For the fainthearted . . .

Silly old fool

I stood last evening in Dalkey with tears running down my cheeks. I realized from a shop window that Mog had died. I am a silly ass.

Mog

Mog was an important character in our house in the early 90s. ‘Mog on Fox Night’ was one of the favourite books when the children were small, the antics of the fox cubs coming into Mog’s house causing hilarity and curiosity.

I had gone to the Spar to buy milk and stopped at the bookshop window. The shop was closed and darkened but there was plenty to see in the window, prominent among the books displayed was “Goodbye Mog” with Mog heading starwards.

Checking Amazon, I discovered that poor Mog actually died five years ago, I am very slow in catching up with news.

Why the death of a fictional cat should trigger tears, I’m not sure.

The battle against depression at this time of year is always difficult, the lack of daylight and the high emotional pressure attached to Christmas make it an uneasy time.

Mog is attached to memories of painful times in parish ministry, not that the people were difficult, but there were times of isolation and an overwhelming sense of loneliness. Ministry in traditional rural communities is just like that at times.

Maybe it was just the accumulation of a lot of sadness, culminating with burying a little white coffin last Saturday.

Clergymen are not meant to stand in the street in tears. I drove up through Killiney village thinking myself a complete eejit.

I understand “Goodbye Mog” is a very sensitive treatment of death and dying. I will buy a copy next time I am in Dalkey

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