KINDNESS IS AMPLIFIED BY GRIEF — and so is unkindness

Fiona Scott
10 min readDec 30, 2021
Dougie Scott with his granddaughter Georgia in the year she won the Dolestan Cup

When you lose someone you love, grief shows itself in so many ways. When we lost Dougie, my father in law, before Christmas 2021, it was very sad and yet we knew it was his choice.

Dougie, who was 79 at the time of his passing, had vascular dementia, many physical ailments and over the last two years his world had become smaller and smaller. He was less and less physically and mentally able. Given his wife, Lettie, had passed suddenly in 2019, there’s no doubt his zest for life had gone. It was clear to all of us in our family that the only way for him was downhill and when that final chest infection came we knew it was his way of making his own choice. He refused medication and the medics opted for palliative care only.

Regardless of those circumstances, here was a man who had led a full and active life for 77 years and that’s to be celebrated and honoured. We are all blessed to have been related to and to have known him. In my case, my father died when I was just a year into my relationship with my husband, so Dougie was the closest person I had as a ‘dad’ for the last 24 years. Losing him is like having a hole shot into the middle of our family and it will take a lot of healing.

Many of you will be familiar with what I’m saying here. Grief is a process, a movement, different for every family member…

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Fiona Scott
Fiona Scott

Written by Fiona Scott

Fiona has been a UK journalist for more than 30 years as well as being a freelance tv producer director. She’s also had her own media consultancy since 2008.

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