
As a small child, the subject isn’t really something that I ever came to ponder over. Whilst visual images would always question the subject in advertising, TV and film, I never really had any preparation for it.
When you do have to face death head on, usually there is no dress rehearsal; it is a literal bomb of sadness and time for questioning everything that goes on.
When I was seventeen or eighteen the time the phone rang early one Sunday morning, around 7am. Waking me up, this could have of course been a wrong number or the curious adventures of a drunk seeing how many people he could upset. Looking back at things, these scenarios would have been better than the impending information I received of being told my granddad had died of a heart attack.
Being the first death in my family to deal with, this was of course upsetting and took a while to get over.
Pushing it to the back of my mind, life had to carry on and for me it was during a time when exams were being revised for in order to go to university and learn my limit on how many cheap pints I could shovel down my neck. So I did all the revision about exciting theories on social decay, the Italian revolution and the history of da Engliz language. After all that, it was time to wait and see what a man in a suit would mark me down as having.
A week before results day I had a dream, but not in a Martin Luther King way.
Instead, I could see my granddad sitting in front of me in his living room. He was speaking to me but no audio reached my ears. The dream didn’t last long but it was slightly distressing to vividly see a family member who I couldn’t quite communicate to properly, especially because he had passed away.
I told my mother about everything as I thought she’d get some comfort in what happened. Still, it bugged me about the meaning behind everything.
Turning to my idiot friend whose sister had a dream book, I asked what the meaning of everything meant and awaited the result and was told “I was going to receive good news.” Normally, I don’t believe the whole messages from the afterlife side; however I did stop everything I was doing, exactly one week later.
I’d passed all my exams and gotten in to my first choice for uni.
Weird.
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This Curious Thing was submitted by that nice young Matthew Laidlow off that Hecklerspray.
You can read more Curious Things, or find out what this Curious Things thing is all about (and perhaps submit your own).
Dream well.





