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


Let Them Know You Love Them While They’re There …

I watched something recently that made me happy, jealous and sad all at the same time.

I know … I know … they’re the sort of emotional extremes you’d normally associate with a psychopath – but hang in there.

I’ve written a lot about how much I loved my parents. How much I still do.

So many of the decisions and choices I’ve made in my life have been influenced by me wanting them to feel proud of me – even though they’re no longer here and I know very clearly that they were already.

But despite that, I still do stuff that is driven by a desire to thank them for being brilliant parents … to let them know that despite all the moments of ‘stupidity’ that I have embraced throughout my life, the lessons, encouragement and love they continually showed me, were never taken for granted.

Even more so because they never wanted anything from me.

Nor did they ever ask anything of me.

All they desired was that I choose a life of fulfillment over contentment.

It took me a long time to work out what that meant, but once I had worked it out – it fundamentally changed how I lived my life. Giving me clarity at times of confusion or complexity. Hell, it’s one of the main reasons I didn’t go back to the UK when I faced some truly challenging situations while living overseas … because even though I knew they’d love it if I’d gone back [and I’d have loved it too] – I felt I would be disrespecting the gift they’d given me by encouraging me go and explore the world when they were facing such personal hardship through Dad’s illness.

We talked a lot about this when Dad became ill.

I was due to go to Australia when Dad had his stroke. Suddenly I didn’t want to go … I wanted to stay with them and help, which was my new plan right until the moment I told my parents about it.

“NO!” they said.

This was not something they were willing to allow.

Of course they massively appreciated the consideration, but they wanted me to go and live my life rather than – as they saw it – be held back by their situation. Given how hard their situation was, it is fair to say that no one – least of all me – would have blamed them if they had asked me to stay, but they didn’t and I think part of that is because they knew that had I not gone then, I would never have left … and that was an outcome they were never going to allow.

That does not mean life wouldn’t have been good if I had stayed – I loved my parents and I loved Nottingham – but it is also fair to say the life I get to live and enjoy now is nothing like the one I would have experienced if I’d remained. As I’ve written many times before, everything I have in my life today, bar my relationship with my best friend Paul, is because I left the UK.

My family.
My career.
My lifestyle.
My experience.
My experiences.

Every single bit of it … which is why their actions are not only an incredible example of ‘unconditional love’, but also proof of how well my parents knew who I was and – with a bit of encouragement – who I could be.

What a gift.

What generosity.

Which may explain why I felt such a compulsion to repay their love. I don’t mean that just in terms of chasing a life of fulfillment, but in trying to help them make their life easier, happier and – dare I say it – more comfortable.

You see, whatever way you look at it, life wasn’t easy for them. In fact it never was.

Money was always very tight and now, with Dad’s health – and Mum caring for him 24/7 – it had now become even harder.

And while I did what I could, I was not earning the money that would allow me to do what I really wanted for them which was:

Pay off the house and buy Dad a yellow 1970’s, Rolls Royce with white-walled wheels.

In that order.

But hope and reality are separate beasts and even if I could have pulled it off, I know they would have lost their shit over it, because to them, they’d tell me I should be focusing on my future, not theirs.

Which leads me back to the beginning of this post and how I saw a clip that made me feel happy, jealous and sad all at the same time … because I got to watch a kid do this for his parents. Not the Rolls Royce bit, but the house.

I love it.

I love the reaction of the Father.

The slow realisation followed by the cavalcade of emotions …. pride, relief, gratitude and love.

I can only imagine how good the son felt to be able to do that for his folks.

And while my parents did – in the end – get to pay off the family home, it was not because of me but because of an insurance payout they received for a car accident they’d been involved in 5 years prior. And while I wish they hadn’t had to experience the accident to be able to pay off the home, I also know how happy it made my parents – especially my Dad, who knew he was nearing the end of life and so it reassured him Mum would be safe – but even then, I still wish I’d been able to do this for them.

Of course – as my career took off – I was able to repay/spoil/look after my Mum – but while I may still look at that clip with a mixture of emotions, I comfort myself knowing it has nothing really to do with buying your parents a home and everything to do with celebrating a loving, caring family and viewed through that lens … I know my parents knew how grateful I was for all they did and all they were.

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Reaching The Other Side Of A Decade Long Journey Through Despair …
March 9, 2025, 8:15 am
Filed under: Comment, Dad, Death, Emotion, Empathy, Family, Love, Loyalty, Mum, Mum & Dad

I know, I know … I said I was away for a week – and I am – but I couldn’t let today pass without me acknowledging it, because today is the 10th anniversary of my Mum passing.

I’ve written a lot about this over the bast decade.

From what happened … to how it messed with me … right thought to how it changed how I do things and look at things.

And while all those things are still there … a decade later the feelings are far less connected to darkness and far more about the light.

I have to say, I am so relieved.

Mum was a wonderful human.
Full of compassion and curiosity.
Driven by a real sense of respect and justice for all.

For a very gentle, quiet woman, she was a force that you felt through her actions, her choices, her emotions and – when necessary – her words.

But most of all, I think of Mum as an incredibly dignified person and nothing reflects this more than how she prepared for what she feared most.

You see Mum was going into hospital for a heart valve operation.

It was a pretty common procedure, but at 83, she was aware things could happen.

She’d already delayed the operation by a few months to ensure I could be with Jill when Otis was born – another example of her selflessness – but even though things had initially gone well, sadly the condition of her heart was far worse than expected and within an hour of coming out of theatre, it ruptured and Mum died.

I’m so, so grateful I was with her and that she knew that.

She’d told me a few months before that her greatest fear was that she may die alone – like her sister-in-law had tragically experienced.

And while I would give anything to have her back, knowing I was there – as I was with Dad – has definitely helped me deal with the loss.

But it’s what happened after she passed that reaffirmed one of her greatest traits.

Her dignity.

Something she valued very much. Even in death.

You see, when she had died, we were going through some draws back at her house. In there, I found a book she’d been compiling featuring all the account numbers associated with her, all the contact information of her friends, and a compilation of stories and articles that she wanted me to see or know if the worst happened.

To do that both blows me away and breaks my heart …

Blows me away for the incredible generosity of wanting to ensure in my darkest hour, I am not being further impacted by the complication of trying to find or access information.

Breaks my heart because not only did it represent her acknowledging the potential of her death, but that she did it alone.

I don’t know how she felt doing this, I just hope that any emotional struggle she felt was softened by knowing she was doing something that was important to her. Important because I – as her only son – was her world.

She never left me in doubt of that. Ever. Even when we had little disagreements over the years …
Because the undeniable fact was she loved me and I loved her.

And I still do.

I’m so grateful and honoured she was my Mum.

Which is why, as much as today is a connected to something deeply sad in my life – she’d be very happy to know, the feelings I have today are far more associated with love than tragedy.

For all she did.
For all she was.
For all she continues to be in my life.

I love and miss you so much Mum.

Give Dad a big kiss from me.

Rx


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A Decade Of Outrageous Delight …
December 11, 2024, 5:00 am
Filed under: Birthday, Dad, Daddyhood, Emotion, Family, Jill, Love, Mum & Dad, Otis

Following the sadness of yesterday, today is pure joy.

I think Lisa would have absolutely loved that.

You see today, my brilliant boy – Otis – reaches a milestone …

He turns 10.

TEN!!!

Even though it seems only a few years ago he came into our life, he’s packed a hell-of-a-lot into his first decade.

Born in China.
Moved to LA.
Touched down in London.
And – it’s safe to say – thrived/thriving in Auckland, New Zealand.

But on top of all that change, he’s also dealt with a whole lot of challenges along the way.

Saying goodbye to his buddies …
Watching his Dad fall apart at the loss of his Mum …
Watching his beloved Rosie leave us
Watching his Mum have a pretty big operation …
Go through his own operations.
Deal with a global pandemic and all the impact that had in terms of education, isolation and trepidation.
Then there’s been the new schools, new friends and – let’s not forget – the daily challenge of dealing with dysgraphia.

And while there’s definitely been some hard days, he approaches life with a level of kindness, compassion, curiousity, cheekiness and love that takes my breath away.

It’s all his Mum’s work and influence, but still … it’s incredible.

That doesn’t mean he’s naïve to the impact all these challenges have had – and continue to have – on him.

In fact, one of the things I’m proudest of is his emotional intelligence.

His ability to not just identify when he’s having a tough time, but to express it to others.

Of course it’s not easy hearing your kid tell you he’s feeling down, but I don’t take it for granted how fortunate I am that he does and that he feels he can.

It’s why I’m in awe of how his crew of mates are so supportive to each other and any challenge they’re facing or dealing with. That certainly wouldn’t have been the case back in my day – where it would have been used to taunt and tease mercilessly, even if not meant maliciousously – which is another reason why I hold more faith in Otis’ generation to make a positive difference to how we all live, than mine.

As you can probably tell by now, I could not be more proud of being Otis’ Dad.

Not just because he’s a great kid … not just because he’s my kid … but because he has made me a better person than I’d otherwise be.

They’re not empty words, I mean it.

OK, I wasn’t a total nightmare prior to him [I think], but he has definitely inspired me to be a better person.

More calm. More understanding. More compassionate. More open.

I appreciate some of my colleagues may raise their eyebrows in surprise reading this – or they would, if they read my rubbish – but as much as I may be a short-fused, temperamental, call-a-spade-a-fucking-shovel, challenging, confronting, emotional prick … I was a whole lot worse before, haha. That’s why I know if Mum and Dad had got to meet him, they wouldn’t just adore him from tip to toe for being their first grandchild, but because they’d see how he has been able to inspire me to be better in ways they never quite pulled off. [Sorry Mum and Dad]

Now kids ‘growing up so fast’ is nothing new.

But as I’ve written before, the reason parents can handle it is because at every stage of their kids ‘accelerated development’ they get introduced to a new trait they fall in love with … a trait so adorable that it helps them let go of the last trait they thought they could never live without.

Now some of these traits are ‘stereotypically cute’.

A smile.
A sound.
A reaction.
An evolutionary development. Or sometimes, something they just love to do … which in Otis’ case, was sweeping – be it the floors of home, cafes or even Shanghai streets. Which he has DEFINITELY grown out of. Unfortunately, ha.

But as they get older, these traits evolve in more ‘unique’ ways – and yet are still utterly adorable.

For example, right now Otis is in the ‘moments of cringe’ phase of his development. Or should I say, I am igniting that in him.

It could be because of a song I’m listening to … a program I’ve watched … a phrase I’ve said … but the result is him laughing his infectious, cheeky laugh and telling me how cringe that is.

And you know what? I love it and I think he loves it too because in a weird kinda way, it’s a bonding moment between us.

Something that’s ours and no one else.

But I also love it because it reveals his growing independence, evolution and frame of reference and surely, if there is any ‘marker’ for a parent to check if they’re doing their part OK, it’s that?

So to my wonderful, delightful, brilliant son, I say this.

Dear Otis.
Congratulations on hitting double digits – it’s a big moment in anyone’s life.
And while you may feel it’s taken you an age to get here, don’t wish things away too quick.
You’re a brilliant kid.
Not just in who you are, but how you are …
Stubborn on the right things, effervescent in everything else.
That’s about as perfect a combination as anyone could hope for …
It means you don’t spend so much of your time looking forwards you fail to see all you can squeeze out of the present.
The weird, the silly, the wonderful and the ridiculous.
That stuff matters.
Not just for enjoying now, but for getting the most out of the long life of double figures ahead.
So keep doing all you’re doing, because you’re playing it great.
The good, the bad, the happy and the hard.
Dealing with life with honesty and grace.
No arrogance or distain, just consideration and deliberation that belies your years.
A desire to do the right thing, even when you occasionally find yourself having done the wrong.
It’s an honourable way to live and we’re lucky to be witnesses to it.
So keep playing your own rhythm.
Don’t let others try and drown you out with their melodies and noise.
We’re so very proud of who you are and excited to see who you will become.
So enjoy those double digits, but don’t start acting quite like them yet.
There’s a lot for you to leave your mark on today, as well as tomorrow.
Happy birthday, dear Otis.
We love the hell out of you.

Mum and Dad
xxx

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Thank You Mum, But Not P&G’s Version (And Not Just Because I Was Literally Forced To Write It As ‘Thank You Mom’ When We Worked On Launching That Campaign Way Back When)
November 1, 2024, 7:15 am
Filed under: Corona Virus, Dad, England, Family, Italy, Jill, Love, Mum, Mum & Dad, My Childhood, My Fatherhood, New Zealand, Otis

So on Sunday, it would be Mum’s 92nd birthday.

Now of course, she has been gone 9 years … however despite that, I still feel deeply connected to her birthday so for me, that number still feels very real to me.

I often wonder what life would be like if she was still here.

I say that, because had she still been alive, I don’t think we would be in NZ.

When COVID happened, we would have brought her to us in London … so she would be kept safe, cared for and loved.

I would imagine it would have been quite the challenge to get her to agree because she was always fiercely independent … but apart from the fact Otis would have been the major draw card, the fact is that towards the end of her life, she had accepted she needed some help. Not much, but a little. Even if that was just so she had someone to talk to every now and then, despite loving her own company.

And if that was the case there is no way we would have left the UK.

If anything, we would have been more likely to move to Italy … so she could be back in her homeland, near her sister and nieces.

Not that she would have expected us to do that – oh no, she was adamant I had to live my life, not look after hers – but that was a [gentle] tension we endured throughout our time together.

Her wanting to look after me by never demanding anything of me.
Me wanting to look after her by being protective and supportive.

Fortunately, towards the end we had found a calmness in how we dealt with it.

She’d accept what I sent her, and I’d accept she’d do nothing with any of it. Hahaha.

I know that might sound like some weird kind of ‘truce’, but it worked for us and I presume many other families work in a similar way. Acceptance, compromise and convenience … not because it ‘keeps the peace’, but because ultimately, you know the other person is doing it with love, even if it’s not exactly as you wish/hoped they’d act.

My Mum was the master of seeing the love.

Or dealing with challenges with love.

I can’t help but feel we’d all be better off if we followed her way of living rather than the self-serving, myopic, populist, egotism that the world is riddled with these days.

While I’m glad Mum didn’t have to endure the challenges of COVID, I’d have been so happy if it had meant she would be with us. I’ve written before how one of the worst of times was – thanks to my huge privilege – very special for me. By that, I mean in terms of COVID allowing me to be with my family 24/7.

They may have been sick of it, but I utterly loved it. Treasured it even.

But the reality is Mum had died years before, which meant NZ became a real option for us. And what a move it has turned out to be for the family. And while we won’t be here forever, we have valued and enjoyed every minute … which is why on top of thanking Colenso and the country for making it what it is [which is Otis’ FAVE EVER country, hence I’m going to ruin his life again one day in the not too distant, but not close, future] I also need to thank my Mum for kinda making this happen.

Or said another way … thank her for looking after my best interests even when I don’t fully realise that until later.

What a human. What a Mum.

Happy Birthday Mum, I love you.

Big hugs to you and give Dad a big kiss from me.

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How Loss Shows You Where Happiness Is. Eventually …

So tomorrow marks the 2nd month since Rosie passed … and I am still struggling with it.

I appreciate how pathetic that may sound, but it’s how I feel.

In many ways, the loss of Rosie feels very, very similar to the loss of my parents.

I don’t say that lightly.

I also don’t say that because my parents weren’t wonderful.

Frankly, they were amazing and gave me a childhood where I can honestly say I never wanted for love, support or encouragement. And while I didn’t really appreciate how special that was until I was much older and realised not everyone got to experience that, I definitely understand how blessed I was for what they gave me and left me.

However, while Mum and Dad were my physical and emotional constant throughout my first 20+ years of my life … as I went through my key adult ’life stage’ years – such as marriage, moving countries [a lot] and starting a family – they weren’t. Part of this is because by then I was living far, far away from them – so only connected to them by phone, albeit on a daily basis, as well as my annual visit home – and part of this is because sadly, both of them died over this period of time. Which means from 2007, Rosie – along with Jill – were my physical and emotional constants.

Wherever I was … whatever I was going through … they were the ones who I went back to each and every day.

Who were there for me, each and every day.

In essence, they were on the other side of the bridge that took me between childhood to adulthood, which I hope helps explain Rosie’s significance and importance in my life.

But there is another reason I feel such loss and that is because I can’t help but feel I had something to do with it.

At the end of the day – while it was out of love to ensure she didn’t suffer given her kidneys had stopped working – I/we made the decision when her life would end. And for all the compassion, care, gentleness and tears we shed, it is something I still feel guilty about.

Of course it is full of irrationality …

Somehow, I am of the belief that we could have nursed her back to health. That … had we not taken her to the vet that Saturday morning for a routine injection, she’d still be with us.

And maybe she would … except the likelihood is she would have ended up suffering far more as we wouldn’t have had the time to get her the specialist care that ensured she didn’t suffer more than she had to.

But that Saturday is burned into my mind.

That morning she was almost back to her old self.

Jumping on our bed in the morning. Wanting food. Doing her loud ‘surprise happy scream’ every time she saw us. We even said, “she’s back to her old self”.

The injection at the vets was just to help with her arthritis – nothing more – and yet a quick blood test set off a chain of events that led to us saying goodbye to her 48 hours later.

And while I know the reality of the situation is her kidneys had started to properly fail … in fact, her readings had more than doubled within the month – from an already terrible score of 400, which represents ‘stage 4’ out of 4 possible levels for a cat’s kidney health to just under 1000 – I still find the image of leaving our house looking well and returning ready for goodbye hard to reconcile. Hard to let go of my complicity in creating this situation – even though every vet we spoke to had already warned us of the severity of her situation and, if truth be known, we were aware that her previous illness a month earlier signified a major shift in her wellbeing. As I wrote in the post announcing her death, that shift felt similar to the final stages I saw my Dad go through before he passed.

Doesn’t make it any easier.

Doesn’t make being home any less challenging.

Because everything screams she is not there.

It’s all so heartbreaking. I keep wanting to ring the vet who helped her sleep to give her an injection to make her come back alive. To erase the decision we made, even though it was absolutely the right decision … a decision that I think even Rosie wanted. Especially as kidney failure gives a cat about 30 days before it all ends in tragedy and we were close to that timeline being hit and yet I want to ignore all that as I just want her back.

Hell, I keep finding myself saying, “come on Rozzie” when we go to bed … expecting to hear her feet make a little sound as she jumps off wherever she was to follow us down the stairs. But the hardest thing … the thing that absolutely reinforces she’s not longer with us is that I no longer have to check the front door when I leave in the morning or get in at night.

Each day, as I was heading out to work, Rosie would come upstairs with me. While this was because she hoped for extra Friskies – despite I had just given them to her downstairs – I would end up giving her a couple more because I couldn’t resist her face and it was the best way to ensure she didn’t sneakily follow me out of the front door where she felt a compulsion to explore, even though she knew she wasn’t allowed to. And at night, when she heard my car come down the drive, she’d be waiting at the glass next to the front door where I would see her silently meow to me through the glass as a way of saying hello, before trying to get through my legs when I walked in.

Occasionally she’d succeed and then proceed to sit under mine – or Jill’s – car until finally getting bored [or tempted with treats of falling in reach of one of our arms] but it was a daily ritual and now I can keep the door wide open and it literally fucks with my head.

I miss it. I miss all the things she did.

Even the stuff that annoyed me … like coming into the lounge at night – when Jill and Otis were asleep – and literally screaming at me, telling me it was time to come downstairs to bed with her.

She did a lot of screaming, but over the years she ‘educated us’ to what each one meant.

One was that she wanted to sleep under our sheets in bed and needed us to lift them up for her to go underneath. One was that she was hungry and wanted us to hand deliver treats rather than eat the food in her bowl. One was for us to open the lounge doors so she could go and sit out on her special bean bag cat bed on the deck so she could look out on the trees and feel the sun on her fur. In fact, the only time she didn’t scream was when we were actively looking for her, fearing she had got out when we came home and didn’t realise.

She did do that a couple of times, but never went far. Or for long.

She knew where home was.
She knew how well she was cared for.
She was definitely not a stupid cat.

And that’s why I can’t think about getting another. At least not yet.

I did look for cats who needed adopting very soon after Rosie had gone, but then I realised I wasn’t doing it to replace her, but to replicate her and that is both impossible and unfair to whoever we adopted.

So we need time. And while this may all sound dramatic for a cat, I point you to the post I wrote about Denise – the woman that I need to apologise to. Who gave me a very early warning as to what this would feel like. Because a pet is not just for life, a pet adds to your life and Rosie was – and will forever be – my first animal family member and I’d do anything, as I would for Mum and Dad, to have her back. Even for one day.

So regardless who you are or what you’re doing, don’t take the good shit for granted.

Because as annoying as it can be, it is better than it not being there.

And that is why – despite having experienced death throughout my life – Mum, Dad and Rosie’s passing has been the most significant.

What is interesting is that at my age – which I recently heard described as ‘the youngest of the old bunch’ – I am heading towards more of that. Including, my own one day … albeit hopefully a long time away. But it does make you re-evaluate what is important and who is important, which is leading to a lot of discussions and considerations about the future we want to have rather than the future we will get given.

But while there is a lot of sadness in this post, I want you to know I’m not in a bad way.

I was, but not now.

Part of that is because we have Rosie’s ashes with us and weirdly, it feels like she’s home.

Not exactly as we would like.

But exactly where she belongs.

And that, I’m increasingly learning, is the real definition of happiness, fulfillment and success.

______________________________________________________________________________________________

This is the last post I’ll be writing for 2 weeks as I’m off on a ridiculous trip for work.

Across Canada. Across America. And a quick visit to Australia. Quite bonkers.

But I am eternally grateful for it. Not just because of the air miles, but because it is being organised by a client who wants me – and 3 colleagues – to really understand who they are.

The details. The nuances. The values. The realities.

At a time where so many clients want simple, superficial and easy, they’re going out of their way to make it difficult for all of us … but in the most brilliant, rewarding and valuable way ever.

And for that we’re all eternally grateful.

Not because it’s rare, but because it means they give a fuck about what who they are, what they do and what they want us to create together.

They’re invested in making something great, rather than just expecting excellence without contributing anything to it beyond deadlines, mandatories and distain.

And you know what this ‘in it together’ approach achieves?

A team very, very motivated to do something extraordinary for them.

That’s contrary to what many companies think is the way to work with agencies or partners these days. Believing that if they treat people like disposable commodities, they’ll get them to work even harder for them. Which means they value you nothing other than the price they pay for something.

And while I appreciate what we do costs a lot of money and so being on top of things is important, I’ll tell you what ends up costing a whole lot more: treating partners like shit. Not because they’ll stop caring about what they do, but because they know you don’t even care about who you are.

Which is why we’re thrilled to be going on this trip … because nothing shows commitment like inconvenience.

See you on the 29th … as there’s a holiday in Auckland on the 28th, hahaha.


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