim never wanted to be tied to one place, she wanted to travel the world. This is how I knew she had met her match when she met Ben and planted her new roots in Australia. After meeting Ben on their cross-Canada adventure I saw how happy she was and knew that is where she would call home.

Although through our lives Kim and I went many years without seeing each other, Kim and I always picked up right where we left off. Even when I visited Australia last August after not seeing each other in 8 years, it felt like we had hardly been apart. I believe this is a sign of a true friendship, the ability to pick up where you last left off.

I know Kim has impacted many lives, including mine and my family’s. I am thankful to all her friends who supported her in Australia especially in the past few difficult years. Her friends and family meant the world to her and with my not being able to physically be there for her, I am grateful to all of you who were. And of course, to you Ben for being the best partner and friend I could have ever wanted my Kim to have. She lived a full and loved life because of all of you.

Tali and Toby, your Mom was one of a kind and someone we will never forget. She loved you both more than you could ever imagine and she will be with you every day, even if you can’t see her.

Hugs and kisses to all of Kim’s family and friends and may she always stay in our smiles.’

Ben Cook

Late last year we had the enormous honour of a visit from Kim’s favourite high school teacher, Mr Moe Jacobs.  The next day Kim wrote the following.

Last night we laughed about students we could remember and classroom antics, and the fact that I met my first love by asking him to edit my essay for Mr J's class. We also went over some of the work I had saved and chuckled over his comments, which certainly wouldn't fly today but which were so vitally important to my self respect back then. He didn't suffer fools, and nor did he compliment anything undeserving. So of course, I worked my ass off on every single poem, story, essay and exam. Below is one of my favorite comments by Mr J: 'In summary, if indeed skill is to be respected and talent admired then you are afflicted with the latter and may even contract the former. From a purely chauvinistic viewpoint, if Jason, or any other man ever lets you go, he should be shot. Of course, if you let them go, then that's OK. You are special Kim. You basically use your torment to create. That sets you apart. Don't relinquish your soul for the comfort of acceptability.'

Kim finished high school and went to Guelf University to study literature. By this time her parents had separated and Kim’s father was making the 3 hour commute to visit her all too regularly which was cramping her style a bit. So she transferred from Guelf to Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, a 4 hour flight away, which seemed to provide a big enough buffer.

Emily will now read a tribute from Erin Edmonson, whom Kim met in Vancouver.

Emily reading Erin Edmonson (friend)

Kim and I met in the early 1990s, working together at a restaurant. Our uniforms were denim shirts and jeans. I can still see Kim, long hair in a high ponytail, high waisted jeans, brown hiking boots. That laugh, that smile were there, way back then. Most of us at the restaurant also went to Simon Fraser University and worked to defray the costs of books and tuition, but most of us also had help from our parents. One of the first things I remember learning about Kim was that she had no help from anyone and that she was covering all of her costs on her own. She seemed remarkably organized and responsible to me, even then. She was grown up when we only thought we were. She had come out to the West Coast of Canada from Ontario when the national trend was to come from everywhere else in Canada and go to school somewhere in Ontario. We went to the same school, but didn’t see each other much on campus because we were both always working, so it was at the restaurant where we became friends. She had already travelled around Europe and had stories to tell when the rest of us dreamed of going somewhere after graduation. She loved that her last name was Walker, sure that it was a prophecy to fulfill. I was majoring in Middle East History and one day between shifts, I told Kim how I would love to see what I was learning about. Immediately, she suggested we go. “I’m serious,” she said.

“I’m serious if you’re serious,” I said.

“Let’s go,” she said.

So we did. It was that simple. It was a done-deal from that moment.

To me, that is Kim. She meant what she said, and she said what she meant. There was no bullshit, no pretence, ever. She didn’t boast or brag, she just did.

Kim had a firm line between right and wrong. Always. Her moral code was clear and unwavering. She gave respect, truth, and loyalty, and she knew that she deserved respect, truth, and loyalty. If you couldn’t give them, she had no time for you. I always admired her clarity and strength in this. She didn’t suffer fools or forgive hypocrisy, and I loved her for this from the very beginning of our friendship.

Our trip was amazing. A lot of sugary sweet tea, cards, ruins, museums, hikes, bike rides in the desert, and boat rides on the Nile, ill-advised camping outside oases in unsafe places that we were too young to realize were unsafe.

We spent days in the drawers of the Egyptian Museum writing found poetry with the object lists. We recited much better poetry at the amphitheatre in Palmyra. We posed like statues in the ruins of Ephesus. We climbed Mount Sinai and Nemrut Dagi in the middle of the night to count the stars and watch the sunrise and sing songs with strangers.

At mosques and mausoleums we had to borrow the scratchy, slippery black polyester public abayas to cover ourselves. We got used to it, but always laughed at each other. At Al-Azhar in Cairo, we wanted to be respectful, but we looked too funny not to photograph ourselves, so we snuck into a dusty roofless storage area and set the timer on my camera to take a 1990s version of the selfie. We couldn’t get the timing right or have the same look on our faces, so in the pictures we are ridiculous and laughing, and so young.

Everywhere we went, if there was water, Kim jumped in. She was fearless, yes, but mostly she just wanted to be in the water; she couldn’t resist a chance to float and splash around. She jumped in a spring en route to the Oracle of Delphi, some weird irrigation canal under the hale-bopp comet, the Dead Sea, the Mediterranean.

We wanted to go everywhere, and agreed to be open to anything, but the one solid plan we had for the whole six month trip was to spend her birthday at the Pyramids of Giza. I can still remember how important this was to her and how excited she was that morning when we set out from the hostel at sunrise to take a rickety public bus to the Pyramids. We spent the whole day there. We brought bread and cheese, water, journals and cameras, and just basked in the presence of the Pyramids. We watched the camel drivers rip off tourists all day and when they offered us rides for money, we said, “No thank you, we have feet.” By the end of the day, our banter with the camel drivers had become friendly and funny, and one of the guys gave us a free ride to some hills on the edge of the Pyramid site to watch the sunset. When it got dark, he took us through the camel corrals to a stone wall where we could watch the cheezy tourist light show projected onto the Pyramids. A booming voice talked about the “mystical fervor” with which the Pyramids had been built. We laughed and laughed, and then the camel driver gave us a ride through the busy streets of Cairo to the bus stop and waited with us until our bus came. It was one of those rare perfect days that you know is perfect even as it is happening.

“Mystical fervor” and “we have feet” became our mantras. They were our private jokes and our rallying cries for the rest of the trip. For years afterward we passed these phrases back and forth. Every February 26th since, I think of this perfect day.

Now our trip exists only in my memories. And that’s not fair. But I will keep them and share them with Tali and Toby - and when they start walking the world, I will show them Canada, as I promised you.

After that trip, Kim moved to the UK and sent me cheerful letters about her cramped apartment and terrible restaurant job. She saved enough money to travel across Africa, north to south, and move to Australia. We met up again in China, on her trips to Canada, and kept in touch through the adventure of motherhood, where she was, again, as always, my mentor. We agreed the motherhood was our greatest adventure, and the most important thing we had ever done. I am eternally grateful that we found a way to share it.

Kim was my good friend. And I will always be grateful for everything we shared. And I will miss her horribly.

Alex will now read a tribute from Amander Kidner, whom Kim met in London.

Alex reading Amander Kidner

In the early hours of the morning, my beautiful friend Kim left for spirit. She has left behind, not only her amazing little family, but also her legacy of kindness and wisdom. 

Kim and I met in our early 20’s, both hostesses in a restaurant on the eternally cool Kings Road, Chelsea. She was just a couple of years older than me but had already travelled and explored so much that she carried this worldly aura. I was frippish and naive to her calm and sense. It would have been easy for her to be disdainful of me but instead she embraced the best of me, she’s always done that. 

We whiled away the hours with humour and candour; our friendship honest and simple. And then she left to travel some more and our paths diverged. 

Some 10 years ago, through the gifts of social media, we reconnected across the world; Melbourne to London. We watched each other’s lives as we dived into love & parenthood and the crazy all-consuming discoveries that flow with that; we engaged in light comments and philosophical discussions here and there. 

And then she got sick, she was told she had very little time, and we plunged right back into that friendship we had left behind at our hostess stand 20 years ago. 

She has given every ounce of herself to be around for her family for as long as possible, she has walked this illness through three and half years and I have walked alongside behind the written word of our messages as we have shared our loves, our fears, our histories and our hopes. There is nothing like the shadow of death to focus our hearts to truth. 

As she did so many moons ago, she saw the best in me through every conversation, she offered wisdom won through pain and joy and I know she offered that to everyone. One of her fears as she neared the end was that her children might think she had not ‘fought’ hard enough to stay alive and it breaks my heart that she could even consider that of herself when she loved them so passionately and absolutely. She raised herself up and away from her own childhood of pain to offer them the very best of herself because that is the strength of woman she was. 

And now I have had to say goodbye to one of my closest and dearest friends despite not having as much as hugged her for two decades. That is love, that is friendship and that is heartache.

PHOTO MONTAGE (Traveller by Martha Wainwright)

Ben Cook:

In December 1999 Kim’s travels brought her to Australia. Initially the plan was to stay for 1 year, complete her Masters in Literature and then continue on her way. By the time she arrived it was too late to enrol, but she did manage to get a place to complete her Diploma of Education. Throughout the year 2000 Kim worked as a waitress in the cooperate boxes at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. While she was waitressing, Kim paid scant attention to what was going on the field. But she did notice that a team by the name of the Essendon seemed to win every time they played, and win by a lot. She found the Essendon supporters arrogant and took a particular dislike to the Essendon captain, James Hird. She’d barrack for every team that played Essendon, and chose the Bulldogs as her team purely because they were the only team to beat Essendon that year. It pains me that Kim has seen an Essendon premiership live and I haven’t. And I’m pretty sure that Kim put a curse on the Bombers that year, because it has been pretty much downhill ever since.

I first noticed Kim a good 6 months before I met her. I was working as an integration aide while Kim was doing teaching rounds as part of her Dip Ed. In my mind’s eye I so clearly remember Kim standing up at the other end of the staff room talking to a group of student teachers, hearing her cool accent and thinking wow. But the days I worked didn’t coincide with her placement days, I only saw her the once and it seemed that was that. Early the next year a one year teaching contract at the school needed to be filled, and Kim was put forward by her supervisor from the previous year as an outstanding student teacher. So it was my dad as an assistant principal at the school who got in touch with Kim, called her in for an interview and pretty much offered her the job on the spot. At that point I don’t think it occurred to dad that Kim would someday have his grandchildren.

Before taking up the position Kim had to fulfil a commitment to teach English to kids in China, so her start to the year was delayed a month or so. I did see her around a couple of times and recognised her from my single sighting the previous year. We finally met at a staff conference in Ballarat, and I finally learned her name when she said “hi, I’m Kim”. And we had our first of so many coffees together.

After that we’d often chat in the staffroom on the couple of days a week I was working, and Marilyn tells me how she could see my eyes light up a mile away when I saw Kim. Now and again I managed give her a lift home to her one bedroom unit in Ivanhoe. Apparently the landlord was sold on Kim when she said she couldn’t believe how close it was to a public library and a train station. All she had was a futon, a couch she found on the nature strip, some crockery and pots and pans from the local op-shop, and a set of photo albums with all these incredible photos from all over the world. No TV or any interest in getting one, just books and music. She just had this unpretentious worldliness and sophistication about her. I think when I saw where she lived I was smitten. But still had a lot of work to do.

It was well into June by the time I started to get somewhere. Playing soccer for Latrobe Uni, I’d just got back into the senior team after coming back from a broken leg, and I kicked an absolute pearler of a goal. I know this isn’t about me, so I won’t go into details, but come up to me later and I’ll describe it if you like. Up until that point, in both soccer and love, goals had been few and far between for me. I was too defensively minded I guess. But after the game I called Kim and asked her to a movie, figuring whatever happened it would still be a good day. After the movie, a dubious arthouse choice with a little too much dog fighting for Kim’s liking, we were deep in conversation about life and love. Kim said she was surprised that I was single, and I was surprised that she was surprised. And then she said if I wasn’t so much younger than her, and if we didn’t work together and my dad wasn’t her boss then maybe we’d be a chance. I countered with an example of a couple of friends with a similar age difference who were making it work. I said that I was only working part time and only until I finished uni. And I said that I’m sure if my dad knew that his tenure was keeping me from being with somebody like Kim, then he’d resign on the spot.

So Kim somewhat tentatively said we could give it a try, and away we went.

Kim only taught for just over 3 years, but she was the sort of teacher they make movies out of, such was the impression she made on students. She loved teaching philosophy in particular, tricking the kids into discussing ancient philosophers through movies such as the Matrix and the Truman Show. The disengaged students were suddenly thinking, and the engaged students went to a whole new level.

When one student was causing trouble, Kim told him if he could prove to her that homework didn’t exist she wouldn’t make him do any. So he went away and came back with a well-reasoned essay, confident he would be excused from homework for the rest of the term. But was devastated when Kim pointed out that by doing the essay as homework he had disproven his own argument.

Her former student Amanda O'Reilly writes

Just over 11 years ago I bumped into Kim and (a very small) Talia when I was working at Ivanhoe Library and it was like we had only seen each other yesterday. I hated school overall, it was not a happy time in my life. But Kim always made me feel welcome and appreciated and cared for. In year 10 when we got to choose electives I knew I wanted to be in her philosophy class. She was just always interested in her students and their wellbeing. Kim was so funny and caring and much more than a teacher. I know she kept me afloat when school was rough and I will always be grateful to her for that.

For me, getting to know Kim in those early days just the greatest. She was so worldly, funny, loving, affectionate and so damn smart. She introduced me to a whole new world of music, an eclectic mix artists like Leonard Cohen, Tom Waits, Nina Simone, Tori Amos, the Tragically Hip, the list goes on and on. We’d watch movies together, which Kim regularly interrupted by saying “I’ve been there!” As not many movies were made in Thailand or Bali I really couldn’t compete. She loved going on road trips, whether it was for one day or several. We’d pick a town on a map, she’d put the music on, her feet on the dashboard, and off we’d go. We’d wonder through little country towns, as Kim would seek out opp shops and used book stores. And boy could she read.

After we’d been together a few years we headed back to her beloved Canada for an epic road trip. We went to many of her favourite places, and also explored new parts of the country that she had never seen before. We went to Long Beach on Vancouver Island, and Kim says this is the place where she looked out onto the Pacific Ocean and realised just how big the world is, confirming her yearning to explore it. We went to her great friend Nicki’s cottage, which sits on an island in the middle of a lake. That was heaven for me. And most special was the visit to her grandad’s farm, the first time in about 20 years for Kim. We gave them about 10 minutes notice that we were coming, turning up at the local general store and asking them if they new Uncle Allen. We spent time with Kim’s Grandad, then 98, as well a bunch of little third cousins who absolutely adored Kim. I don’t know if it was the time spent with cute little kids, or the emotional goodbye to her grandad, or maybe it was seeing me drive the combine harvester, but Talia was conceived very shortly after that visit.

I know before we had Talia Kim wondered what she’d be like as a mother, never having had a great role model to say the least. But Talia and Toby, from the moment each of you came into this world she was besotted by you. And just a total natural.

Kim’s interactions with Talia and Toby have always been completely in the moment, with absolute engagement in whatever you guys were doing. And accompanied by a simultaneous sense of wonderment. It was like Kim would step out of herself and look down and think, wow you guys are so friggin cool.

Kim made the decision very early on that she would stay at home with Tali until Tali started school, and then when Toby was born 5 years later, she immediately committed to another 5 years at home.

It was as a stay at home mum that Kim began to channel some of her connection with her grandma. She taught herself to sew (so now we each have multiple quilts to choose from), and learnt to knit from Helen who ran the local playgroup. She got into gardening, determined to give our kids the experience of eating fresh produce. And she turned herself into an extraordinary chef, cooking and baking and always on the lookout for new recipes.

And she loved involving you guys in these things, getting your hands dirty in the garden, kneading dough, and Tali she was so pleased when you took over her sewing machine when she could no longer use it.

She’d take you guys to the park, the pool, the zoo, the museum, the Studley Park boathouse to feed the ducks. And each park became known by a certain characteristic. The whizzy dizzy park, the long slide park, the pink park, the pirate park. Or she’d happily curl up with you on the couch and read books and poems or watch a movie.

She was so grateful that she got to spend that time with you guys.

Her friend Megan writes:

I had just moved to Melbourne in April 2007 and was in a playground with my 3 year old feeling a little lonely and sorry for myself when I struck up a conversation with another mum pushing her toddler on a swing. As soon as she found out I was “fresh off the boat”, as it were, she took me under her wing and suggested we meet up at another playground the next day (she would bring coffee and cake) ... and I had found my first friend in Melbourne ❤️ Kim had a smile the size of her native Canada and a heart the size of the planet. She opened her heart and home to a complete stranger for no other reason but to be kind.

The beginning of Kim’s cancer journey coincided with Toby’s first day of 4 year old kinder in February 2015. That evening, feeling fine, and not suspecting anything was wrong, Kim was simply stretching her shoulder back with her hand on her abdomen. She felt a lump and immediately suspected something was very wrong. After an excruciating couple of weeks of scans, and initial reports that it was benign, it was determined that it was a large malignant mass on her liver.

And from then it felt like all hell broke loose, and never relented for the next 3 and a half years. Kim had 3 major operations, the initial liver resection as well as 2 major hip operations 18 months ago. She spent 8 months on chemotherapy over 2 separate periods, as well as another 9 months on immunotherapy. I counted well over 50 days of radiation therapy. Interspersed with all this were numerous CT scans, Pet Scans and MRIs, each anticipated by a gut churning dread and followed by oncology appointments which were invariably bad news.

The bone pain began over 2 years ago, leading to multiple compression fractures up and down Kim’s spine, a broken neck which meant she hasn’t been able to turn her head for 18 months, fractured hips and femurs, and several other sites of the disease. For the last 8 months of her life Kim was unable to walk or even sit comfortably in a wheelchair, so she was confined entirely to our bedroom for that period.

But one area the cancer was unable to reach was Kim’s incredible spirit and determination. While Kim’s survival chances were very low right from the start, she refused accept it as a given. Every time there was a hurdle put in her way, she just took a deep breath and kept moving forward. Just before Christmas 18 months ago, the scan came back indicating that both Kim’s hips were hanging by a thread and could break at any moment. As we sat at home waiting for a phone call with admission instructions, Kim said screw this let’s go to the beach. So we turned out phones off and drove to St Kilda. With one arm over my shoulder and the other hand on her cane, we hobbled down to the water for Kim to brace herself for the next ordeal.

Last year one of the radiation oncologists said to me when Kim comes in she always seems happy and smiling, but then they look inside her and can’t believe she could present so well. I asked Kim why she always walked so briskly into her appointments when I knew she was in pain, and she said “because I don’t want them to give up on me”.

Once Kim knew her diagnosis was clearly terminal, her aim became staying as healthy as possible for a long as possible.

And despite the constant physical and emotional pain, Kim was so deeply grateful that she got stick around as long as she did.

She would read to Toby virtually every night, initially poems, but was so chuffed get to the end of the first Harry Potter book, an unexpected milestone. They then got through the remaining 6 Harry Potter books, and the entire Percy Jackson series for good measure. And Toby she was so proud to watch you discover your reading super-power.

One night earlier this year Kim was reading to Toby, but she was missing words, re-reading sentences, dozing off, and really struggling, but without realising. She said to Toby: “Am I doing ok?”. And Toby straightway said: “Yes mum, you’re doing great!”

When Kim stated very early on that she wanted to be around to watch Talia graduate from primary school, it seemed like a bit of a long shot. And she never would have envisaged how incredible you would be, not only with all your achievements, but more importantly for her was to watch you become such as confident, generous and funny young woman with a backbone of steel. So many times when she’d get yet another round of bad news, you would sit quietly with your mum and hold her hand and give her the strength to keep going. She’d apologise for putting you through this, and you’d say “that’s ok, I know it’s not your fault”.

And to lighten things up you got her this card, which always made her smile, taking pride of place on the mantel piece.

And as much as Kim needed caring for throughout this journey, she poured her heart and soul into doing everything she could to look after us into the future. She knitted us each “mummy love” blankets to wrap ourselves in when we need to feel her warmth. She planted a little orchard at the front of our house so we can have fresh fruit in the years to come. She wrote and wrote and wrote, leaving us with a 50,000 word gift. She says that “even if my arms aren’t around you, my words and advice and love will stay with you.” She prepared us each goodbye letters, already a well of strength for me.

And when she was told her cancer was clearly terminal 2 and a half years ago, when most would decide to hit their bucket list hard, Kim decided we needed a dog in the house. A happy puppy presence, something to get us out into fresh air, something to snuggle with (no offense to the cats) and a companion. Jet has more than fulfilled his part of the bargain, and I think Kim even grew to love him despite being a dedicated cat person.

Kim was completely lucid and alert and even vibrant right up until her final few days. And when she gently slipped away from it was in our bedroom, with myself and Toby asleep on the next bed interspersed with our furry creatures, and Tali asleep in the next room. Not much about this journey went the way Kim would have hoped, but she would have thought the ending was perfect.

Goodbye my love, you’ll always be in my heart.

PHOTO COLLAGE (Waterbound)

Talia Walker, 13 (daughter):

So here we are. The day that should not be happening yet. The day that shouldn’t even have occurred to us yet.

Mum should’ve had a long life; decades of time were cut short by this disease, but even so, I think mum lived more than others. Even through a hard childhood, she broke free and travelled to places most would never go, and met people most would never think of meeting. She made lifelong friends and lived through the type of stories that you might find in books. Even her stories from home were fascinating to us, as Canadian childhood is, of course, very different to ours. While we fantasized about the snow days that, though we crossed our fingers every time the temperature hit freezing, depressingly never came, she would shows us pictures and tell us more amusing stories of her time back home.

Out of the many things mum left for us, her love of reading was perhaps one of the best. Mum read to my brother and I all our lives, from when she was a sleep deprived mother from looking after a newborn who apparently stubbornly refused to sleep all through to the next child, an 8 year old who also refused to go to sleep without a chapter or two.  Even when the English language was even more confusing than it is now, it was being read to us, grammar rules that still make no sense and all.

Her love of cartoons was also passed down; we have books of everything from Calvin and Hobbes, a cartoon about a stubborn 6 year old and his tiger, to collections of Leunig at home. Since I could find no appropriate Calvin and Hobbes cartoons, I will end my speech with one of mum’s favourite Leunig poems.

'No sooner do you arrive than it’s time to leave.
How beautiful it is, how glorious, yet it’s nearly time to go.
So you take it in, you take it in.
And you take a few small souvenirs, some leaves: lavender, rosemary, eucalyptus.
A few small pebbles, a few small secrets, a look you received, nine little notes of music, and then it’s time to go.

You move towards the open door and the silent night beyond.
The few bright stars, a deep breath, and it really is time to go.
No sooner does it all begin to make sense, does it start to come true,
does it all open up, do you begin to see, does it enter into your heart…no sooner do you arrive than it’s time to leave.

Yes, it’s the truth.
And then you will have passed through it, and with mysterious consequence it will have passed through you.’

Thank you.

Toby Walker, 8 (son)

As far back as I can remember I’ve loved reading poems with Mum. I will read two poems by by Shel Silverstein who is one of our favourites.

The first is called “the Voice”.

There is a voice inside of you
That whispers all day long.
“I feel that this is right for me,
I know that this is wrong
No teacher, preacher, parent, friend,
Or wise man can decide
What’s right for you - just listen to the voice that speaks inside

This one is called “Years from now”

Although I cannot see your face
As you flip these poems awhile.
Somewhere from some far-off place
I hear you laughing and I smile.

 

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For Ben Cowen: 'The house is still too quiet, and the bed too big', Graveside Consecration, by wife Lahra Carey - 2018

February 15, 2018

11 February 2018, Melbourne, Australia

I don’t want to be here.

I had a sense that if I came, I would have to accept that this is all true- and that you are never coming back

I’ve spent the last year being brave, and strong, and good… and wondering – endlessly torturing myself with needing to know where you are…. But mostly – waiting for you to come back.

I haven’t squandered my time – I got on with things – cleaning up the mess that life became without you, and I have kept moving forward.

I stayed away from the huge hole in the middle of my life – I walked gingerly around it, careful not to look in too long or too hard lest I fall in.

At times, I let strangers into our life : hopelessness, pain, loneliness and despair. You wouldn’t like them. And managing them has taken up so much of my time, I don’t recognise myself anymore. They mostly visit in the early hours of the morning when I’m vulnerable and alone. And they are cunning.

They know how to surprise me with a familiar song, a scent of our life, a memory … I have learned to let the waves of pain roll over me – like an unexpected rip on a smooth sea. It doesn't last as long if I don’t put up a fight.

And fear came too – I never knew fear while you were nearby. Fear, it turns out is much more persistent than the others, and fear began to grow roots and permeate every aspect of my life, and those of the girls. What happened to you was so unthinkable it became reasonable to fear the plausible.

Given all of this – are you asking yourself how we are standing here today? How have we managed these 399 days and nights without you?

The answer is solely because of the friendship and love we have been handed in such abundance. From the practical, to the emotional – so many significant as well as small and unexpected gestures have been offered and delivered by our patient and thoughtful friends who haven’t waited to be asked.

Yes, your absence inspired an army to rise, and to keep the home fires burning and take care of your family whilst you are gone.

I have gotten to know your closest friends in a way I never would have if you were still here. And in a very bittersweet way, I have gotten to know you in new ways – and fallen more in love with you through the stories so many of your friends have shared with their outpouring of grief.

This whole year has been so humbling, and life changing. You would hardly recognise me today - I have had to let go of my fierce independence, and I have had to accept help. I’ve felt so overwhelmed at the incredible generosity of our friends and the community that has closed its ranks around us. I may have felt lonely, but I have never had to feel alone.

I have learned to say ‘thank you’… and then to not say it.

I have learned that some people are never used up, no matter how much, or how often I ask. I have learned that I will never be able to repay what I’ve received, but I will do all I can to carry it forward.

You wouldn’t be surprised that it was our children who gave me a reason to get up each day. You passed on to each of them your passion for life, your positivity and your sense of adventure, and this has been enormously helpful in managing the huge change in their lives.

We went to Africa – and you were there too… in the open skies and endless plains of the savannah – you were with us.

We worked hard to close the gap you left – but still to remain a connected, tight and loving family – It’s your energy and love that remains as a force-field surrounding us.

I’ve had to make so, so many decisions without you – all of them new and I’m uncertain so much of the time. But I learned so much from you- and I carry your voice in my head all the time.

I hear you mock my purchasing decisions at the supermarket, and I hear your proud praise when I’ve had a win at work. You still sit with me at the school musicals, and parent teacher nights – I even had our traditional fight at you being late – out loud – in my car. True story.

I feel you bursting with pride when you see the incredible success Shaf and Jason have made of Edison … in your memory, and with your spirit.

I see your surprise when I head out for dinner with Brett… or to coffee with Mong, and a regular chat with Horus. But I know you understand. I need these connections with your friends – they keep me close to you

The house is still too quiet, and the bed too big. I still can’t face taking your towel down from its place in the bathroom, or put away the book you were reading from your bedside table. I need these small connections to you and our intimacy.

I still say ‘we’ instead of ‘I’, and ‘our’ instead of ‘my’. If it’s ok with you, I will hang onto these small entitlements of our marriage for a little longer.

Undoubtedly, the legacy of your life was the lesson of human connectedness. Your impact on people was so deep, and so long-lasting. I’ve had emails and letters and calls from people I’ve never met- whose lives you impacted permanently many years ago. These connections were due in no small part to your philosophy of doing what you loved, nurturing the friendships you made, and using both hands to take hold of each opportunity life threw your way.  

The kids get this. And they get the credit for reintroducing terms like “looking forward to” and “excited about” into our lives. Discarding your legacy of adventure was not an option. Without you, they are a force to be reckoned with, and I feel your immense pride at how they have managed the past year – refusing to remember you with grief. They are the ones who insisted on celebrating your life this afternoon – telling the stories you would have loved to hear retold, and associating the name Ben Cowen with a smile.

I will need to apologise to them later for my sad words here today, but I have come to accept that the grief will follow me for as long as it needs to, and the kids understand.

All of us here today need to move forward and try to live the legacy of your life. Perhaps this means acknowledging the fragility of life by loving harder, cherishing friendships more deeply, doing what we love, and incorporating adventure into our lives.

The kids have had enough sadness. They have implored me to throw myself back into life – to rediscover the parts of me they recognise, and to start letting go of the pain. They want to look forward, and they don’t want their father’s death to mark the end of a happy childhood. It’s a fair ask – and one I am determined to fulfil.

Thank you all for a year of love and support – I know it’s been so hard for you too.

This morning – we are here to accept the truth. He is gone, and he’s never coming back.

But this afternoon, we will share the funny stories, the poignant memories and the happy moments.

And there’s no better way to keep the legend of Ben Cowen alive.

 

"Forever the CLAMB" in photo above is reference to the way Ben used to refer to his family- as the “CLAMB” – for Charley, Lahra, Alex, Mitch and Ben."

Cowen family pic - 2016 2.png

Lahra also delivered the eulogy at Ben's funeral. It is an unforgettable speech

"My husband had a magical cape. He would wear it with arms outstretched as he walked around, and into it he would sweep anyone in his path, bewitching them with a kind of intoxicating power that would make us believe he was heroic, invincible and capable of anything.

 

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For David Goldberg: 'Let's just kick the shit out of Option B', by Sheryl Sandberg - 2015

May 8, 2017

5 May 2015, Stanford University Memorial Auditorium, California, USA

This was written as a Facebook post by the Facebook COO, and posted on the day of her husband's funeral.

I want to thank all of our friends and family for the outpouring of love over the past few days. It has been extraordinary – and each story you have shared will help keep Dave alive in our hearts and memories.

I met Dave nearly 20 years ago when I first moved to LA. He became my best friend. He showed me the internet for the first time, planned fun outings, took me to temple for the Jewish holidays, introduced me to much cooler music than I had ever heard.

We had 11 truly joyful years of the deepest love, happiest marriage, and truest partnership that I could imagine ... He gave me the experience of being deeply understood, truly supported and completely and utterly loved – and I will carry that with me always. Most importantly, he gave me the two most amazing children in the world.

Dave was my rock. When I got upset, he stayed calm. When I was worried, he said it would be ok. When I wasn’t sure what to do, he figured it out. He was completely dedicated to his children in every way – and their strength these past few days is the best sign I could have that Dave is still here with us in spirit.

Dave and I did not get nearly enough time together. But as heartbroken as I am today, I am equally grateful. Even in these last few days of completely unexpected hell – the darkest and saddest moments of my life – I know how lucky I have been. If the day I walked down that aisle with Dave someone had told me that this would happen – that he would be taken from us all in just 11 years – I would still have walked down that aisle. Because 11 years of being Dave Goldberg’s wife, and 10 years of being a parent with him is perhaps more luck and more happiness than I could have ever imagined. I am grateful for every minute we had.

As we put the love of my life to rest today, we buried only his body. His spirit, his soul, his amazing ability to give is still with it. It lives on in the stories people are sharing of how he touched their lives, in the love that is visible in the eyes of our family and friends, in the spirit and resilience of our children. Things will never be the same – but the world is better for the years my beloved husband lived.

 

This later post from Sandberg was posted 4 June 2015

Today is the end of sheloshim for my beloved husband—the first thirty days. Judaism calls for a period of intense mourning known as shiva that lasts seven days after a loved one is buried. After shiva, most normal activities can be resumed, but it is the end of sheloshim that marks the completion of religious mourning for a spouse.

A childhood friend of mine who is now a rabbi recently told me that the most powerful one-line prayer he has ever read is: “Let me not die while I am still alive.” I would have never understood that prayer before losing Dave. Now I do.

I think when tragedy occurs, it presents a choice. You can give in to the void, the emptiness that fills your heart, your lungs, constricts your ability to think or even breathe. Or you can try to find meaning. These past thirty days, I have spent many of my moments lost in that void. And I know that many future moments will be consumed by the vast emptiness as well.

But when I can, I want to choose life and meaning.

And this is why I am writing: to mark the end of sheloshim and to give back some of what others have given to me. While the experience of grief is profoundly personal, the bravery of those who have shared their own experiences has helped pull me through. Some who opened their hearts were my closest friends. Others were total strangers who have shared wisdom and advice publicly. So I am sharing what I have learned in the hope that it helps someone else. In the hope that there can be some meaning from this tragedy.

I have lived thirty years in these thirty days. I am thirty years sadder. I feel like I am thirty years wiser.

I have gained a more profound understanding of what it is to be a mother, both through the depth of the agony I feel when my children scream and cry and from the connection my mother has to my pain. She has tried to fill the empty space in my bed, holding me each night until I cry myself to sleep. She has fought to hold back her own tears to make room for mine. She has explained to me that the anguish I am feeling is both my own and my children’s, and I understood that she was right as I saw the pain in her own eyes.

I have learned that I never really knew what to say to others in need. I think I got this all wrong before; I tried to assure people that it would be okay, thinking that hope was the most comforting thing I could offer. A friend of mine with late-stage cancer told me that the worst thing people could say to him was “It is going to be okay.” That voice in his head would scream, How do you know it is going to be okay? Do you not understand that I might die? I learned this past month what he was trying to teach me. Real empathy is sometimes not insisting that it will be okay but acknowledging that it is not. When people say to me, “You and your children will find happiness again,” my heart tells me, Yes, I believe that, but I know I will never feel pure joy again. Those who have said, “You will find a new normal, but it will never be as good” comfort me more because they know and speak the truth. Even a simple “How are you?”—almost always asked with the best of intentions—is better replaced with “How are you today?” When I am asked “How are you?” I stop myself from shouting, My husband died a month ago, how do you think I am? When I hear “How are you today?” I realize the person knows that the best I can do right now is to get through each day.

I have learned some practical stuff that matters. Although we now know that Dave died immediately, I didn’t know that in the ambulance. The trip to the hospital was unbearably slow. I still hate every car that did not move to the side, every person who cared more about arriving at their destination a few minutes earlier than making room for us to pass. I have noticed this while driving in many countries and cities. Let’s all move out of the way. Someone’s parent or partner or child might depend on it.

I have learned how ephemeral everything can feel—and maybe everything is. That whatever rug you are standing on can be pulled right out from under you with absolutely no warning. In the last thirty days, I have heard from too many women who lost a spouse and then had multiple rugs pulled out from under them. Some lack support networks and struggle alone as they face emotional distress and financial insecurity. It seems so wrong to me that we abandon these women and their families when they are in greatest need.

I have learned to ask for help—and I have learned how much help I need. Until now, I have been the older sister, the COO, the doer and the planner. I did not plan this, and when it happened, I was not capable of doing much of anything. Those closest to me took over. They planned. They arranged. They told me where to sit and reminded me to eat. They are still doing so much to support me and my children.

I have learned that resilience can be learned. Adam M. Grant taught me that three things are critical to resilience and that I can work on all three. Personalization—realizing it is not my fault. He told me to ban the word “sorry.” To tell myself over and over, This is not my fault. Permanence—remembering that I won’t feel like this forever. This will get better. Pervasiveness—this does not have to affect every area of my life; the ability to compartmentalize is healthy.

For me, starting the transition back to work has been a savior, a chance to feel useful and connected. But I quickly discovered that even those connections had changed. Many of my co-workers had a look of fear in their eyes as I approached. I knew why—they wanted to help but weren’t sure how. Should I mention it? Should I not mention it? If I mention it, what the hell do I say? I realized that to restore that closeness with my colleagues that has always been so important to me, I needed to let them in. And that meant being more open and vulnerable than I ever wanted to be. I told those I work with most closely that they could ask me their honest questions and I would answer. I also said it was okay for them to talk about how they felt. One colleague admitted she’d been driving by my house frequently, not sure if she should come in. Another said he was paralyzed when I was around, worried he might say the wrong thing. Speaking openly replaced the fear of doing and saying the wrong thing. One of my favorite cartoons of all time has an elephant in a room answering the phone, saying, “It’s the elephant.” Once I addressed the elephant, we were able to kick him out of the room.

At the same time, there are moments when I can’t let people in. I went to Portfolio Night at school where kids show their parents around the classroom to look at their work hung on the walls. So many of the parents—all of whom have been so kind—tried to make eye contact or say something they thought would be comforting. I looked down the entire time so no one could catch my eye for fear of breaking down. I hope they understood.

I have learned gratitude. Real gratitude for the things I took for granted before—like life. As heartbroken as I am, I look at my children each day and rejoice that they are alive. I appreciate every smile, every hug. I no longer take each day for granted. When a friend told me that he hates birthdays and so he was not celebrating his, I looked at him and said through tears, “Celebrate your birthday, goddammit. You are lucky to have each one.” My next birthday will be depressing as hell, but I am determined to celebrate it in my heart more than I have ever celebrated a birthday before.

I am truly grateful to the many who have offered their sympathy. A colleague told me that his wife, whom I have never met, decided to show her support by going back to school to get her degree—something she had been putting off for years. Yes! When the circumstances allow, I believe as much as ever in leaning in. And so many men—from those I know well to those I will likely never know—are honoring Dave’s life by spending more time with their families.

I can’t even express the gratitude I feel to my family and friends who have done so much and reassured me that they will continue to be there. In the brutal moments when I am overtaken by the void, when the months and years stretch out in front of me endless and empty, only their faces pull me out of the isolation and fear. My appreciation for them knows no bounds.

I was talking to one of these friends about a father-child activity that Dave is not here to do. We came up with a plan to fill in for Dave. I cried to him, “But I want Dave. I want option A.” He put his arm around me and said, “Option A is not available. So let’s just kick the shit out of option B.”

Dave, to honor your memory and raise your children as they deserve to be raised, I promise to do all I can to kick the shit out of option B. And even though sheloshim has ended, I still mourn for option A. I will always mourn for option A. As Bono sang, “There is no end to grief . . . and there is no end to love.” I love you, Dave.

Source: https://www.facebook.com/search/top/?q=she...

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For Ben Cowen: 'My husband had a magical cape', by Lahra Carey - 2016

January 20, 2017

11 January 2017, Temple Beth Israel,  Melbourne, Australia

My husband had a magical cape.

He would wear it with arms outstretched as he walked around, and into it he would sweep anyone in his path – bewitching them with a kind of intoxicating power that would make us believe he was heroic, invincible and capable of anything.

We were bedazzled, and anything seemed possible.

My closest friends know that living with a larger-than-life wizard could be irritating. There was never a life lesson because the plane would always wait, the phone would always be returned, the keys would always be found and we would always forgive him.

I called it “the magic of Ben”, and went along for the ride.

I got used to him inviting random strangers he met in a queue to come for dinner… finding out the life story of his taxi drivers… I became close friends with his ex-girlfriends, and agreed to take the kids to places barely back on DFAT's list.

Some of you here made friends with people you didn’t previously know over one of his campfires. Others got horribly drunk (or worse) under his influence. You hiked with him, travelled with him, flew with him and spent time at his favourite place in the world – Timbara with him – and all the while you felt the magic. And you felt good about yourself.

You listened to his jokes – probably more than once. You learned to recite slabs of Monty Python, the Godfather, or Fawlty Towers. If you ever watched a movie with him that involved an actor from another country, you had to speak in that accent for the rest of the night.

We all knew him because he let everyone in.

I could go on and on – and over the coming weeks, months and years I will. Because we all want to tell our stories of Ben, and nobody wants that light to be put out.

So that brings me to the real reason i have chosen to speak today.

You have all reached out to me in sympathy… in shock, in confusion, in denial and grief and loss and pain. We all stand here together bound by this bottomless pit of hopelessness, and you all keep saying “let me know what I can do”.

So i will tell you. I am recruiting you all into Ben’s army.

And here are your instructions –

I need you to collect up all of your Ben Cowen stories. I need you to write them down so that when we’ve healed a bit we can meet to share them with each other – and our children.

I need Mitch to be supported for the rest of his years into adulthood by you strong male role models. And it will take a squadron of you to fill his father’s schedule of bike riding, kicking the footy, cricket on boxing day, footy on Anzac day – and any Carlton match. We also need volunteers for Sunday footy goal umpiring, continuing his musical education – only rockers need apply… and FIFA, cooking, camping, how to shave and a list of other activities these two best buddies shared.

But if all that activity isn’t your speed, you can volunteer for the Alex brigade. For her you need to be a good listener – willing to address complaints about her mother with kindness and love, a constant stream of compliments at the ready about her appearance and her brains, and a love of discussion on any topic from politics to ethics. Ben was also passing onto Alex his love and knowledge of photography. You will be challenged and exhausted – but please know that it will be worth the effort if you are adored even a tiny bit as much as Alex loves her father.

Or you could sign up to Charley’s platoon – but only apply if you are gentle and kind – because that is what Charley is used to from her father. You need to have a great imagination because this job requires taking over Ben’s duties relating to naming each of Charley’s 100-plus plush toys, and making up animated stories using said toys (which you must call friends) – and helping Charley take care of her new puppy Billie who will join our family on Saturday.

And for me? I need you include me in your adventures. I need your help unravelling the complicated financial structure that Ben executed so seamlessly behind the scenes. I need you to help me plan for the future of my children – and for myself to make sure I execute Ben’s legacy of ensuring i am never a burden on them. I need date night once a week and that’s where I need to hear how fabulous our children are.

I need you to encourage all of my dreams… tell me I'm the most beautiful woman in the world – and mean it. And above all – remind me constantly that everything will be ok.

Baby – i know you would have loved all of this drama. And I hope you can see the enormous impact you have had on the lives of all of those you loved, worked with, became friends with and collected up under your magical cape.

I cannot imagine how on earth we go on without your powerful life force. But even in the midst of this terrible pain i know that if i had my time again, I would do it all again exactly the same way with you.


Lahra Carey is a guest on episode 51 of the podcast.


Ben Cowen tombstone.jpg

 

 

A year after this amazing eulogy, Lahra spoke again at the graveside consecration of Ben's headstone.. "

"I don’t want to be here.

I had a sense that if I came, I would have to accept that this is all true- and that you are never coming back ..."

 

 

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For Elizabeth Joan Buddle (Betty): 'I am in awe of the way Betty conducted her life', by husband Roger Buddle - 2016

August 8, 2016

6 June 2016, Mount Barker, South Australia

Betty was born Elizabeth Joan Collins on December 1st, 1942 at the Queen Victoria Maternity Hospital, Rose Park, South Australia.  Her parents were Gilbert Roland Collins and Elsie Vera Collins who lived at 68 First Avenue, Nailsworth. Betty was the youngest of seven children and her six siblings were Mervyn, Beryl, Alan, Hazel, Marjorie and Kevin.

She entered the world feet first by breech birth and, given the state of the world in December 1942, maybe she was reluctant to join it – or maybe she wanted to hit the ground running, which was the way she mostly led the next 73 years of her life.

Almost from the very start she was known as Betty and that name stuck, although in later life she much preferred her full name of Elizabeth on formal occasions. Betty’s mother was a chronic invalid and a large amount of her early upbringing was by her two closest sisters, Hazel and Marjorie.

Betty attended Nailsworth Primary School from 1947 to 1954 and Adelaide Girls High School from 1955 to 1958, when she matriculated with her Leaving Certificate. After leaving school she worked as a Drafting Assistant at the SA Lands Titles Office.

I started work as a Technician-in-Training with the then Post Master General’s Department in 1957. There I met another trainee, Kevin Collins – Betty’s brother. Sometimes I would visit Kevin at home when we were studying for exams and that is how I met Betty. At that time she was still at Adelaide High and she told me years later that if she saw my car parked in front of her house as she was coming up the street on her way home from school, she would run all the way home in case I left before she got there. That accounted for her always being breathless and bright-eyed as she hung around annoying Kevin and me while we tried to study. A couple of years later I plucked up the courage to ask her out and we started courting.

One thing led to another and on August 6th, 1960 we were married at the Broadview Methodist Church. Our honeymoon was spent at Encounter Bay.

At first we lived with Betty’s sister and brother-in-law, Hazel and Ian Lovett, at Enfield and then we rented a house at Evandale while our new home was being built at 4 Farm Drive, Redwood Park. Meanwhile Catherine had been born. We moved into our new home in January 1962. Things were very tough financially and, having sold our car to raise the deposit on the house, our transport was a motorbike and then we upgraded to a motorbike and sidecar.

In those days Redwood Park was on the outer fringes of the metropolitan area with very few services or shops. Betty used to trek the six kilometres return trip to the Tea Tree Gully post office, pushing the pram, to get the monthly child endowment allowance.

Our second child, Noelene, was born in January 1964 and then Steven in September 1966. The children attended the Kathleen Mellor kindergarten in Tea Tree Gully and Betty was involved in managing the kindergarten op shop. She was also active in the Ridgehaven Primary School parent’s activities while the children were there.

In 1969 I came home from work one day to the news that Betty had seen an advertisement in the paper for a canteen assistant at the Blacks Road drive-in at Gilles Plains and she had applied for and got the job. Getting to the interview for the job had involved catching the bus into Adelaide, joining a large queue of job applicants and dragging the pusher, with Steven in it, up a flight of stairs to the office. She worked at the drive-in from 1969 to 1971 and became expert in making hamburgers, nut sundaes and banana splits.

It wasn’t long before she saw another ad for interviewers for a sport and recreation survey for the proposed Monarto satellite city. She got that job, undertook the training and completed the survey work. That led to her being employed part time as a population survey interviewer with the Bureau of Census and Statistics. She worked in that position from 1973 to 1976.

Those jobs involved interviewing randomly chosen people in their homes to gather statistics on unemployment and other domestic matters. She soon realised that she had a natural ability to listen and relate to people as they opened up to her about things that had nothing whatsoever to do with the questions in the survey.

Anyone who has had a conversation with Betty will know what I mean.

So she undertook an aptitude test with a career advisor and was told that she was suited to being either a teacher or a social worker. Luckily she chose social worker and it wasn’t long before she saw yet another ad in the paper for a cadetship with the Department for Community Welfare to study full time for the Associate Diploma of Social Work at the South Australian Institute of Technology, which is now the University of South Australia. She commenced her study in 1976 and gained her Diploma at the end of 1977.

She then worked as a Community Welfare Worker at the Elizabeth office of the Department for Community Welfare, which she described as a baptism by fire. She worked there for three and a half years from 1978 to 1981 and during that time she discovered she had a talent for helping young girls and women who were victims of abuse, both physical and sexual.

This led to her applying for the position of Social Worker at the newly formed Sexual Assault Referral Centre at The Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Woodville. This was an initiative of Dr Aileen Connon and the centre initially had a staff of three – a doctor, a nurse and a social worker and liaison with the police sexual assault unit.

At first the Centre was located in the old child care building at the hospital, then later it moved to a floor in the nurses quarters and gained additional professional and support staff.

While working there Betty studied part time for her Bachelor of Social Work at the University of South Australia and graduated with her degree in 1988. She also undertook post graduate study, and in 1994 gained her Graduate Diploma of Education, Adult Training.

This all sounds very clinical when presented in a chronological fashion like this, but we need to realise that all this was achieved while Betty was holding a husband and three children together as a loving family. Driving through traffic from Redwood Park to Woodville every day, then listening to absolutely horrible and ghastly things that had happened to her clients and then driving home to cook dinner and nurture her family in the evening (which included helping with homework). In 1975 she even did it on her own while I was working in Sydney for three months.

As she gained experience in her profession she developed a model for helping victims of sexual assault through their trauma and pain. She wrote a paper on her method and called it Simple Things that Work.

In 1986 she was invited to present her paper to The First International Symposium on Rape in Jerusalem and she travelled there alone to speak at the symposium. It was the first time she had gone overseas.

Then, in 1987, she travelled to San Francisco to present her work to a conference on trauma recovery.

In 1989 her work was published in the International Journal of Medicine and Law.

After fifteen years of working in this field, listening to things every working day that nobody should have to hear, her body was starting to break down. Her health was suffering both physically and psychologically and she needed to get out. Finally she was granted retirement on grounds of ill health and she was able to start to regain her health and equilibrium.

On retirement Betty enjoyed her gardening, travel, our grandchildren - and then croquet took over. She became treasurer of the Victor Harbor Croquet Club and was responsible for gaining many thousands of dollars in grants for equipment and facility upgrades.

I am in awe of the way Betty conducted her life. She was constantly optimistic and cheerful. She could always find good in people, but by the same token she would not suffer fools lightly. She was the glue of our marriage and she tolerated my many faults and shortcomings with loving understanding. She loved our three children without reservation and absolutely adored our five grandchildren.

After she became ill with cancer she spent a lot of the last eighteen months educating me in subtle and not so subtle ways on how to survive when she was gone. She taught me to cook (well, she tried), she labelled everything, she made me recite where things are kept, she made lists and generally handed me the reins.

Betty was a unique and wonderful person. Her infectious laugh, her sparkling eyes. She was an amazing wife, companion, friend, mother and grandmother.

Coupled with this is the legacy that she has left of all the lives she has touched, and in some cases saved, of both women and men, through her work in sexual assault counselling. Going through her papers I came across many letters and cards from people who she helped regain control of their lives. A quote from just one:-

I wanted to tell you about all the good things that have come from our sessions together but I find that I am a bit lost for words when I try to thank you. To have met you has been a privilege. You are an amazing person! To think back to some of the things that you said makes me feel in awe of you… you have incredible depth and sensitivity. You are courageous: able to look Hell in the face and to venture into places that may not be safe.  

Lastly, Betty made me promise that when I wrote this I would leave you laughing so here goes…

Some time ago, before she became ill, Betty went to the chemist to get a prescription filled for my anti-reflux tablets. Unknowingly she had picked up my prescription for Viagra instead.

When she returned to the chemist later to pick up the prescription the assistant handed her the box of pills and said “That will be seventy six dollars.”

Betty said “What!, they’re not usually that dear!”

The assistant said “No, that’s the correct price.”

Betty, waving the box of Viagra above her head for all the other customers to see said “Oh well, I don’t care how much they cost as long as they do the job!”.

I loved her so much.

This is an excerpt from a poem by Leonard Cohen

A Thousand Kisses Deep

I’m good at love, I’m good at hate
It’s in between I freeze
Been working out but its too late
(Its been too late for years)
But you look good, you really do
They love you on the street
If you were here I’d kneel for you
A thousand kisses deep
The autumn moved across your skin
Got something in my eye
A light that doesn’t need to live
And doesn’t need to die
A riddle in the book of love
Obscure and obsolete
And witnessed here in time and blood
A thousand kisses deep

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for Michelle McNamara: 'She hasn’t left a void. She’s left a blast crater', by Patton Oswalt - 2016

May 5, 2016

published 3 May 2016, Time magazine, California, USA

Michelle McNamara was a true crime author and blogger, and her husband Patton Oswalt is comedian and movie actor. published Time website. There is no available video or audio of this eulogy.

Michelle Eileen McNamara entered the world on April 14, 1970.

On April 14, 2016 she turned 46.

One week later she was gone.

That’s the kind of opening Michelle would have written. She’d have done it better. Added one perfect adjective or geographical shading to pull you in. The pulling in of you, the reader, was never aggressive, calculating or desperate. She didn’t have to raise her voice.

She was a true crime writer—first on her blog, TrueCrimeDiary.com. More than 150 precise, haunting entries about subjects like “The Man With the Hammer,” “Devil in Michigan,” “The Ice Maiden and the Genius,” “Syko Sam” and “The Desert Bunker Murders.” There were also thoughtful, provocative ruminations on abiding crime topics—“The Big Fake Called The Fugue State,” “Crowdsleuthing” and “DNA (hooray).” There was also a fascinating entry called “#bloodbath,” a speculative masterpiece about how the Manson murders might have been different—or not happened at all—if our current social media infrastructure had existed in 1969.

This drew the attention of Los Angeles Magazine, who hired Michelle to write an article about “The Golden State Killer” (a name she coined)—the worst unsolved string of homicides in California history.

The article drew the attention of Harper Collins, who hired her to write a massive book about The Golden State Killer. This was the project she was 2½ years into when her story stopped, sometime on the morning of April 21.

Those are facts but not her entire story. Her life also involved social work in Belfast and Oakland, and screenwriting in Los Angeles, and teaching creative writing at Minnesota State, and motherhood and marriage and glorious, lost years on the outskirts of the early 90s Chicago music scene, where she also worked for a young Michelle Obama. One day Michelle Obama’s husband came into the office to speak to the staff. He was impressive and funny. Another encounter, another memory in a life spent fascinated with people and relationships and the unknown.

The reaction to her passing, the people who are shocked at her senseless absence, is a testament to how she steered her life with joyous, wicked curiosity. Cops and comedians call—speechless or sending curt regards. Her family is devastated but can’t help remember all of the times she made them laugh or comforted them, and they smile and laugh themselves. She hasn’t left a void. She’s left a blast crater.

I loved her. This is the first time I’ve been able to use “I” writing this. Probably because there hasn’t been much of an “I” since the morning of April 21. There probably won’t be for a while. Whatever there is belongs to my daughter—to our daughter. Alice.

Five days after Michelle was gone, Alice and I were half-awake at dawn, after a night of half-sleeping. Alice sat up in bed. Her face was silhouetted in the dawn light of the bedroom windows. I couldn’t see her expression. I just heard her voice: “When your mom dies you’re the best memory of her. Everything you do and say is a memory of her.”

That’s the kind of person Michelle created and helped shape.

That was Michelle. That is Michelle.

I love her.

Source: http://time.com/4316653/patton-oswalt-reme...

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For Carey Leech: 'Words are inadequate, but they are all I have' - by husband Greg Leech, 2008

August 28, 2015

5 September, 2008, Mt Eliza, Victoria, Australia

First of all, please let me say that we have done Carey proud with such an incredible turnout to see her off in style. It comes as no surprise, but I know one thing for certain. She’d sit back, survey the scene and feel really loved. Thanks again.

The fact that Carey was such a perfectly balanced character was no accident. Carey had a simply wonderful upbringing from a loving family. She loved to spend time with her father, Roy, whenever she could, enjoyed a very special and close relationship with her lovely mother Lois and took great pride in the love she had for sister Louise and brother Nigel, both of whom equally loved to have their doting little sister around. Her delight in having a close family never wavered and the lessons learned in that warm and secure environment supplied her with the blueprint she took into her own marriage and motherhood. It was totally based on love and security and she learnt that early in life.

Fast forward to 1984. When I first lay eyes on Carey. She was 18 years old and an apprentice at a printing company at which we both worked. Apart from being, as we all know, absolutely striking to look at, her manner, her seemingly effortless elegance struck me the minute I saw her. And life was never going to be the same. I knew it right then, but it took me a while to convince her of the same thing. In fact two years of pretty determined pursuit! It’s history now that she relented and decided that, for some strange reason, I was worth investigation. She had discovered beer right about that time and I can’t help but feel there could be some correlation between the two occurrences!

Carey took it all in her stride. This was a path she was choosing and she was to embrace that choice, through thick and thin. I like to think she is still embracing it, in that ageless, classy way. Because Carey had the most wonderful virtue of being unburdened by ego. She simply never saw it necessary to inform those around her of her undoubted abilities. I’m sure most present will recognise how, when speaking with Kez, she would sincerely want to know what was happening in your life, only touching on her own trials or triumphs as a matter of course in the conversation. Even then, she would understate her own achievements, not because she had to, but it was her natural way. And she had achievements. Many, many achievements. In fact, it was failure that was the stranger to Carey. It was this care for others that set Carey apart from most. That genuine way of hers, the really wanting to know, to listen. To really listen. She made every person she called ‘friend’ feel special. She made me feel special. Every day. She still makes me feel special.

Back to the story… We became inseparable. We became known for our ability to fully enjoy a party, but it was Carey that was the principal in that. When other mates were getting a tug on the sleeve from their partners at around 1am to hit the road, more than once it was whispered in my ear as they made their reluctant way from a venue, ‘I wish I had a chick like yours’. ‘Keep wishin’ pal’, I’d think to myself as Kez would race from the dance floor, grab me around the shirt collar and rush me back so we could bust a few of our trademark messy moves to Soft Cell’s Tainted Love or some such ‘big-haired ‘80s classic. All the while those gleaming white teeth shining from that so freely-given smile. So we moved through life, married, ate bacon and eggs and read the papers on a Sunday, worked hard, played hard.

And then Spencer arrived… Home-Brand anyone? Carey was a natural mother. We had no idea that was going to be the case, but, once again, failure never turned down Carey Street. This was just another example of her wonderful attribute of celebrating what life brought her. She took to it with the same enthusiasm she approached everything. Angus was on the scene by this time too, and her clear blue eyes were given yet another reason to sparkle. And the next phase of Carey’s wonderful life hove into view. Carey loves her children. In fact, who doesn’t? They became her focus. She happily gave up a career that she’d built on ability and ethic, made her life around our little family, became involved with all their activities and loved every second of it.

It was about this time that it became obvious that our little house in Burwood would split its seams with the addition of Gus. Enter Mount Eliza. Moving to Mount Eliza saw Carey blossom even further. It was within days of our shifting in that she had friends in the area. Most have gone on to become lifelong mates, people that stick true. Because they are the types of people that Carey attracted. It was no fluke that the friends we have made since our move down here in 1999 are so wonderful. People always have wanted to be near Carey and that is why her being gone is so difficult for all of us. There is simply no replacement for her. We are just going to have to keep her spirit alive. We will one day remember her and do it without a tinge of sadness. We will smile like she did. Like she wants us to. That day will come. It’s just not today… or tomorrow.

It was not long after this, in 2001 that Carey was diagnosed with cancer. It shook the foundations of Team Leech, but it was Carey that first arrived at the pragmatic approach she took all the way through her illness. She was to have a double mastectomy, reconstructive surgery and she would push on. She did just that. In fact, she never allowed cancer to define her. Yes, she had it, but her life was filled with quality was her approach. Bravery. It’s a word that is used flippantly, but I have seen bravery that has no words. But she would never tell you about it. It was part of her day, but not once was there a complaint. It was simply inspirational. As I said, words are inadequate, but they are all I have. Carey overcame the disease that first time. She was active beyond belief, played sport, taught swimming to kids that flourished under her understanding tutelage, her life was on track. She attended all the children’s events, organised a goodly amount of them, ate, drank and danced. Her life was good again, and she considered that her cancer was behind her.

Until that day in August of 2005. It was back and it was back in a bad way. What was Carey’s approach? ‘I’ll have treatment and we’ll push on’. Still, she stood in its way and dared it. Still, she remained unfrightened. If courage was enough, well cancer never stood a chance. But cancer is not like that. It’s a sneaky coward that finds other ways. We know how she attended chemotherapy once a week for two and a half years, how she became loved by the patients and nurses there, how she made even that daunting grind a way to bring happiness. It took her slowly, but she kept on. We finally arrived at a point where it was obvious it was going to take her life. With bravery, she informed the boys. Then she set about making everything in the house understandable and easier for us, should she leave. It became her number one priority. Spencer, Angus and myself. Not herself. Us.

In February of this year, she was given weeks to live. As we know, it took until August 30 to claim her. And she passed with the same dignity and truth with which she had led her life. I’ve never felt prouder than I did holding her hand as she was released. And it was beautiful. Even through the period leading up to all but her final days, she laughed, she even danced. Her intellect and humour still defined her. The sparkle had dimmed, but it was still there in those beautiful eyes. Spencer and Angus bravely coped and loved her all the more. They are very special little boys and why wouldn’t they be, having had the privilege of being able to claim this wonderful person as their mother. Carey knows how much they love her and miss her, but she also knows that the agony will pass for the boys, she has delivered them of such emotional and intellectual sophistication. Another of her wonderful, wonderful gifts.

At home, we have a picture of Kez. It’s 1988, she is aboard a galloping horse in Egypt, her long natural blonde hair streaming and cascading behind her, with the pyramids outside Cairo supplying a dramatic backdrop. It’s just a photo of her as a 21 year old girl, in an album at our house, but, this is but one of the images of Carey that define the happiness and unaffected lust for life and all its experiences that she lived every day of her packed life. I will always see that shot in my mind, and feel the freedom she experienced at that moment. I like to believe that she feels just such freedom today and will forever more. I love you Carey. Like you loved me. Ride on my beautiful darling. Until we meet again. Greg.

 

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Don Mackay, with Therese (behind), Ali (left) and Melissa (right) - Boxing Day 2006

Don Mackay, with Therese (behind), Ali (left) and Melissa (right) - Boxing Day 2006

For Don Mackay: by Therese, Ian, Melissa & Ali

August 18, 2015

21 May, 2007

DONALD WILLIAM MACKAY - 4TH JULY 1950 - 17TH MAY 2007

Poem written by wife, Therese Mackay,  read at the funeral by the celebrant.

The Man and Me

Sleeping at night my palm opened flat on his chest,
Warmth feeding warmth, I know we are blessed.
No matter the day’s misunderstandings and blues;
No matter points made and lost;
No matter who thinks who’s the boss;
Sleeping always next to him is the life I would choose.

Re arranging pillows, blankets and such;
Both easy to fire off, yet both easy to touch.
Each unwilling to give way, equal to the end.
The Celt in us both, a marvellous brew,
Stirred and stirring, a wondrous stew.
Sleeping hand to chest our rousing battles mend.

Ah! And give me that fire, pure and unpolished,
And give me the spirit, no argument undemolished,
And give me the wickedness and its play,
Give me the empathy and knowing
Give me the common sense for our growing.
And let us wake hand to chest at the start of the day.

How dear to me is the man who breathes beside me at night?
How dear is the spirit, which gives his eyes their light?
How dear to me is the world we share?
There is no measure I can explain
But that his pain gives me also pain
And that our love is sometimes more than we can bear.

For me he stands, young, fair and clear-eyed as in youth.
For me, the things he feels I know, they are truth.
And I will hold these truths like rare and precious treasure,
For in a shifting sea of easy useless lies
The values of such truths are cherished ties
To the love which lives within the heart which is without measure.

So let me lie for hours, my hand upon his chest,
Thinking on the treasures with which we are blessed.
Such as our children treading out into the world to be,
Carrying the dreams of all our life;
Treasures as sacred as the man and wife
And as sacred as the love which binds the man to me.

With Love Therese

Ian Mackay's part (brother)

The dash between 1950 and 2007 is the period Don was with us. It is the most important dash that we know. It fulfils his life and the love that we know both from Don and to him.

My portion of Dons life is mainly from birth till his early twenties.

Born on 4th July 1950 the fourth child of Rod & Kath Mackay in the western town of Moree. His family consisted of firstly Jeanette… (Tet) Judith… (Jude) and myself, Ian. … Not counting the main proponents of the family Dad (Rod) & Mum (Kath).

My sisters used to dote on me until this kid called “Don” arrived, it changed after that and he became the dotee. That didn’t matter all that much as they couldn’t play marbles and didn’t go much on catching frogs.

Not much to do in Moree

One evening at dinner not long after his first birthday Don said to us and all, “We should go to the Snowy and build the Eucumbene Dam as they need people like us”. He was a very advanced child. As a group of half a dozen we set off to build a dam. Turns out it was a bit bigger than the six of us could handle, so we called in a few more people (1000 actually) it took about six years to complete. Those six years probably formed Don into the person he became in later years.

The things that we got up to as kids would have sent you to a home of some sort or other. It included, the four of us setting out for a bike ride of a lifetime, ending up in a pigsty at the original dam site, with a raging fire that could have burnt an average National park. Someone volunteered me to get Mum and Dad (Tet I’m sure) in a raging stormy freezing cold on a 10 mile ride in the dark, with the cavalry Mum & Dad the three eldest – me included were chastised severely. “What were you thinking taking this young baby out in this weather”. As quick as Tet said “Mum at least he is warm and dry and he is not a baby he is four years old. It ended well. The kids could do no wrong.

The Shooting

Don & I were shooting tadpoles and frogs in a creek near home. I had just shot a frog and Don said give me a shot: I gave him the slug gun and he said to me “see how you like it” and promptly shot me in the foot. That was the start of his GREENY ATTITUDE. Not content with the foot shooting when we got home he reloaded the slug gun and chased me around the house.

Fishing

A mate and myself were going fishing and knocked off a bunch of carrots from the headmaster's place to eat while fishing next thing Don and his mate Ian ‘Ackenzie’, his real name was Mackenzie but Don couldn’t get his tongue around that, caught us and dobbed us into the headmaster- Mr Faulkner. Don got extra points for that. The mate and I panicked when called to his office, but being a great teacher he didn’t go crook instead gave us a lesson on tying fishhooks.

The remainder of our stay in the Adaminaby Dam site was filled with family love and love of family a really great place to grow up as a child.

Dam completed, Don called us together again and said that the people were having troubles with a dam at Tan Tanungra and felt that we should help a fairly uneventful part of our lives Don schooled at New Adaminaby. Tet worked with Dad and Jude helped mum at the local shop.

Don again gathered us after our Sunday roast and weekly caster oil and said, “there are problems with a power site at the Lake Macquarie we should go and help”

Swansea this joint had it all
TV - never seen that
Beaches - been on holiday
Lakes - made them
Fishing - caught millions and masses of adventures that four kids from the Snowy had never seen.

Don became a super star at Soccer in the under 14s and we both completed schooling there. From there the family fragmented.

Tet married Jack Holmes and had a son Phillip all died in a car accident 1969.
Jude married Buddy who died in a car accident in 1965.
I married Monika and had a son Terry and daughter Jenny.
Jude remarried, Kevin and had a son Rodney and daughter Joanne.

Don said they were calling from Port Headland in WA. The family fragmented further, as mum and dad with Don in tow headed there to sort out the problems the Port mob encountered.

The problem solved and plans to return to Swansea were completed. However Dad encountered cancer and lost the battle in the Sir Charles Gardiner Hospital in Perth on 31 Jan 1966.

Don and mum returned to the eastern states, I got leave from Vietnam to see Dad before he passed but unfortunately due to slow transport missed seeing him before passing. My leave was far to short and I returned to Vietnam whilst Mum and Don went to Maroon country in Brisbane where the tied up with Jude.

With Brisbane a temporary base Don now 17 headed to Blackwater mines 4-500 kilometres west of Rocky. This part of his life was born “The wild child” bought new cars and demolished them at a rapid rate.

Mum returned to Cardiff and Don soon followed and sort of lost the Wild Child a bit when he met

Therese and had two daughters
Melissa in 1974
Alison in 1977.

The remainder of his story is related by Therese through Garry our celebrant.

To have known Don as a brother was a privilege and to have loved and be loved by him irreplaceable.

DON REST IN PEACE, WE ALL LOVE YOU.

Therese Mackay's part (wife)

Don and Therese met in Newcastle in 1972 and joined forces about three weeks after that meeting. Don was then working as a Fitter for Hodge Industrial installing underground petrol tanks and bowsers all across NSW.

In 1974 Melissa was born to them and Don’s boss offered them the use of a large caravan to use so that Don would not want to come home each weekend to be with his family and could spend months moving around NSW working.

This was a wonderful 18 months and there were few areas they did not get to spend time. Blayney in winter in an uninsulated caravan was an experience. Opening the van door at the tick gates and seeing their red kelpie, called Red, slithering around in the beetroot which had fallen out of the fridge, because someone had forgotten to put the pin in the fridge door was another.

Port Macquarie was one of the towns they visited and Don was offered work from Gordon Hunt should he ever move here.

In late ’76 they moved to Port Macquarie.

Alison was born in 1977 and the family was complete.

They lived in a small house just past Sea Acres near Johnson’s Fruit shop, which cost $12 a week. Here they were home. Chooks, ducks, a dog – Boris, cats – (Don was never too keen on these creatures) and Lucky - Don’s horse, two happy little girls and little money made this a happy home for Don and Therese

He worked on building sites and drove a backhoe and truck and was able to turn his hand to most things he tried.

In 1982 Don was badly injured while working in the canals behind Settlement City.

He became a quadriplegic and spent a seven-month stay at Royal North Shore Hospital (Sydney). Therese, Melissa and Alison moved for that period living near the hospital, with Therese’s eldest sister Veronica. All returned to Port Macquarie when Don was well enough

After a settling period, Don along with his wife Therese became involved in issues in which he believed in passionately. He lobbied Council in the ‘80’s for better wheelchair access and struck a deal with them that he would go halves in the cost of construction of wheelchair access on major access points around the CBD.

In the early ‘90’s he manned the RSPCA phone and was passionate about his commitment to this. Although it’s a well known fact Don was not a great cat lover, he abhorred cruelty of any sort and would too often be upset by the callousness of human beings to their pets and livestock.

His mother died in 1997. He not only looked out for his mother’s needs but also Therese’s mother and was always quick to see when others were had difficulties. He had a great compassion for others who were suffering illness or other.

When his sister Judy was dying in Queensland in 1998 he and Therese spent the last three months with her only leaving a few days before she passed away. This was a special time and he spent many days just quietly sitting by his sister’s bedside talking and laughing about family.

He believed ardently in the right of the individual to freedom of choice on issues regarding Fluoridation, and other and it is well known he did not suffer fools gladly. He was very active in the fight against the privatisation of Port Macquarie Hospital and he worked for years tirelessly to have the hospital returned to public hands.

Unfortunately he was stuck in bed on the day the Hospital Action Group had its celebration outside the hospital grounds once again when the hospital was finally handed back to the people of NSW in 2004, but he spent that morning harassing the local media, as was his wont, into speaking with the Hospital Action Group who were there from the beginning of the fight in early 1992.

He became actively involved in One Nation, and along with Marge Rowsell from Taree organised the original meeting in the Civic Centre when Pauline came to Port Macquarie and filled the Civic Centre to overflowing on a Tuesday morning. When Pauline moved away from One Nation so did Don. He was outraged by her jailing and worked as hard as he could writing letters etc to help raise awareness of the injustice often saying that if it could happen to such a public figure as Pauline, it could happen to any one of us, and that we each, on our own, must always fight against injustice when we are able…

When Pauline was released, fully exonerated he was over the moon.

Don and Therese moved out here to Craggy Island in early 2004. The sense of peace and beauty they both felt the first day they saw this place is still here with us and for Therese it is the essence of her husband and a fitting place for this service.

Becoming a Quadriplegic was bad enough, but Don was unlucky in that he was suffered constant pain and would comment on those few days when it totally lifted how good the day was. As the years went on this became much worse. His courage and endurance, still being able to be concerned about others, smiling, fooling about, being involved and interested and most of all never complaining, was truly wonderful to experience. It was heartbreaking at times when people did not understand his fragility and his exhaustion and bravery he showed by just facing the days at times.

The family are aware of the many roles Don played in life and on the small screen, where just the placement of a wig, or a hat and he would transform into little fat Eadie from Picnic at Hanging Rock which should now be known as “Picnic at Don Rock”…and his Mafia alter ego called “The Don” was done as seamlessly as he did everything.

There was the eighth day of the week “Don Day” which was a special day for the kids.

His force of personality and its many facets became something of a miracle to his family and especially Therese, Melissa and Alison. He was constantly concerned about their welfare, and that of the extended family, and he seemed to grow more compassionate, the more he suffered.

Melissa and Alison joke about the fact that they quickly learnt to never say they were bored because when they did he would give them jobs to do. Now adults they say they are grateful for this. He was fiercely independent and a gentle and concerned loving husband and father.

He passed away at his home on Thursday 17th May, two days before his eldest daughter Melissa and her fiancé Chris were due to be married. He had been in RNSH for 5 weeks and was flown home the night of his passing. Unable to speak because of the Ventilator for the past 5 weeks, when it was finally turned off, he softly talked and joked with those of us gathered for about two hours. He died with his family around him and was loved gently as he went with dignity and concern for others welfare the last things he expressed.

The manner of his passing after the terrible suffering he endured, will never be forgotten by those of us present, and has left us with no fear of death… none at all. Yet another of the precious gifts he left to those he loved. He was beautiful to the end and died quietly with his daughters and wife and other loved ones… in a quiet room... at home at last. He deserved such a peaceful seamless death to this life. His compassion and empathy for others; his sense of fun and stirring; his generosity; his unpredictability; his intense love of the natural world; so much, but more even was the love he held for his children Melissa and Alison, and his wife Therese. He loved them without conditions. Its known Don had his rough edges but the rough diamonds are always the best, and are always more precious

Thanks must go out to Therese’s sisters Veronica, Joan and Jackie for their support. Jackie spent the last day in the hospital with Don while the family drove home to meet the Air Ambulance. She went on the flight with him so that he always had someone with him he loved. Thanks to Carmel, Patsy, Mike, Rod, Neil and Renata, and Donna, and they know why.

The effort made by Don’s Doctor Dr Mark Stewart and the Air Ambulance and others made it possible for Don to have his last wish, which was to die at home.

He is survived by Therese his wife, Melissa and Alison his daughters and Ian his brother.

Goodbye for now our lovely Eadie… See you round like a rissole.

Melissa’s part (daughter)

One things for sure this world will never be the same again without Don or better known as Noddy to Ali, Mum and I.

Whenever I think of him it always makes me smile and a million memories come rushing to me. Each one making me happier. Dad had a wonderful sense of fun and a wicked wicked sense of humour. Which left a lot of people not quite sure, was he laughing at them? That made it funnier. Alison and I from a young age absolutely loved when he was being wickedly funny. Kids love it when someone can get away with saying and doing things naughty. Ali do you remember your first communion? I know mum and I sure do! Only 20 cents for a glass of water. We had some amazing times as a family, you couldn’t ask or wish for a better dad. He was always always there for you, and nothing was ever too much. The gap in our little family is going to be felt, but he is always with us, because he promised me once. I remember when dad was in hospital, his arms were tied with restraints, mum and I untied them and he stretched out his arms like he was going to fly away. I said jokingly, YOUR FREE! And he laughed and smiled it was the most beautiful smile. So I hope he is free and still has that beautiful smile, that I’ll never forget.

He deserves all the wonders of complete freedom and happiness.

Melissa Mackay
 

Alison’s part (daughter)

Where do I start, when trying to say goodbye, or a final “see you later” to you Dad? I know that you will always be with me & that I will meet you again, but for now you need to rest. I am so sorry for what happened to you at Royal North Shore Hospital, it was as you said “Shithouse”. We were lucky to have been with you at the end. I hope that you could feel all the love from us.

You & Mum gave us such a fun & rich childhood; there was always much laughter in the house. There are so many stories and great times that will always be with my heart. Thankyou for teaching me so many things its strange but I still remember each moment so clear when you taught me to tie my shoelaces, to dive properly into the pool, my times tables, telling the time on a real clock. All the times you watched me swimming by myself in the pool because I was always to scared jaws would get me if you weren’t watching. You would try to sneak away after a long while but I’d always catch you and you’d always come back out.

There were always lots of cuddles in our house, interesting games of monopoly, jobs if we admitted boredom, and there was always a right way to do jobs and a short time in which to begin them. That was just you though Dad and it became slightly amusing as we got older.

We have so many funny home videos of us four and others, but by far the best was our “Picnic at Don Rock!” you played Edie brilliantly and we have so many one-liners from it that will always make us laugh.

Thank you Dad for always being so helpful and kind to me. You always tried to make things better for me. All the phone calls over the last few years I will cherish. All the stories you told, all the silly voices we did. You taught me how to cope with things that were beyond my grasp, and always when the seriousness was over you’d get me chuckling again.

People tell me that I am like you in many ways and I am proud of that. You always taught me to stand up for myself too, which I am grateful for. You did so with such phrases as “Don’t take shit” and “are you gunna put up with that?” Dad you always taught me to be strong and fair. Two qualities that you have.

I will always love and cherish you, there have just been so many funny and warm times shared. I am so lucky to of have had a father like you, a friend like you and a teacher like you.

Take care Dad wherever you are right now, and always know how proud I am of you for who you are, how you lived, how you dealt with hardship’s, how you joked and how you loved.

I love you

Love always Ali

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