THE IMPORTANCE OF LIFE STORY WRITING

Dad arrived in the mail yesterday. Due to the extremely reductive process of cremation, this formerly handsome man of 90 kilograms could now fit into a small cardboard box. If it were possible, he would be laughing at the absurdity of his final journey. Such is the nature of modern-day death and the available option when circumstances dictate something less than a full-service funeral.

Cycling home from the Post Office, with dad in my backpack, I wondered if it was his entire body in that container, and if not, which part was it, and where was the rest? It mattered little. I had seen his lifeless body and kissed its cold forehead. As a non-believer in the fanciful concept of heaven, there were no prayers. I had simply whispered to him, ‘Wherever you are going, wait for me there. I will be along soon enough.’ And that, I do believe.

Now, what is left of him sits in my office, watching and waiting. I miss him already.

This good and honest man who had shared his Phantom comics and cold beer with me for decades had done the ultimate disappearing act – here one day and permanently gone the next. I had once cut hair from his manly chest and stuck it to my own bare one in the misguided belief that it would encourage growth, and I could be like him. I had sat on his broad shoulders as a young son and later we had kicked a football and played golf together. I had learned the meaning of integrity from him, the value of honesty and the benefits of hard work. He had left his own small mark on the world and a smudge of notoriety, but that was never his intention. Neither was being sucked dry by the voracious appetite of cancer that would transform him into a miniature of his once powerful horse-breaking self.

I remember very clearly the last time I saw him. I was going away for a couple of weeks and said, ‘I’ll see you soon.’ He lay there, all skin and bone, and nodded. But his watery eyes told the truth. I didn’t see it then, but I do now. He knew.

We never spoke much of living, or of dying, even when the end of one and the approach of the other were so close. I wish we had, but men have the ability to talk at length on matters no deeper than a puddle.

The cycle of life is inevitable and yet so difficult to accept. He never once told me he loved me, although I am sure he did. And now, with the harsh reality of death, I realise I had also failed in that admission, and it is time to make amends.

Love you, Dad.

LSA member Michael Taylor, from Number 41, is a full-time writer who specialises in biographies and memoirs.

In Michael’s words: “I don’t write boring.  I do write creative non-fiction; lively, readable, entertaining stories. Because you don’t want your grandchildren to stop reading after three pages.

You want to gently hold your reader’s hand and take them on a journey – sometimes walking, sometimes running, sometimes stopping in shock or wonderment as you laugh, and cry, together.”

Visit the Queensland member page to find Michael’s details.