Update - April 26th 2010
Well, we did it. Peter & Matt ran London Marathon 2010 for the Child Bereavement Charity.
Huge thanks to everyone who has contributed to the 'Running for Gus' fund, and for all the messages of support.
Special thanks must go to Michael Odell, who used his journalistic contacts to help get our story into The Times on the Saturday before race day. Thanks also to Fiona MacDonald-Smith of that newspaper for featuring Gus and the Child Bereavement Charity. The article generated some very kind messages of support and donations from people who prior to reading it had not heard of the CBC.
The fund has also been boosted by a donation of £3000 from The Spielman Charitable Trust. Christopher Moorsom of the Trust said "We support young people and children in the South West, and we are delighted to support such a worthwhile cause."
So, unless you've already read it already in The Times. Here is our story.
"On
the afternoon after burying my son I went for a run. With the rain pouring down
I ran across the Clifton Suspension Bridge, into Leigh Woods, down to the
riverbank and then back up the side of the Avon Gorge via Nightingale Valley.
Running up the valley is a challenge. It’s rough track, in places it’s very
steep, and it just goes on and on and on. The only way to approach it is to
attack. So I did. Ran at the gorge rather than up it. Ran at it with a rare
fury.
Since
that day in February 2006, I’ve run half marathons, cross country marathons, an
ultra marathon across Dartmoor, even an 125 mile kayak marathon non stop from
Devizes London. But I’ve never done any of them for charity. Never raised a
penny to fund the hospitals which cared for Gus in his short life. Why not? Am
I an ungrateful, uncaring monster? Maybe, but the simple answer is - I couldn’t.
I
couldn’t raise money because fund raising involves facing up; going public;
talking about the cause you are campaigning for. I couldn’t do that. Because I
couldn’t talk about Gus. So I could go running, and I could think about him. In
fact in many ways those races and the training I did for them were where I did
my grieving. For away from them I had to be a supportive husband to Gabrielle,
a strong father to Cecelia and then, later, to little Beatrice. But talk about
the trauma of losing your son? No chance.
Now
this was quite unhealthy – mentally that is, as pretty soon I was as physically
fit as I’d ever been in my life. So
was my wife, Gabrielle, who had also embarked upon a rigorous exercise
programme with a personal trainer. But Gabrielle wasn’t in as great shape
mentally as she could have been either. As the warm, open woman that she is
Gabrielle could talk about Gus. But who to? To family and friends obviously,
but where were the trained therapists and counsellors who could help us begin to
make sense of the trauma we had been through? Nowhere to be found. So I
continued running, and Gabrielle kept crying and not sleeping, and life, which
had seemed quite bad, got by degrees, a little bit worse.
Of
course, we’d had a little bit of counselling during Gus’s short life, but that
had mainly seemed to involve earnest individuals telling us that we were likely
to get divorced because most marriages don’t survive trauma, or to try to put
our grief in a box, and then put that box on a shelf. We didn’t find either
piece of advice particularly helpful. Then of course, the worst happened. Gus,
who had hypoplastic left heart syndrome, contracted MRSA in Birmingham Children’s
Hospital. We got him home to Bristol for Christmas, but he never shook off the
infection. He died on a February evening after emergency surgery. The surgeon
and team battled for as long as they could, until, finally, we were led into a
small, empty room and had the ‘nothing more we can do’ conversation. The tubes
in his arm, and the one threaded down through his nose and into his stomach
were gently removed and he was handed over to Gabrielle, being kept alive by a
handheld respirator operated by a nurse. After a few minutes, we took the
respirator away and Gus died. His body was taken away. We left the hospital and
walked home. We were asked to come back the next day. When we did, we were
asked if we would like to see his body. Given a leaflet on burial options.
Asked if we wanted to have brass casts made of his hands or feet. Our dazed,
traumatised answers were no and we left the hospital to do what it does best –
caring and treating for the living.
His
funeral was delayed for many weeks due, apparently, to the chronic shortage of
paediatric pathologists and the consequent delay in the post mortem. We had
sensitive and thoughtful meetings with the clinical team wherein we discussed
his condition, the MRSA infection, and his death. What we didn’t have was any
professional psychological support. So when I went running in the afternoon following
his funeral, I can see now that whilst it might have made me feel better, I was
in actual fact running away. Physically fit, Gabrielle and I were mentally ill.
How
did we get from that state to where we are now? Where I can not only talk about
Gus, but write about him here. Counselling. Therapy. From a trained,
experienced professional. How did we get it? Pure chance. Through one of
Gabrielle’s old work colleagues in London we were alerted to the Child
Bereavement Charity, and in particular its Founder Patron Julia Samuel. Why
hadn’t we heard about it before? Well it struggles for public profile, for
media exposure, to raise funds. Julia will admit that the CBC is not as sexy as
‘Fashion Targets Breast Cancer’, or as headline grabbing as the ‘Make a Wish
Foundation’. But who does the more important work? Should we, as a society,
direct our charitable donations toward sending terminally ill children to
Disneyland, or to funding the provision of dedicated bereavement counsellors at
every major children’s hospital in the UK? You don’t get to meet Mickey Mouse
with the CBC, but what you do get is prolonged psychological support for
recently bereaved parents, brothers, sisters, grandparents and carers. As Julia says “
the terrible pain of
the death can’t be prevented, but the surviving parents and children deserve,
at the very least, appropriate well informed psychological support at such a
difficult time.”
Bereaved
parents, grandparents and siblings deserve better support than is currently
available. But death isn’t sexy. Death isn’t sentimental. There’s no cure.
Never will be. For Cancer Relief we can run in the ‘Race for Life’. What’s the
CBC equivalent? The race for death?
We
called Julia, and she invited us to see her at her house in Somerset. Over the
course of a few months we saw her regularly. The sessions were emotionally and psychologically
exhausting and painful. Far harder than running, or lifting weights. Step by
step though, we were able to analyse and examine the trauma of Gus’s short life
and death. What’s more, the truly amazing and wonderful thing about such a
process is that once you’ve started on it, you begin to not only make sense of
what happened, but you begin to grow as a person, to connect with the most
fundamental, important aspects of your character and the relationships you have
with those around you. It might sound absurd. It might sound amusing to those
who think of me as a tough, cynical individual. But in dying, Gus has made me a
better person. It took the work of Julia and the CBC to help me see that and
feel good about it. In a recent e mail, Julia explained it to me:
“Loss
that is processed and integrated psychologically, means that long term negative
consequences can be prevented, and people even talk about feeling more alive,
that it changes their perception of the meaning of life, valuing it more
intensely. This has been termed ‘post-traumatic growth’.
Now
we were very, very lucky. Julia saw us on her own time at home. The resources
of the CBC are very limited. They do what they can and they want to do more. I now do less running, and more thinking
and feeling – I believe because I’ve had proper bereavement counselling and
therapy. Many others will not be
so lucky. We need, as a society, to have a more honest and open attitude to
death, particularly traumatic death, and the long term effects it has on
people. The CBC talk about ‘breaking the silence’, about lifting the taboo on
talking about death. Hopefully those of you who’ve made it this far will help
to lift this taboo by sponsoring me.
Thanks for taking the time to visit my JustGiving page. Donating through JustGiving is simple, fast and totally secure. Your details are safe with JustGiving – they’ll never sell them on or send unwanted emails. Once you donate, they’ll send your money directly to the charity and make sure Gift Aid is reclaimed on every eligible donation by a UK taxpayer.