The Musings Of An Opinionated Sod [Help Me Grow!]


My Dad Is Dead …
January 16, 2026, 6:15 am
Filed under: A Bit Of Inspiration, Anniversary, Dad, Death, Family, Love, Parents

OK, so we got to the end of the first week of 2026.

Or should I say the 3rd week … but you know what I mean.

Anyway, I started the TWENTIETH year of this blog with a couple of nice posts.

Then I followed it up with a couple of things that were frustrating-the-fuck out of me.

And now I am going to end it with something deeply personal to me.

Today is the 27th anniversary of my dad dying.

That not only means he has been out my life for just under half my life, but in just 5 years – I’ll be the age he was when he died.

As I’ve written before, when I turned 50 I went through a real emotional wobble believing that meant I only had 10 years before I too died … and while I’ve thankfully got past that, it increasingly shocks me how young he was when he passed.

Now I’ve written a lot about how much my Dad meant to me … how much he means to me … so this time I’m going to post something else altogether. Not because I don’t want to celebrate my Dad, but because I think this celebrates him in a way he would both want and respect.

To do that, you need to watch this …

This not only hit me, it made me really think hard.

And I get it and I think my Dad would have loved it.

Don’t get me wrong, I wish my Dad was still alive with all my heart and soul.

I miss him every single day and I hate I haven’t been able to share any of the past 27 years of my life with him.

But while he is still in my life and still relevant in my life, I know he would want me to refer to him as dead rather than ‘passed away’… not just because he wasn’t religious in any way, but because the word ‘death’, honours him and acknowledges him with greater dignity and love than any of the more ambiguous terminology that is often used to soften the reality rather than respect it.

Put simply, ‘passed’ sounds temporary and death represents permanency … and the reason that is so important is – as Labi Siffre so brilliantly articulates – the permanency of death not only justifies, but enables the full expression of grief because ultimately, grief represents the deep love you had for someone and the importance they played in your life.

And my god, did I love him.

So here’s to you Dad.

Dead, missed but absolutely not forgotten.

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