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UK Worldwide Candle Lighting 2020
The Compassionate Friends, UK Worldwide Candle Lighting on 13 December 2020 is available to view on YouTube on The Compassionate Friends UK channel. If you weren't able to be at this special event of remembrance and light last Sunday or would like to view this wonderfully connecting evening together again then please click on the image above.
2020 Book of Remembrance
Throughout December, you can post a message of remembrance in our 2020 Book for your son or daughter, brother or sister, or grandchild. You can also include a photograph with your message if you wish.
There are so many beautiful faces remembered in our Book of Remembrance. You might like to just read about all these special sons and daughters, and brothers and sisters, r perhaps add a photo and dedication yourself to your loved one.
We will be thinking about each and every special person in the Book throughout December and the winter holidays and at our Candle Lighting on Sunday 13 December at 7 pm
Post your photo and remembrance message here (until 31 December 2020)
(If you don't upload a photograph a picture of a candle will accompany your message).
Hope of finding the mourning light through the mist of grief
Andrea Corrie, author of Into The Mourning Light, and also Living In The Mourning Light, spoke to a full house at a gathering of bereaved parents online on the evening of the 11th of November 2020.
It is a profound thing for bereaved parents, grandparents and siblings to be able to hear the thoughts and experiences of others who have passed through this kind of bereavement themselves, and have been able to use that experience to help others.
In Andrea's case, she has written the books and also continues to help others by her talks. She spoke honestly about the pain that she still feels when recounting the circumstances of the death of her son James by drowning in 2005.
She does not blur the edges of passing through that experience, but speaks frankly about the intensity of the journey, but also of the hope of finding the "mourning light".
Andrea spoke about the toolbox which can be helpful on that journey, especially in the early days and about the need to hear of other's journeys, and the self help of endorphin releasing exercise and the healing practices of creativity in its many forms, and in her particular case, in writing.
Grenades and Guillotines with Cathy Rentzenbrink
Over 130 bereaved parents and siblings joined us online on the evening of 13th October 2020 to hear author Cathy Rentzenbrink speak movingly and with huge honesty about the unpredictability of grief and the impact the early loss of her brother Matty had on her life and her family.
Bereaved siblings, Hayley and Lily were at Cathy's talk and have reviewed the evening.
Read Hayley's review here.
Read Lily's words here.
Bereaved mum, Shirley, also listened to Cathy and has shared her reflections with us.
“There is a life out there for you”.
These are the words that stayed with me after Cathy’s talk. They are the words that she would go back and tell her younger self after the death of her brother Matty following a car accident when she was 17. She wouldn’t want to try to fool herself and say that none of it matters but she would want her to know that, in the future, she would be glad to be alive.
Matty was in a coma for eight years, and in the space between him living and dying, Cathy still had a role; she was still a sister. She had loved being a sister and, after Matty died, she wasn’t any more. Cathy felt that her family had functioned like a car with four wheels, and then one of the wheels came off and left them struggling down the road. The family were in balance when Matty was here because he was `her’ person and then she was on her own in the back of the car.
When a tragedy like this happens, the grenades mentioned in Cathy’s title explode and `take someone out’ and the shrapnel hurts everyone else, so we become the walking wounded. The guillotine refers to a memory from her school days, when the sharp blade would come down and slice the paper in two – now the blade is the harsh reality that separates our old life from the new.
A Good Mourning
Thank you to the wonderful Maria Ahern for her wise, honest, moving and inspiring words on Wednesday evening. Maria shared with over 150 bereaved parents and family members her personal perspectives and reflections since the loss of her only child, her son James, and how she has found ways to have a 'good mourning'. Thank you to everyone who attended. It was wonderful to see you all. Some feedback from Maria's talk is below.
‘Look
up.
Blink. Breathe. Repeat.
And then, not just a Good Mourning, you’ll
have had a Good Day.’
(Maria Ahern - from Maggie Pinsent's report below)
Read Maggie's review of Maria's talk here
"Maria saw that she needed to survive positively and chose to survive by co-existing with James and Grief in a Good Mourning. “U” are central in the Mo”u”rning and you need to find your own equilibrium". Judith Pinfold
Read Judith's review of Maria's talk here

Maria's conversations with James on Facebook are here
More about The James Ahern Foundation
Our next guest for our online series of talks is author, Cathy Rentzenbrink, on 13 October at 7 pm. Find out more and register here.
Support our work
Each year thousands of parents suffer the loss of a son or a daughter. Please help TCF to support families in their time of greatest need.
Tell us what you think
Whatever your contact with TCF we encourage you to give us feedback so that we can continue to improve our support.