Ah Gong and I

Let’s just say I don’t do death.

I’ve never had to deal with it, never thought about it, possibly because I never had a pet, and never had family or friends who’d passed on or contracted anything major. People lived, in my family, and lived quite long.

Especially my grandma and grandpa, who seemed to just go on and on. If that’s a skewed perspective of old age that might be because I have seen them go on everyday from the moment I was born: they have lived with us forever.

Ah Gong was always in the next room. He never laughed; he sniggered, he chuckled slyly, he was grumpy as hell — in the most endearing way possible. He was a traditional Chinese man — born in China in 1930, adopted then brought to Malaysia, saw his adopted father beaten to death by Japanese soldiers during the war — who, for most intents and purposes, kept his feelings (and thoughts) to himself, avoiding actions or words of affection like the plague, but was the sort of man you warmed to anyway.

I like to think he waited for me long enough, given how well-timed the whole incident was — he only fell drastically sick when I was due to return, and I at least managed a week or so with him, despite his sedate state, despite how he was barely there at all. I had expected my trip to the Middle East and London this last time to be like any other — I’d be back, he’d pretend he barely cared, but he’d get quite quickly to the only way he seems to know how to show any love: verbal-sparring with me in our secret language, Teochew.

Instead, I got back this time and found the house strangely empty. No Ah Gong pottering about finding things to amuse himself, no Ah Gong waking me up with 8 alarm clocks and 1 mobile phone call, no Ah Gong to play hide and seek with when it came to the subject of how cigarettes mysteriously appear in my bag all the time, in increasingly strange (or secret) compartments or methods of concealment. He always found them, he always out-talked me, he was always right, he figured out stuff quicker than I could think, and he laughed and smirked because he liked being right much more than the fact that I was doing what I shouldn’t. In his last days Ah Gong sat mostly on his wheelchair, his mind still sharp and observant, and his temperament still endearingly grumpy.

But life and love doesn’t go on and on, I’ve come to find the hard way, and as he lies there I can imagine him saying: every single time you go abroad you buy me a clock, and the one time you haven’t I’ve really gone.

In Mandarin to “gift a clock” can also mean to send someone off at their funeral. It’s thus taboo to give your elders time-keeping devices of any sort. But we had a special relationship based on the two great loves of his life: torchlights and alarm clocks. He never said I love you, or I care about you, but when he did, he gave you a torch. Or two.

Ah Gong and I

Ah Gong and I

Ah Gong and I

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  • fairygodlover
    --hugs--
  • My condolences also. I'm sorry for your loss.

    Your words are very touching and you are able to give the measure of this man to the people who don't know him.

    After reading your words, I think that the best clock he ever had was you. Seeing you 'ticking' through life must have made him very proud, even without him saying the words...
  • Winnie Lim is right... he will be supporting you and taking care of you from over there where he is now. Our beloved ones who have gone on ahead are not far off, Adri. You will often sense his presence and love, and I hope you will open to the reality of that experience when you have it. The communication with him is now direct heart-to-heart transmission and untrammeled by this crude matter our bodies are made of, and the vagueries of human speech... I'm so sorry you miss him, Adri, and he misses you, too. He's fine, but he misses you, and he wants you to know that.
  • Oh looks like you and your Ah Gong have had a special relationship. This makes me miss my grandmother. She was born in 1910 in Amoy, China (Province of Fukien), but we're not sure about the stated 1910 because she, too, was adopted and brought to the Philippines. I miss my grandma (I live far away from her) and I would be really sad if she 'moved on'.
  • Anand
    Condolences to you & your family, Adri.

    You certainly have some great shots with him, evidence of your much time spent together. That's a big blessing I feel, cos not many ppl can say they have had that with their grandparents.

    Nice touch with the change in your Twitter pic as well ...
  • amanduhhh
    My condolences. Although I've always secretly wished that my grandparents would go on forever and ever too. I've never had to deal with death and I know it's going to be devastating when I finally have to one day. I just hope this day does not come any time soon.

    I hope you know your grandfather knows you love him in spite of and because.
  • Death is the ultimate journey of life. What you have written brought back tonnes of memories for myself. I'm pretty sure both of you shared a special bond together.

    Fret not, time will heal everything. The memories will stay. The thoughts linger. One thing is for certain, life goes on.

    Condolences to you and your family. May you move on from here stronger than you ever had before.
  • Mere words cannot describe how I felt while reading this article. I just wish convey my condolences. Your Ah Gong will be silently proud of you from above.
  • I love this entry, and your photos. My grandmother just passed too, certain circumstances meant that I was never close to her, but still when she passed I felt that immense sense of....loss in a way that could be described as having a rug being pulled away from under you, everything else remains more or less in their original places, but you know something's different, and will never be the same.

    My condolences, Adri.
  • We all deal with death around us differently (others' deaths, that is — we deal with our own deaths differently as well, but that's a separate issue). I lost both my grandfathers in the past two years and I can't say I could summon up such strong feelings of paternal (grand-paternal?) love and nostalgia as you have.

    I wish you and your family well, and hope that your grandfather's passing will help to unite your family in kinship and love.
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