I first heard that Grandpa had died at 7pm on Friday. As it happened, I had an offer from fizit to join her at the Japan­ese baths anyway, so I went there and talked about Grandpa and griev­ing and loss with her and bun­ni­kins and eye­of­bast. That was sooth­ing and com­fort­ing, thanks guys.

I went home and wrote poetry and booked a flight to Sydney for the funeral. Mum said not to worry about rush­ing up, so I booked it for Sunday morning.

Sat­urday I spent tidy­ing the house and writ­ing more poetry. I find music an incred­ible com­fort. I found a par­tic­u­lar song going around in my head, so I played the tape Jonathan made me ages ago with it on. I played the soundtrack to Three Col­ours: Blue, Kieslowski’s beau­ti­ful movie about grief. I played Train to Okinawa, the duet album from Riley Lee (shaka­ha­chi flute) and Peter Grayling (cello). I played Jeff Buckley’s Grace.

I e‑mailed Jonathan asking if he’d play that song for Grandpa on the show (“Becom­ing some­thing other” by Chris Knox). (Thanks for doing that, Jonathan, and for the ded­ic­a­tion – “For an old sabre-rat­tler who passed away this week” – very appro­pri­ate and much appreciated).

I went to sleazemon­key’s birth­day party on Sat­urday night. I spent a lot of it just star­ing into space, but the fairy bread was good and I enjoyed watch­ing the food fight. Happy birth­day, babe. 

I spoke to Brandon on the phone when I got home and told him what was happening.

Sunday was spent pre­par­ing Grand­ma’s place for the funeral crowd the next day. Com­fort­ing Mum and Grandma, talk­ing with my Aunt. Tried to keep calm in the midst of the usual familial stress. Bought Dad a father’s day present. In the after­noon, the rabbi came around to talk to us about Grandpa and try to get an idea of what we wanted him to say. We exchanged memor­ies and talked about him. That was good. I hadn’t real­ised he and Grandma played Scrabble every day for most of the 65 years they were married.

Got the train down to Woonona to have dinner with Brandon, which was really good. We went for a walk to the beach and I told him about Grandpa and let some of the ten­sion of the day ebb away. In the morn­ing, we went for the briefest walk on another beach, right out­side Brandon’s house, and it was the best way to start the day.

Train back to Artar­mon, calm as any­thing, look­ing out the window at the ocean and the national park near Stan­well Tops, peace­ful and ready. Went to the cemetery and stood out­side the ohel, people I barely knew walk­ing up to me and wish­ing me long life, old friends and exten­ded family coming up and hug­ging me. My old, dear friend Joseph, who’s now a cantor, held me tight and that was won­der­ful. My cousin Vanessa and my second cousin Joanna were a strength too.

The ser­vice was amaz­ingly good for a reli­gious ser­vice. Rabbi Lampert is the old rabbi I grew up with, and he spoke beau­ti­fully about Grandpa, using all the bits of inform­a­tion we’d given him. I was also amazed that the rabbi changed the text so that every time the tra­di­tional text said ‘men’, Rabbi said “mor­tals” and every time it said “he” he changed the sen­tence around so it either said “we” or “they”. Even more incred­ibly, he changed every ref­er­ence to “Lord” to either “God” or “Adonai”. We just had a ser­vice with an ungendered god!!!!! Joseph sang beau­ti­fully and I’m so glad it was him doing it.

We then went to the graveside and lowered the coffin. My mother, aunt and grand­mother recited the mourn­er’s kad­dish and the rabbi tossed the tra­di­tional three shovels of soil onto the coffin. Then he offered the shovel to my grand­mother, mother and aunt to do the same. This is another tra­di­tion his­tor­ic­ally only avail­able to men… I took the shovel in my turn and put my three scoops of dirt onto the coffin. What a hard task, and what a firm and final sense of closure.

Vanessa and I walked back together, quietly dis­cuss­ing the day. Back at Grand­ma’s, with 23 people for lunch, we grandkids did our best to keep out of the way until it was time to clean up and then we took over the kit­chen. Grandma needed space, so after we’d packed off the vis­it­ors and Mum and Aunty Joan had gone, my sis­ters, Melanie and Selena, Selen­a’s hus­band Mark, Vaness and Joanna and I headed for the pub to have our own little wake, toss back a few whis­keys for the old man and cel­eb­rate his life, as Brandon keeps saying. We spoke about books with secret com­part­ments that Grandpa made for us; about the world map with pins in all the cities he’d vis­ited that we used to mis­chiev­ously alter when we stayed there as chil­dren; about play­ing hide and seek and get­ting in trouble for turn­ing the light on in the cup­board under the stairs where all the wine was kept; about the scent of dis­in­fect­ant in the down­stairs bath­room and Grand­pa’s Inter­dens that he had shipped in from Amer­ica; about his col­lec­tions of everything – Japan­ese dolls, hag­gadahs, you name it. That was really good, not only for that, but just for good dis­cus­sions about a lot of things in our lives. 

We went back to Grand­ma’s think­ing we had an hour before the minyan star­ted, but with people turn­ing up early, we ended up scoff­ing dinner in the kit­chen and then help­ing lay out cakes. Mostly people I didn’t know this time, but that was okay. Grandma lit the shiva candle and the rabbi – Rabbi Kolya, this time, a woman I’d never met – was won­der­ful, again a non-gendered ser­vice, although very reli­gious, she picked up quickly that Grandpa was cul­tur­ally jewish but agnostic and high­lighted the parts of the ser­vice that wished for peace in the world and har­mony between nations. My aunt made a speech about Grandpa, my mother read Mary Frye’s “Do not stand at my grave and weep”, Selena spoke about how Grand­pa’s book bind­ing had encour­aged her to become a con­ser­vator, I spoke a little and read the poems I wrote and Vanessa spoke and then sang “Sum­mer­time” in her gor­geous voice. It was beau­ti­ful and perfect.

There were minor stresses during the day, from the usual and expec­ted quar­ters, and I didn’t let them get to me. It was the best send off it could have been, I think. Good bye, Grandpa, we’ll miss you.