My Grandma as a child outside the Taj Mahal
My writing has always been inspired by my Grandma; as a
child she would take my hand and tell me stories about her life as we walked
through the foothills of the Himalayas, winding between the rhododendron trees.
As soon as I was old enough, I went off
in search of my own adventures. Later, when I was pursuing my dream of being
published, the rejections allowed my self-doubt to flourish but she was never
fazed by them. Just keep going, she would say. So I did.
I’m grateful to hold some strong women as role models. And Grandma is one of them. As a young woman she escaped
an arranged engagement to a man much older than her, and fell in love and
married my Grandpa in India. He had been
a prisoner of war in a Japanese camp during WWII when he was just eighteen
years old, which Grandma said gave him a seize the day attitude.
When people scorned at Grandma for being an opera singer in
her early twenties, declaring it would give her a reputation as a loose woman,
she ignored them all and did it anyway. And
in 1950, when the community she was in turned against her good friend Alfred because
he was gay, she refused to be part of that community anymore.
My second book is very much inspired by my Grandma’s life
and her love of animals. She travelled with my Grandpa, their four children, a
border collie, a Pekinese and a joey kangaroo from Australia to India by boat
and land, before ending up on the Himalayan foothill I grew up on. They lived
there with Alfred. He was a painter and my Grandpa was a photographer.
My Grandma died on Friday, the same day the rhododendrons
bloomed. They were her favourite flowers. Every time I walk past them my heart
breaks, I miss her terribly. Each time, I take a deep breath and remember that she’s
here in other ways: in my heart and memories; through her stories; the people
that knew her and the kick-ass grandchildren she leaves behind.
By Jess Butterworth
@j_t_butterworth (twitter)
@jessbutterworthauthor (facebook)
4 comments:
She sounds wonderful!
A very warm and loving tribute, a delight to read.
Ah, Jess. So sorry. A beautiful tribute to an amazing-sounding lady.
What beautiful photos to have of her.
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