Category: Kate and bereavement

  • If last year was lively on Eponymous (aka timdracup.com), 2025 has been positively manic. In 2024, I published 26 posts and thought that was good going. But this is my 41st post of 2025. That includes 15 book reviews, 12 musical posts in my Ouroboros series, five posts devoted to our progress along various English…

    That Was 2025
  • It would have been Kate’s 64th birthday on 4 July 2025, had her life not ended in the Princess Alice Hospice on 13 July 2017, shortly after her 56th and final birthday. Every year we make two memorial pilgrimages to the place where we scattered her ashes, on her birthday and on Boxing Day. And…

    #Kateday25
  • It’s been a lively year here on Eponymous (aka timdracup.com) This is my 26th post: I’ve been writing the equivalent of a new post each fortnight. Exactly half have been book reviews. There were also ten travelogues, one Dracup family history blockbuster and one bereavement-related post in memory of my late wife, Kate. Starting with…

    That was 2024
  • On 4 July 2024 there is a General Election here in the UK. It would also have been Kate’s 63rd birthday, had she not succumbed to breast cancer on 13 July 2017, shortly after completing her 56th year. As is now customary, we shall walk to the place where her ashes were scattered, celebrate her…

    #Kateday24
  • As the sixth anniversary of Kate’s death approaches – only just preceded by her 62nd Birthday on 4 July – I find myself reflecting once more on how different life would be had she lived. Would we have retired together, Devonwards, as we had vaguely planned, and would our relationship have blossomed in that new…

    #Kateday23
  • Monday 4 July 2022 would have been Kate’s 61st Birthday. And Wednesday 13 July 2022 will be the fifth anniversary of her untimely death from breast cancer, at the Princess Alice Hospice, Esher, in the summer of 2017. As the years pass by, increasingly I prefer to commemorate and celebrate her birthday, allowing her death…

    #Kateday22
  • Maureen Dracup, my mother, died on 14 January 2022. She was ninety-one and succumbed to dementia. My brother and I finally managed to extract her from hospital in the autumn of 2021, by which point she required palliative care, but could at least spend her last days at home. She had been taken in after…

    Saying Farewell to Mum
  • Sunday 4 July 2021 would have been Kate’s 60th birthday. It was the day she planned to join me in retirement – and we had vague notions of relocating somewhere more tranquil and beautiful. We would have thrown her a huge party of course; given her another special day to remember for the rest of…

    #Kateday21
  • ‘ This post encapsulates my further understanding and experience of bereavement, acquired since the third anniversary of Kate’s death. Three Years Bereaved (July 2020) explored my downward spiral into poor mental health, provoked by my father’s death so soon after Kate’s, which somehow extended and amplified my grief beyond my capacity to endure it. I…

    Escaping our Bereavement Comfort Zones
  • Kate would have been 59 on 4 July 2020 and the third anniversary of her death falls on 13 July, just nine days later. It feels timely to reflect on my bereavement again; something I last attempted more than two years ago. So much has happened between then and now – some amazing; much dreadful…

    Three Years Bereaved
  • It’s now almost three years since Kate left us. And, on 4 July 2020, she would have celebrated her 59th birthday. We always try to make Kate’s birthday a celebration: a day for family and friends to raise a glass, remembering her fondly and sharing afresh all the fun, laughter, love and happiness she brought…

    Happy #Kateday20!
  • .  As our partners trace their graceful arabesques above They pause; stoop down to guide our own more rustic figure And thus we weave the skeins of new-found love. . Emerging from our past lives’ wreckage, our fondest dreams stove In; what should we do but grow love from grief? How else endure As our…

    Dancing Partners
  • .  When my wife Kate was still alive I published three posts dedicated to exploring whether I might qualify as borderline Aspergers. Kate had become convinced that this explained the difference between her personality and mine – and the difficulty I experienced in understanding and responding to her emotional needs. She read several books on…

    Aspie no more? How has bereavement changed me?
  • . When Kate died in July 2017 I discussed with some of her closest friends and relatives the idea of meeting annually on her birthday to remember her. I thought this would be a fitting tribute to someone whose commitment to friendship and family was extraordinary – whose greatest gift was her immense capacity for…

    #Kateday2018
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  • .  I’ve this unquenchable thirst to slake Must slough off the shrouds of solitude While cautiously inching awake, . My erstwhile love I’ll not forsake, Stranded in desolate quietude, I’ve this unquenchable thirst to slake. . Stay blank fear, do not mistake This tremulous interlude While cautiously inching awake . Resolve the conundrum; so much…

    Resolution
  • This was my contribution to Kate’s funeral service, which took place at Kingston Cemetery and Crematorium on 31 July 2017: . I first met Kate at university in October 1979. She was 18; I was 20. We each had lots of red hair. We drank beer, went to many gigs together and became firm friends.…

    From Kate’s funeral service
  • Kate Dracup (nee Jones) was born on 4 July 1961. We were married on 15 October 1994. She died on 13 July 2017 at the age of 56. I miss her badly.

    Kate

Eponymous, better known as timdracup.com, contains long-form posts drafted by a real human being. Everything is free to read. I specialise in Dracup family history, British walking trails and literary book reviews. But you’ll also find writing about music, bereavement and much else besides.

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