Notes I wrote while trying to keep going: January

then I’ll grieve

My mum had just died and everything went strange around the edges.

Work felt different. People didn’t know what to say. Some said nothing. Some said too much. I kept logging on anyway.

There was so much life admin.

No one tells you about the list you inherit when your next of kin dies. The accounts. The forms. The calls. The repeating of the sentence: my mum has died.

Life admin is hard at the best of times. Doing it while numb is something else entirely.

On the phone, people tried to empathise. I know they did. But they heard my mum died and translated it into task to complete.
I could hear the click in their voice.
“Oh gosh.”
“I’m so sorry.”
“I’ll just close her account then.”

They didn’t hear my confusion. Or the resentment. Or the way every call felt like another weight added to an already full day.

I kept thinking: I’ll just get through this bit.
I’ll do this call.
I’ll send that email.
I’ll finish this list.

Then I’ll grieve.

Grief became something postponed. Something scheduled for later. Something I’d get to once everything else was dealt with properly.

But the list didn’t end.
It just reshuffled itself.

Somewhere in all of this, life kept moving. Dinners still needed made. Bedtimes still came around. The world didn’t stop spinning, it just slowed enough for me to notice how tired I was.

I didn’t fall apart. I didn’t have the energy.

So I kept going.
And kept thinking:
then I’ll grieve.

These are the kinds of moments Daydot was built for.

Why Daydot exists

Daydot was built around documenting life as it’s lived.
The calm after fear.
The stories that don’t need fixing.
The things you notice once you stop rushing past them.

Seas & Sunrises
Seas & Sunrises

Seas & Sunrises

Half-Feral, Fully Fabulous
Half-Feral, Fully Fabulous

Half-Feral, Fully Fabulous

Mountains & Glens
Mountains & Glens

Mountains & Glens

Forests & Rivers
Forests & Rivers

Forests & Rivers

Cosmic Beyond
Cosmic Beyond

Cosmic Beyond