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Thank you for posting this. This Olympics has opened the flood-gates for me. I was so choked up when Mo won his second gold medal last night that I couldn’t speak. I’m only hoping this doesn’t spill into my professional role. Emotional involvement is good but blubbing as I read the eulogy is not!
Apologies for including someone from the Dominican Republic, I now notice. Oh, well. And well done to him, too.
Mo’s race was astonishing. Such a lovely man!
Perhaps celebrants should set the example at funerals?
What a challenging final question, Charles. Does it depend on how one cries? Some people tend to issue forth a quiet tear, which rolls gently down their features. Noble, touching, etc. My face tends to pinch up, a small release of snot may be not far away, and so are gulps. Less noble and inspiring… One does have to speak, after all! But perhaps the audible effect of someone just about managing to hold it together (my more likely reaction) is good enough – shows we are not women and men of steel. Closer to milk pudding actually, in my… Read more »
I guess it does depend very much on how one does it, GM, doesn’t it? The crem timetable abhors a hiatus, so taking a time out for group bawling is not going to be a runner. Actually, any sort of choked standstill is likely to be irksome to any number of more buttoned-up grievers and, if celebrants are there to hold the space, they are also there to hold themselves together. Only a sociopath could do the job without being moved, and the possibilities for emotional ambush are many — a poem, a piece of music, a tremor in the… Read more »
Splendid, Charles, I’ve been practising the steadfastness of jaw in front of the mirror, will let you know how it goes next time I get caught out!
and for the ladies – a gentle dabbing of a lacey ‘kerchief whilst steadfastly refusing to relinquish one’s heart to its own devices…
Oh gosh yes, Evelyn, absolutely — something that can be practised whether moved or not, an advantage you laydees have over us chumps, I mean chaps.