Thursday 31 May 2018

Comfort in decay


I'm sorry. But shouldn't you send bouquets to people who've got something to celebrate like, you know, an anniversary or a new job or something? Not losing a bloody baby. I mean, what do flowers do anyway? Nothing. You know, they just sit there, reminding you of why they were sent to you, and then they die. Well I've got that to look forward to, haven't I?
Jenny, Cold Feet

This episode of Cold Feet where Jenny and Pete receive a barrage of bouquets after their miscarriage is one I use to illustrate why sympathy flowers are problematic. Cut flowers aren't plants, and they have a limited life.

I've heard stories of people who've taken immense comfort in the sympathy flowers that were given to them, and even some who took the funeral flowers back home. But I've also witnessed people's anger as they recounted people giving flowers when the person who died couldn't stand them, or distress as their home started to feel like a hospital room with bouquets and baskets everywhere, or the stress of running out of vases. (I recommend only sending sympathy flowers in a container that can be displayed.)

After Helen's funeral, most of the leftover flowers went to her family and friends. I had a few White O'Hara roses, feverfew, rosemary and Solomon's Seal. I put them in the blue Portmerion vase that Helen had seen displaying narcissi and delphiniums when she told me she was engaged.

I took great comfort in the scent of the roses. I would lean towards them and inhale deeply, as if they were an oxygen mask. A few years ago, my therapist friend Lisa Hardi recommended rose oil to me as it's nurturing and a heart-healer, and it is one of my favourite smells. It probably reminds me of carefree summers and the old roses in my childhood garden. The scent is so warming, sweet, and comforting.


However, there was a gradual change over the next week. The sweet scent that filled the room became more sour. The roses were decaying, and the hot weather was intensifying this. Cut flowers expend a lot of energy trying to stay alive, and scented flowers require more energy and consequently have a shorter life. But I took comfort from them, these physical reminders of that heartbreaking day. I should have thrown the roses out and just kept the daisy-like feverfew, but I didn't want to. I wanted to keep the roses as long as possible, and I don't know how to explain why, but I felt secure when I smelled the decaying flowers each morning. The only comparison I can make is with The Bell Jar, when Esther wears the same borrowed blouse and skirt for weeks and describes the unwashed smell as "sour but friendly". (I'm not in Esther-ville though, don't worry.)

One day I'd been weeding in the afternoon heat, and as I sat indoors resting afterwards, I wondered what the terrible smell was. I thought it was my clothes after kneeling on the ground and handling earth and weeds. Then I realised it was the flowers, and it was definitely time to say goodbye to them.


I took photos of them before I threw them with the garden waste. I tried to get a dusky effect in the evening light with a few photos, but I didn't really know what I was doing.




Last year, I took photos of gently wilting White O'Hara roses with ballet pinks and shared them with Helen - I didn't associate her with pink, but always associated her with ballet. And ballet with her.




Tuesday 22 May 2018

Little Dancer


Following on from Friday morning's The Girl Upstairs post, here is the second half of Helen's story. The part I really don't want to write.


I didn't manage to write on Friday evening. I went round to Helen's parents after work and sat talking to her mother Anne at the same table where my friend had been eating her lunch the last time I saw her. It was bittersweet - it's so nice to talk to and listen to someone who loved Helen so much, but I wish with my whole heart that it was under different circumstances (Helen working abroad for a while or something nice like that). While I was there, Paul's mother dropped round with a plant for Anne and they had a chat in the garden. It was good to see how caring and supportive their neighbours are. My mood dropped badly on Saturday. I eventually did some gardening, which helped. Even weeding, which I'm not keen on usually. And I took my sister out and tried to soothe her when she had a meltdown later.


I found the photo above on Sunday when I started writing this - it was taken at the flower market cafe when Helen and I went there after she got engaged, and Helen had chosen colour cards to show which blues and yellows she liked the best. The blue called "Never Grow Up" breaks my heart a little now, because she didn't grow up much after that. She'll never be more than thirty-nine years old. But I like the names of some of the other cards: "Moment of Grace", because grace was a word used to describe her at the funeral; "Frites" because she studied French and loved France; "Cornflower Meadow" because she suddenly texted me after our visit to the flower market and asked if she could have cornflowers for her wedding. There were also cornflowers in the bouquet she modelled in the lavender field. And "English Primrose" is lovely because primroses symbolise childhood. I often think that primroses might be the perfect flower to give for Mother's Day. Primrose was the name of the little sister in The Hunger Games, and we saw the first and last films together at the Bromley Empire, both of us feeling pretty miserable as we stepped out into the evening darkness after the last film.

My engagement card to Helen and Nick is just underneath the colour cards in the photo. It had this quote by Einstein: "Gravitation cannot be held responsible for people falling in love. How on earth can you explain in terms of chemistry and physics so important a biological phenomenon as first love? Put your hand on a stove for a minute and it seems like an hour. Sit with that special girl for an hour and it seems like a minute. That's relativity." I had never known her to be so wildly in love or so happy.


There are dates which stand out - her birthday, the day she told me she was engaged, her wedding day, Christmas Eve. And then the day she died and her funeral day. 16 March 2017 also stands out for me. I knew she was in hospital by this point because her mother had told me, but I hoped that she would be home and on the mend in time for her first wedding anniversary. I had a job interview at a secondary school that morning and I took a photo of the cherry blossom while I waited outside. The cherry blossom had been in flower when Helen told me she was engaged two years before. It was blossoming again when she died and its symbolism - impermanence - has never been more disdainful to me.

I got the job as a school counsellor straight away, and I was looking forward to Helen getting better and being able to tell her and talk to her about working in a school - she had been a secondary school teacher for years. We'd had different careers, so I thought: how lovely - now we have something in common. I had asked Anne a few days before if I could drop round on the evening of the 16th when she got home from visiting the hospital, and she'd said yes. But when I got home from the job interview, I got a message telling me that Helen had been diagnosed with cancer that day.

I'm stalling now. I don't know what to say about this. What is there to say? She hadn't even been married a year. She had been suffering for a long time, and had gone through several tests, but cancer wasn't detected earlier. And now she was told she had secondary cancer and they didn't know the primary source. She was told she could expect to live another 18 months, with treatment. She had an ileostomy, so all of a sudden her diet was restricted and she had to get into a routine of using a stoma bag. It would be months until she would really talk to me about what she went through, and she would describe the shock of experiencing one horror after another and having no time to process what had happened. On her first wedding anniversary, instead of going out for a romantic celebration with her husband, she had her first chemotherapy treatment. I've said these words out loud, but seeing them written down somehow reiterates how relentlessly cruel life was to her. And again, talking to her much later, it was hard not to feel angry and confused - there is so much in the news about what we should be doing and not doing to reduce our risk of cancer, but Helen was a young woman who ate healthily, exercised regularly, never smoked, and hardly drank alcohol. It's hard, even now, to accept what happened to her.

As a friend, it's hard to grieve. I feel like I don't have the right to be this upset, because I'm not her family (although she feels like family). I feel like I keep losing people my age, and without meaning to sound self-pitying, it's hard each time because I think: why them and not me? I don't mean to sound as rubbish as I probably do, and I'm not talking about trading places exactly, but I mean how is it that fate decided that this particular 38-year-old woman who had just started her married life should be the next person to get cancer? At one point I know I said something along these lines to Anne and immediately wished I hadn't. I can't remember what she said back to me, but it was incredibly kind. And as a mother, she wanted to trade places more than I could ever imagine.

For the next year, Helen would embrace life as much as she could, but her illness never seemed to give her a break. She would experience so many losses because of the cancer. One of them was losing the chance to have children - she had wanted children for as long as I can remember. She was upset when she made plans with family or friends and had to cancel them, she was fed up of not being able to eat the healthy things she used to love because of the stoma and how it made it difficult when she was going out for a meal (she couldn't have fruit or vegetable skins or seeds, or dried fruit, or nuts or seeds, or anything high in fibre), and she felt more ill, tired, and in pain than she'd let on. She had side effects from treatment which meant her hands were always cold and she had to wear gloves when taking things out of the fridge, and she got neuropathy. She couldn't go to dance classes anymore, and she couldn't wear the beautiful dance clothes that she used to. As someone who'd wanted to be a dancer since she was a little girl, this loss must have been devastating for her. She talked about this once to me, in her understated way: "I'll never wear those clothes again." She shrugged her shoulders and looked away, and I sat there knowing I couldn't say or do anything to make it better. She asked me what would it feel like when she died. I wish I knew the exact answer, I thought. And I thought, how the hell have we got here, where we're having this conversation? We were two teenagers working on Sundays for pocket money and studying for our A-levels. One of our first conversations was: "Who do you prefer, Oasis or Blur?" Twenty-two years later, we're talking about what it will physically feel like when she dies within the next year. It's just so wrong.

Having said all that, there were some nice moments in the last year. She went away to Blenheim Palace and Bath with her husband, she went on trips to the theatre with her friends, her husband, and her parents, she organised and ran a Macmillan coffee morning with her mother, and she went Christmas shopping with her nieces in Bluewater. I am lucky to have some wonderful memories of her from the last year: the first time I had tea with her in a cafe after she was diagnosed and her gorgeous smile as she sat across from me; watching her father's DVD of Breakfast at Tiffany's with her because she'd never seen it before, and giving her a hug goodbye after she walked with me to the train station; the last time she made me cups of tea, setting out the table beautifully as she always did, and both of crying as we talked; watching Emma Rice's last production at The Globe with her and chatting to an Australian girl who asked us about our friendship; our last Christmas Eve in Bromley and the last time she handed me a Christmas card and gift. Even our text conversations earlier this year. One morning she wanted to check I was ok because I'd had a difficult day at work, and I thought wow - with everything she was going through, she still managed to be concerned about me.

Helen died at home, which was where she wanted to be, looked after by her mother and husband in her parents' house. It's an incredible kindness for a family to look after their loved one in their last days at home. I don't remember everything Anne said when she phoned me later that morning to tell me the news, but I will never forget the devastating sound she made at the end of the call. It was the cry of someone who had just had their insides ripped out.

Helen's funeral was a couple of weeks later. In a case of awful timing, I had booked my first holiday abroad in years, to France of all places, and I had the unfamiliar problem of not being able to collect and condition the flowers myself. I placed the order with the lovely guys at C. J. Love before I went away and got out all the buckets and tools, and my hardworking father picked the flowers up, prepared and conditioned them according to the instructions I'd left, and cut flowers and foliage from the garden as well.

It was a strange time to go away. Five days before Helen died, my disabled sister had been in a fire. Her care home - where I had visited her just 36 hours before - had a fire in the early hours of the morning, and the residents were evacuated. One resident died, which is horrifically sad. It was a hell of a shock to wake up to, and I've never hugged my little sister as often or as tightly as I have since the fire. But it's made it more difficult to grieve - the days I am struggling the most and just want to be alone are inevitably the days my sister's having meltdowns and needing my support. It wouldn't be so bad if it was just giving her a hug and a tissue if she's crying, but it's often taking the physical brunt of her anger and frustration and constantly trying to calm her down and keep her safe, and clean up the mess she makes when she's angry. All of this is hard anyway, but especially tough when you're feeling particularly fragile. But what can you do? You get on with it.


I'm not religious, but while I was away I found myself walking up the hill to the old part of town where there is a Hollywood-style Cannes sign next to a church. In a strange moment of synchronicity, I couldn't go into the church straight away because there was a funeral just finishing. So I sat on a bench outside and checked my phone - Anne had just emailed me to tell me to enjoy my holiday in Helen's beloved France and to try not to be sad. I went into the church and lit two candles - one for my sister and one for Helen. I don't pray. I can't pray. But lighting candles feels like I'm doing something when I can't do anything. I just sat down in the church and thought about both of them for a while.



I came back to a smoggy London heatwave and just missed Anne who had dropped off some white roses and gysophila to use for her posy, and some leylandii from her garden. White roses are a symbol of love but can also mean silence. Gypsophila, one of the flowers Helen pointed out in our walk around the flower market, represents everlasting love. When Anne offered cuttings from her garden, I was grateful for the leylandii - cypress is a symbol of mourning, and it seemed appropriate that this symbol should come from Helen's parents' home where she had spent her last ten days and where her absence is felt so profoundly. I included it in the coffin spray and used it as a collar for the posy from Helen's parents.




I had ordered the same yellow Catalina roses that we used for the wedding flowers, and scented Beatrice and White O'Hara roses. Beatrice is a new variety from David Austin Roses, and the yellow-peachy colour was beautiful and they smelt lovely.


There was white and purple lilac from the garden - I used both in the coffin spray and the scented white lilac in the posy for Helen's eldest niece. Lilac means first emotions of love in the language of flowers, and I remember Helen gushing with love when she first had a niece. (Of course she gushed over her second niece, too.) White lilac in particular symbolises youthful innocence.




I got the forget-me-nots that Helen had wanted for her wedding and I'd been unable to source back then. Anne was keen to include them this time because of their meaning - we won't forget Helen. I included feverfew which means warmth. The flowers are like daisies, which in turn represent innocence, and Helen was childlike and innocent to many of the people who loved her. Clematis means mental beauty in the language of flowers, and Helen was intelligent, thoughtful, curious, and creative (she constantly denied being creative, but I disagreed with her - she choreographed dance!).




I used Solomon's Seal, which I've only ever used before when I did the flowers at the Garden Museum. It means wisdom. I got cornflowers, which Helen had liked so much and which symbolise delicacy. Bouvardia symbolises enthusiasm, which seemed perfect for Helen - someone who was so excited about the things she did, whether it was dancing or the book she was currently reading. Guelder rose is so pretty and the gentle green flowers somehow feel like a bridge between the flowers and the foliage. I didn't choose it for its meaning, but it means winter or age in the language of flowers. Helen was born in the winter and suffered from the cold spring we had this year, but the sun shone warmly during her last days and there was a double rainbow on the day she died.



I used rosemary for remembrance, eucalyptus for protection, and apple mint from the garden for warmth. I also used olive for the first time - it is famously a sign of peace. I often use euonymus for greening up, because its bulkiness is good for covering up mechanics, although the stems have a tendency to snap if you're not careful.




There was a coffin spray from her husband, who had been so joyful marrying Helen two years before. I think being so rushed for time meant I didn't have as much space to be sad. I would catch myself tearing up, upset at the thought of these flowers lying on top of the coffin that was going to hold her delicate body, or re-remembering she had died. I kept forgetting, and even while I was waiting to get the plane home I picked up my phone to text her something funny I'd noticed, but then realised I couldn't. Doing the flowers, I kept wondering what she would think, but then remembered that she wouldn't see them. That was hard. Since I first studied floristry, I have given her flowers so many times.  I couldn't believe this was the last time, and that she wouldn't see them. I remember meeting her for coffee in Bromley before I had my job interview at the Garden Museum, and I was carrying a big bouquet. As we said goodbye, I gave her the bouquet - I thought it was obvious it was for her. She was surprised because she thought I was taking it to my interview to demonstrate my floristry skills. I loved giving her flowers. It's one of the things I'm going to miss doing now she's gone. One of her dear friends, who kindly gave me lifts and much-needed hugs on the day of the funeral, told me how she used to choose flowers to give Helen. It was lovely to hear about someone else's relationship with Helen, how they met, and what they would miss about her. We walked around the garden of the hotel that day and saw forget-me-nots flowering, which was comforting.




Anne asked for a posy from her and Helen's father, and two posies from Helen's nieces. I made these on the night before the funeral, and in the morning I was about to add flowers to the coffin spray when I saw the three posies. They looked like bouquets for a wedding and I cried because I was working in the same room where I'd done Helen and Nick's wedding flowers two years before, and I couldn't believe Helen wasn't here now. I listened to the soundtrack of a French film we loved, and added the tiny, fragile forget-me-nots to the coffin spray. Forget-me-nots are my favourite flower, but I'd never shed tears using them before. I wish I'd had more time to make everything look better. I had to hurry because I needed to deliver the flowers to the funeral director in time and get ready for the funeral. I also wanted to drop the leftover flowers off at the hotel where the reception would be held. Anne told me I didn't need to, but there were so many flowers left, it seemed like the best thing to do. Maybe I misjudged that.


As I left Helen's flowers with the others that people had sent her, the funeral director gently said to me, "Don't worry. We'll look after them." I thanked him and left, and stopped holding my tears in. I wanted to say, "I don't mind about the flowers so much, but will you look after her?"

I think I'm going to stop now. I've written so much already, and if I start writing about the funeral itself I don't think I'll ever stop. And I guess part of me doesn't want to stop. So maybe I'll come back and write some more another day.

There are articles by Cancer Research here about preparing to die if you or someone you love has cancer.

The Samaritans is free to call at any time from the UK or ROI on 116123. You can find them here.

Finally, I recommend Carrying the Elephant by Michael Rosen for anyone grieving, but especially for parents. It's a collection of prose poems written after Michael's 18-year-old son Eddie died of meningococcal septicaemia. Along with making yourself eat and drink even when you don't feel like it, resting even if you have trouble sleeping, and getting some fresh air when you feel like hibernating, the poems are bereavement first aid for me.


Friday 18 May 2018

The girl upstairs


Two years ago, I did the flowers for a dear friend's wedding. We met when we finished our GCSEs in the middle of the 1990s. We'd started working at the local Boots which had just started opening on Sundays because of a change in trading laws...that itself feels like a lifetime ago.

(On a tangent - there's a nice paragraph in Nick Hornby's book High Fidelity when he writes about how Sundays are rubbish because everything's closed, even in the city. That felt so pertinent when the book came out, but there must be whole generation who would read it now and wonder what Nick was talking about.)

Helen and I didn't talk to each other until we'd been working there a few weeks and our mutual friend Paul introduced us. Paul and I worked downstairs in the shop, where there were electrical goods, the photography department, a kitchen section, and greeting cards. Helen worked upstairs where there was make up, toiletries, and the pharmacy. I always thought upstairs was where the cool girls worked. Paul and Helen would get a lift home after work most weeks - they had known each other since they were little and their mothers were friends, having their babies in hospital at the same time, and eventually living on the same road. At that time, Helen and I were both so shy and unconfident, I don't think we would have introduced ourselves when we happened to have the same lunch break. So I am utterly grateful to Paul for introducing us one lunchtime. Helen and I were still working at Boots after Paul and some of the other Sunday workers had left. The photo above was taken on our last day there, before we went our separate ways to university. We'd occasionally work together during the holidays after that.

I want to write about our entire friendship, but that would be a novel's worth. Over the next twenty years there were so many lovely moments. She sat next to me the first time I had my hair cut in a salon. I don't think either of us realised how long it would take, and the hair stylist was bemused, but we happily chatted away and I expect we drank tea - we drank a lot of tea. I went to Brighton to see her ballet dance in a fashion show and I was so excited when she stepped out and did her solo, looking so quiet and beautiful. We swapped clothes when we used to be the same size, and we both unknowingly bought the same French Connection dress in different colours. We saw film after film at the Curzon Mayfair and the Bromley Empire, and occasionally at the French Institute. We saw ballets at Sadler's Wells, and it was always nicer to see a ballet with her, because she understood dance so deeply. She gushed over her little nieces, who she loved to pieces. She modelled for me in a lavender field, showing her graceful dance moves and her stunning blue eyes - there are posts here and here. We used to meet most years on Christmas Eve, and I've written about that here. I have other memories, which perhaps don't sound so lovely, but which add to her depth and have strengthened my love for her - taking turns falling out, usually because one of us had a new boyfriend and the other felt left out, crying in cafes because we we were unhappy in love or work or life, ranting and laughing about things that made us angry. She was the first person to contact me when my ex and I cancelled our wedding, and I can remember her kind, thoughtful words. I can hear her randomly breaking out into song when I used to stay over at her first flat, and I can see her beautiful blue eyes and her stillness when she cried.

And then she stopped crying about her love life because she'd met someone at the school where she worked who made her utterly happy.

On 12 April 2015, the last time I cooked her dinner, we were sat in the kitchen and suddenly she said, "Shamini, will you do my wedding flowers?" That's how she told me she was engaged. For the next hour or so, I got out my old wedding magazines and floristry magazines and she could barely contain her excitement while we looked at them. A few weeks later, we met at Vauxhall station and walked over to the old, New Covent Garden Market where I took photos of the flowers she liked - which was almost everything white, yellow, or blue. She was like a kid in a sweet shop. We sat down in the cafe after a while and looked through the photos on my phone, trying to narrow them down, but I don't think we did very well.








The following year, I spent Easter weekend with a friend from my floristry course, preparing Helen and Nick's wedding flowers. Some flowers I couldn't get - forget-me-nots were difficult to get and narcissi and bluebells had shot up in price as it was Easter weekend. I managed to cut a few from the garden, but that was all. But there were ranunculus that mean "You are radiant with charms", huge yellow spray roses called Catalina, white roses and tulips for love, two kinds of myrtle for marriage, ivy for fidelity, delphiniums for lightness, and there were even early cornflowers which Helen had asked for. They symbolise delicacy. There was lemon-scented waxflower and bubblegum-scented muscari, and tiny spires of Thlaspi "Green Bell".




There was loads to do - twenty pew ends, ten tablecentres, a dozen buttonholes or corsages, a cake topper, a long tablecentre, a heart for the church door (which would be moved to the reception venue, along with the pew ends), petals for the flower girls, two bridesmaid bouquets and Helen's bouquet. But we listened to the radio, caught up on the time since we left college, I told him stories about Helen, and we had a really nice time. But I kept getting the bridal bouquet wrong - I must have untied it and started again three times. My friend kindly told me I was overthinking it because I wanted it to be perfect for her. In the end, I wasn't completely happy with it, but Helen came up to me in the wedding reception and told me it was exactly how she imagined.


In the morning of the wedding, I listened to the radio while I wired flowers for the buttonholes, ribboned the bouquets, and made the cake topper. It was just before 4am and there was a call in and people were talking about what time they set their alarms on their mobile phone. Some of the answers were so random - "3.30, 3.40, 3.50, 4.30" - I remember laughing. How long ago that feels now.




I went to the venue and laid out the tablecentres. It was wonderful to get a preview of the work Helen and Nick and their families had put into decorating it. It was beautiful and the tables were themed on their road trip around France.







I didn't cry until the end of the reception, but I felt a bit choked up when I saw the lovingly hand-written place cards.




I dropped the bouquets and buttonholes off at Helen's parents' house. I forgot her photographer friend Dawn would be there, and I hid behind the bridesmaids' bouquets as she tried to snap us. I have that photo now and I treasure it - the doorway I've walked through so many times and Helen laughing and looking so joyful.


I then had to go to the church and tie up the twenty pew ends to the pews and put up the heart on the door.




Then there was the usual florist dash to get ready for the actual event.


I wrote a taster post here with the intention of writing a longer post later. I started and deleted the longer post so many times. I'm furiously kicking myself for not just posting something earlier, however incomplete.

At the end of the night, I got a lift home with Paul's parents - the boy who had introduced us all those years before. It was surreal and incredible, chatting to them in the car. I felt so glad Helen and I had stayed friends for so long and so privileged to be part of Helen and Nick's happy day.

The gorgeous photos below are by Helen's photographer and dancer friend, Dawn. There is another post to follow this, which I really don't want to write, but I'll try to do it after work today. None of us would have guessed that two years after these joyful photos were taken, we would be going to the same church for Helen's funeral. And now I'm crying again.