A new hope

Various images of Emma Charlesworth and her daughter taken on 4 May over the years

Star Wars Day. May 4th. For someone who has famously never seen Star Wars, there is a certain amount of irony given how many things have happened to me on this day to make it memorable:

  • 2004 – Started my PwC career.
  • 2009 – Found out I was pregnant with our first child.
  • 2010 – Met some people who’d become incredibly important to me.
  • 2016 – Won a magnum of vodka.
  • 2024 – Held the second CharlieFest which saw my daughter sing with my late husband.

Quite a list eh? It’s weird looking back at it all now. I had no real concept of where my life was going to go. Did I envisage still being at PwC 22 years later? No, I don’t think I did. Did I envisage that I’d be solo parenting my first child? No, I definitely didn’t.

It’s why in 2026, I’m taking stock a little bit on this day. I turned 45 at the end of March and somehow, we’re now in May. I’m not entirely sure where April went. Is this a sign I’m getting old? Or just a sign that my life has been insanely busy lately? I think back to my birthday, which is also the anniversary of my late husband being taken to ICU, and realise it was almost a sign of where the next month was going to go. Numerous conversations with solicitors regarding the sale of my nan’s house. A hospital appointment with my daughter. A trip to my late husband’s memorial bench. And the innocent question from my daughter, “why are you crying Mum?” Nothing like spontaneously bursting into tears on your birthday while driving down a motorway because life gets too much for you.

And that’s how my life has been lately. A bit too much for me. I haven’t really stopped in weeks. I don’t consider myself special, so many people have chaotic, busy lives. But I do consider myself to be in an unenviable position of trying to juggle widowhood, solo parenting, working full time and caring for my grandmother against the backdrop of vaguely attempting to build a life for myself in my own right. The latter is something I’m becoming more and more acutely aware of as my daughter ages. Just last week I had to accompany her to her college enrolment. She’s thinking about learning to drive in a matter of months. And this week her main GCSEs start. It’s a pretty intense six weeks coming up.

Yet as her future starts to take shape and new beginnings happen, as a family, endings have happened. We’ve said goodbye to the house my grandparents bought in 1964. Just a £50 deposit secured that house back then. But for a multitude of reasons, it was time to sell. I underestimated just how emotional it would make me on those last few days. I’d been able to be quite productive at emptying the house, doing multiple tip and charity shop runs and managing all the administrative side of things But the penultimate day I was in the house, I burst into tears. It took me by surprise. I’m well aware that the material and physical items don’t really give you the memories but leaving the house that had been a constant throughout my life was tough. And despite material things not being the most important, I did have a smile to myself on Saturday when my grandad’s barometer showed me what the weather was going to do. I remember being fascinated by it when I was a little girl and it was one of the very few items I took from the house to keep. It doesn’t go with anything in my house, it’s incredibly old fashioned but it goes with me. It goes with my memories. It’s a part of my history.

The day the house was completed, I didn’t really have time to think about it or process it. As luck would have it, work was exceptionally busy and so I was able to distract myself. This was also the day after the sixth anniversary of my late husband’s death. There felt something poignant that the last day we owned the house as a family was his anniversary. Maybe April 19th will start to become a date for me going forwards as May 4th has been. But to be fair, my main memory of this date is no doubt enough to last me a lifetime.

I wrote on that sixth anniversary about the power of love and hope. And that is what continues to carry me through my life. I know from one of the last conversations I had with him, someone who would have been eminently proud of me for knowing that the first Star Wars film was actually called A New Hope. In a way that’s what Star Wars Day symbolises for me. A new hope.

Let’s look back to 2004. Starting at PwC was scary. I remember feeling that I needed breadcrumbs to find my way around the office in those first few days and weeks! It feeling like home and being such an important part of my life wasn’t something I really considered. There was a certain element of hope in joining the firm though. Hope that I’d find my path. But looking back now, I viewed it as work. Not necessarily a place I’d forge a career and do multiple different roles. I’m now halfway through my latest role and it’s teaching me so much. It’s been so good for me. And it’s also brought me into contact with new people. Just a couple of weeks ago, I had a conversation with someone who didn’t know my story. It’s a bit weird when that happens now, I’m so used to working with people that do know what happened to me, that I almost forget that not everyone does. For so many people the pandemic feels like such a long time ago, that hearing my story can take people aback.

And another new hope happened in 2009 with that pregnancy test. Don’t get me wrong, I was incredibly scared too (flashback to 2004 and being scared at PwC). But the hope outweighed it. Hope that we were finally going to be parents after a considerable time waiting for it to happen. I remember looking in shock at that pregnancy test. When you’ve longed for something for so long, when it finally happens, it’s hard to believe it’s real. But real it was and at the start of 2010, our daughter was born. The juggle of parenting and all of life’s challenges began in earnest!

But that juggle took on a different meaning for me in 2020 when my husband fell ill and then lost his life. If I thought starting at PwC or becoming a new mum was scary, that was nothing compared to the fear I felt when my late husband died. Could I really parent our daughter without him? I like to think I’ve done an ok job over the past six years, but that juggle is ever prevalent. Take last week for example. Work was the busiest it has been for a while, I thrive on it in a way, but it meant that I was working very long hours and barely contactable. “Is this an emergency or are you just saying hello?” was how I answered the phone or started a call with my daughter if I noticed a missed call from her. Fortunately, she’s very understanding and we made it work but it didn’t mean that I didn’t feel the mum guilt.

Except it’s not just mum guilt I’ve been feeling lately. I’ve felt daughter/sister/friend/author/blogger/volunteer guilt too. The notifications mounting on my phone because I’ve needed time or headspace to deal with them all and I’ve just not had either lately. I’ve lost count of the messages or calls I’ve started with “I’m officially rubbish” because that’s how I’ve felt. The guilt that I haven’t done enough to market my book and to continue my late husband’s legacy. The worry that I should be doing more in my volunteer roles. For the avoidance of doubt, this isn’t a woe is me blog. I don’t want you to get the violins out. This is simply a real and honest blog. Because of how I’ve been feeling lately. The pressure to juggle has felt a lot. The fear of change and worry for the future and what comes next for us has been intensifying. If you’ve been one of those people thinking that I don’t seem like myself or you’ve been waiting for a reply from me, know that I really am sorry. It’s honestly not you. It’s me.

But as well as being insanely busy last week, I also had a moment of clarity. I simply cannot be all things to all people and do everything at the same time. Hope returned. Because while selling my grandparents house is inherently sad, it’s also meant we’ve been able to guarantee some stability for my nan. That in itself is freeing. Yesterday I went and visited her in the care home, safe in the knowledge that there are no battles for me to face for her for a while. We sat in the garden and made the most of the weather. My author life might have taken a hit lately, but that’s because my energy has been in my PwC life and giving that all that I have. I also said no to something a couple of years ago I’d have been adding pressure to myself to do. I spent a lot of Saturday doing some self-care. I sat in the garden and let my life pause for a little bit. No pressure. No overthinking. Just being. Yesterday I finally dealt with all those notifications and responded to people. I felt a bit more in control. I could breathe again.

I guess what I’m trying to say as I look back at my life on this day over the years is that there have been so many similar emotions. Fear. Hope. Happiness. I know that I felt all of these at CharlieFest in 2024, as I watched my daughter sing with my late husband. It was quite the moment for everyone in that room. I suspect there’ll never be a time when I’m not juggling all these emotions. Because despite all I’ve managed to achieve since I was that nervous 23-year-old in 2004, I’m still nervous. I don’t think people see it so much anymore, but I am. In a way I’m probably more fearful and scared now than I was either back then or in 2009 when I learnt I was going to be a mum. Because now a lot of what I’m doing and the decisions I’m making, I’m doing so by myself. The pressure to do the right thing and make the right decisions is magnified now. It still feels surreal despite being a widow for six years. I wonder if that will ever stop. I still wonder where we’d be had COVID-19 not entered our lives. But more than where we’d be, I wonder who I would be. That’s probably a question for another day in all honesty.

I don’t know whether today will bring anything that I’ll look back on in years to come as being of note and to add to my memorable Star Wars Day anniversaries. But I’m incredibly grateful for all this day has given me. The anniversaries I am able to celebrate. The friends I have. The person I’ve become over the years. And who knows. Maybe one day I’ll even watch A New Hope to commemorate this date. By all accounts it’s a bit of a classic.

The power of love and hope

The words Dear Charlie are written in white on a black background.

And so, we’ve completed another trip around the sun without you. Six years since that fateful day when I got the call to tell me that all hope was lost. Since we had to say goodbye to you via a Skype call. Since I begged people to help me make sure you weren’t forgotten.

Every year since then, I’ve written a blog to mark this day. I’ve tended to write them in advance so that I can tweak them as I go. Make sure I’m completely happy with them before I post. Not this year though. This year, I’ve struggled to write one. I’ve just not known what to say. And I always said I would only write when I had something to say.

I’ve been beating myself up a little bit about this over the last 48 hours. Why haven’t I been able to think of something to write to mark this day this year? It’s certainly not because I care less. I guess in a way it’s almost just snuck up on me, and I can’t actually believe we’re here again. Maybe that’s a sign I’m getting old. That time is going quicker.

Or maybe that’s a sign as to how we all grow around our grief. It’s still there, ever present but life continues around it. And I think that’s why I’ve struggled to write something before now, because life has just been so full on lately. The juggle has been beyond real. Time hasn’t really been my friend.

But yesterday, something started whirring in my brain about what I could write today. It happened in my grandparents’ house as we were doing the final clean. As I was thinking about the fact that today is the last day this house will be in our family. I couldn’t think of a more poetic day really. Tomorrow it’s gone. It’s the right thing to do but that doesn’t mean it’s hurting any less. That I didn’t stand in the lounge and cry. But I know it’s the right decision. Because it’s time.

And there you have what clicked for me. Time.

I started thinking about you and the early days of the pandemic. Listening to the then Prime Minister say, “I must level with you, the British public. Many more families are going to lose their loved ones before their time.” The heated discussion you had with someone about this statement (side note, she was right though). Your frustration at this was borne from your belief that if people died it would mean that it was their time. Your firm belief that we’ve all got our time on this earth.

You might have had this belief, but I still don’t really understand how it was your time. 45 years old just doesn’t feel right to me. And now I’m 45, I’m understanding it even less. I can’t imagine my life being extinguished and over this year. God willing, it won’t be. But there’s just no sense in how much time we have. While their house might be being sold, Nan is very much alive at the age of 95, Wednesday night’s A&E trip with her proved that. She’s probably going to outlive me to be honest. Because it’s baffling how everyone’s time is different.

I wonder what you’d be doing now if it hadn’t been your time. Where life would have taken you. How many more board games we’d be trying to find homes for. How many more Jim Shore ornaments we’d be trying to put out at Christmas. What you’d be making of having a teenage girl in the house. You’d be eminently proud of her I know that much, but teenage girls are a law unto themselves!

I wonder where life would have taken me if you were still here. I thought about this while have a cuppa and watching my WAY Widowed and Young running shirt blowing on the washing line. Don’t fall off your chair, I haven’t taken up running but was wearing it at PoundFit yesterday. I wouldn’t have known about this charity, become a Trustee and met some fabulous people. I certainly don’t think I’d have started writing in the way that I have. Funny where life can take you.

There’s so much about our life that’s still the same as it was before this fateful day six years ago. The family photos that still adorn the walls. The lounge wallpaper that you chose. The same friends. The two-hour video calls going down tangent boulevard on more than one occasion (I’m sure you can work out who with from that description). The juggle of the dance runs and rehearsal schedules. My commute to London.

There are, of course, differences too. The dog we now have (can’t help but wonder if you’d say he was a proper dog because he’s not the biggest). The Jason Donovan photos that now adorn the walls, to be honest, I still consider this to be my biggest rebellious act since you died. The house renovations I’ve made. The new people in my life. The fact that in less than two months our daughter will leave school. The fact that I am now a published author. I often wonder what you would make of it all.

Yet what I underestimated about this last point is how much this would help with this moment from six years ago today:  

I made a few more calls that night and did speak to some friends and family. I’d love to be able to tell you exactly who I spoke to, but I simply can’t. Trauma and shock were already putting me in a protective bubble. Letting me function but not really knowing what I was doing. I dread to think what I said to people. I like to hope that I came across as vaguely coherent, but I can’t swear to it. All I can really remember from each of the calls I made was begging people at the end of the phone to help me keep his memory alive. To help me help Rebekah to remember him. I just kept saying, “Please don’t let him be forgotten.”

That’s a paragraph I wrote in Is Daddy Going to Be OK?, the book I published telling our story. The reviews from people telling me that they feel like they made and lost a friend when reading it. The people who have told me that they feel like they really got to know you by reading it. Never in a million years did I expect that this would happen. I just wanted to tell our story, the real story of the pandemic and make sure you had a legacy. I didn’t really join the dots between writing a book and you never being forgotten, I thought that was something that only family and friends could help with. Because only they knew you while had your time on earth. The fact that this book has helped with people feeling like they know you is humbling. I like it. It makes me happy to think that your name is being spoken by so many people.

That’s what matters. The legacy and memories that we leave. I’ve felt this even more so recently. Emptying a house that’s been in the family for 62 years and only keeping a couple of boxes. Doesn’t mean we’ll forget any of the time that we spent in that house, or the memories that we made. But my grandparent’s material things don’t mean anything to us. That’s not what’s in our hearts.

It’s really made me think about what we do actually “need.” Six years on and I still can’t bring myself to do anything with your CDs, music was such a big part of your life after all. But do I need these to remember you? I do know the answer to this really. I’ve started sorting and getting rid of the board games, some of which didn’t even arrive until after you’d died, but the CDs I’m oddly attached to. Even though the majority of them haven’t even played since April 2020. I’ve got my “Dead Charlie Box” (nothing like being blunt is there?) which has got items in that I deem to be important, the Marvel lounge pants you were taken to hospital in, they have been washed, don’t fret. But in the years to come when our daughter has to sort through my belongings, I know it won’t be the material things she remembers about you or me. The Jason Donovan photos will no doubt be the first things to go in the bin.

Because what she will remember and hold onto will be the love. The love you gave her for those 10 years will be more important to her than the CDs. She’ll hold onto the memories we made as a family of three and then as a team of two. The time we had together. Six years ago today, I felt that all hope was lost. I couldn’t see a way forward without you. I didn’t know how to live after loss. How to make sure love would live on. The enormity and magnitude of what had happened to us was just too huge. But I think in that moment I forgot one thing. I believe in hope. It’s everything. Without it, I don’t think I’d have made it this far. And I know that once that house is officially sold tomorrow, we’ll be ok. However much it’s been stinging this weekend.

I can’t work out whether you’re eye rolling me or nodding along with me at this. Whether you’re thinking what is she blithering on about now? You should count yourself lucky that you’ve missed my perimenopausal era. The random waffle and forgetfulness that is part of my everyday now.

Yet it hasn’t made me forget you. The life we had. The memories we made.

After all this time? Always.

Becoming Emma Charlesworth, Author

Various images of Emma Charlesworth and her book Is Daddy Going to Be OK?

Today is World Book Day. And this one feels a little bit different. Because this is my first World Book Day as the author of Is Daddy Going to Be OK? Since I’ve been able to hold a book in my hands and say I wrote this.

For many years, I was one of those mums that came to dread World Book Day. It simply meant finding a costume for my daughter (my brilliant parrot umbrella for Mary Poppins was quite something). Books and reading were always something that I actively encouraged as she was growing up. Language and storytelling were something that I knew the importance of, but they belonged to others. Not me.

I didn’t grow up aspiring to write a book. I didn’t have plans to become an author. Writing was never something I pursued with any sense of ambition or expectation. I didn’t write. It just wasn’t something that I thought was good at. Every year at our annual performance review at work, I’d say that writing was a skill I needed to develop. I didn’t write in greetings cards, leaving that to my late husband. Yet here I am. An author. And the journey to get here has been a heck of a rollercoaster (no pun intended).

When I started writing my blog in 2021, I didn’t start it because I had a plan. I started it because my social media posts had become insanely long. Family and friends suggested a blog would be a good idea and may help others. It was a natural progression. When my husband fell ill in March 2020, I quickly took to social media to share our story and to get support. Because under the COVID-19 lockdown restrictions, virtual support was all I could get. Sharing our story and writing became a lifeline for me. It helped me feel less isolated by knowing that there were people out there thinking of us. Willing my husband to get better. The social media posts I wrote four weeks later when he died, were some of the hardest posts I’d ever written. How do you share that your husband has died at the age of 45 of a virus that up until a few months previously no-one had ever heard of?

As the days turned into months, my writing helped me as I tried to adjust to our new world. As I learnt how to put one foot in front of the other as a young widow and solo parent. As I tried to make sense of the senseless. As I captured moments, thoughts and feelings that shone a light into the world of bereavement and grief. What I didn’t realise at the time was that writing wasn’t just helping me process what had happened. It was preserving it. It was creating something that would outlast those early days of grief and the immediate aftermath.

Over time, what I viewed as my little ramblings became something more than I had ever expected. People began to read them. To connect with my words. To see themselves in them. Messages would arrive from strangers who understood in ways that others couldn’t. From people who were also navigating loss, or who had followed our story during the pandemic and had never forgotten it.

People told me to write a book. I laughed it off. Where on earth would I find the time to do that? But more than that, writing a book felt too big. Too permanent. Too exposing. Writing a blog post felt safe. It existed in the moment. It reflected where I was at that point in time. But a book felt different. A book would become part of the record. Something that couldn’t be quietly edited or reshaped with the passage of time.

But slowly, writing a book, telling our story, the real story of the pandemic became something I wanted to do. I began to understand why it mattered to me so much. And I was “gently” encouraged to explore the art of the possible, after all, what did I have to lose? So, in March 2024, on the holiday my late husband and I had always planned to do my 40th birthday, I opened my emails and got the final push I needed to turn a hypothetical into a reality. And thus began the concerted effort to write my book.

I didn’t sit down and define an audience. The marketer in me would be quite cross at that. All I simply wanted to do was tell our story in my voice. I didn’t write the book in chronological order; I had to write as memories and thoughts came to me. Putting myself back into 2020 and 2021 was incredibly tough. I’d changed phones and lost all my messages from those early days, so I’d ask my sister “could you send me the group message from X date.” Invariably the response was “where are you? if you’re on the train or at work, don’t read this now.” My commutes became my writing time. Any spare moment tended to turn into writing time. I’d drop my daughter at dancing and then sit in a coffee shop writing. I’d write on the train as I travelled to weekends away. Writing become a second full time job. And I then had an epiphany about what to name each chapter. “To Charlie” was coming to life. The words I ended my speech with at his Memorial Service were the title of the book. It was happening.

But then I hit a wall. I procrastinated over finishing it. And it was only through my life coaching sessions with the wonderful Sheryl Findlay, that I was able to unlock why.

Subconsciously, it felt that this book was my final goodbye to my husband. Everything that had gone before was leading up to this. This book would tell the end of his story and the beginning of my new life as a young widow and a solo parent. To finish this book felt like saying goodbye to him for the last time.

Once I unlocked that, it made the final days of writing easier. It reminded me that his life hadn’t simply ended. His story and his legacy were continuing, just in a different way. It might have been my final goodbye as his wife, but it would mean that he would be immortalised in print forever more. A place in history. As I got ever closer to finishing it, it brought up so many emotions. My last words were written at Peckforton Castle, the place my nan lived when she was evacuated during the Second World War. I was nearby for a Widowed and Young event and it felt like the most apposite place to write. I hadn’t realised when I sat at Peckforton with a coffee just how close I was to finishing it. As I closed my laptop for the last time, the tears came. The tears continued for the whole of my drive home.

A short while later I found myself back in therapy again. I hadn’t prepared myself for what it would do to me by putting myself back in those early stages of grief, finishing the book and coming to a number of realisations about my life. The book which I’d dedicated so much time and effort to simply lived on my laptop. I had to put my mental health first. I had to focus on me and process everything I’d compartmentalised and buried for nearly five years. My brain allowed me to process it better. Time does that. I’d compartmentalised because it was just too damn painful to deal with at the time. Now I had to deal with it to help me move forward.

And then. After about six months or so, the want to do something with To Charlie returned. I contacted agents. At times it felt like I was pitching into an abyss. I had numerous conversations to get advice on publishing a book. And then in April 2025, Softwood Books was recommended to me… the rest is history.

I learnt so much working with the team. I still am. Their patience as I gave them a manuscript with the caveat that I didn’t think I liked the title of the book anymore. Because I felt that people would see it and think it was a letter to my late husband rather than being a toast to him. The noddy questions I asked about publishing a book and all that entailed. The noddy questions I’m still asking of the team! My deliberations and meticulous attention to detail. Is Daddy Going to Be OK? became the new title. The book cover incorporating yellow hearts as they became a symbol for all those lost to COIVD-19. My late husband’s handwriting as part of the logo for Twists of Hope Publishing. So much work in the run up to the release date of 14 November 2025. The day that would forever become the day I became a published author. The day that I knew World Book Day would take on a new meaning for me.

Yet Is Daddy Going to Be OK? isn’t just a book for me. This is my family’s story and a way of creating a legacy for my late husband and daughter. And in some small way, a legacy for everyone whose lives were affected by the pandemic. It was never about writing a book for the sake of it. It was about making sure that our story existed in a form that couldn’t be forgotten. From the day my husband died, I was adamant that he wouldn’t became a statistic of the pandemic. One of the numbers we heard every day on the news. Figures representing loss, but not the people behind them.

My late husband was, and always will be, so much more than that.

He was a father. A husband. A son. A brother. An uncle. A nephew. A cousin. A godfather. A friend. A colleague. He had a life that was full of meaning, humour, kindness and love. He had a future that should have stretched far beyond the age of 45. And our daughter deserves to have something she can hold onto. Something that tells the story not just of how he died, but of how he lived, and how she and I continued afterwards.

I am an author but I’m also still the same person who wrote those waffly social media posts and started a blog. I am still navigating grief in all its complexity. World Book Day this year also falls just a few days before the COVID-19 Day of Reflection, a day dedicated to remembering those who lost their lives during the pandemic and the millions of people whose lives were changed forever.

For many, the pandemic is something that feels increasingly distant. Something that belongs to the past. But for families like mine, its impact is ongoing. This World Book Day, I find myself reflecting not on the book itself, but on the journey that led to it. The unexpected path from survival to legacy.

But above all else, this book exists because my late husband existed. Because he was, and still is, loved. Because he is missed. I wrote a blog nearly three years ago, titled “Who lives, who dies, who tells your story?” Telling his story is something I needed to do. Because it deserves to be told. Our story deserves to be told. He deserves to be remembered. Books and words have a way of outliving us. They’re a legacy. They carry pieces of people forward into the future. They help make sure that even in absence, there is still presence.

This World Book Day, that means everything.


Is Daddy Going to Be OK? is a memoir about grief, widowhood and resilience after losing my husband during the pandemic, and about helping a child navigate loss. The book is available from the below retailers:

The next chapter in my story

An image of the front cover for Is Daddy Going to Be OK? authored by Emma Charlesworth

Five and a half years ago today, on 19 April 2020, my husband died in a global pandemic. 

I write that because when you’re living it, there’s an element that you just survive. You can’t sit and think about it too much because it’s simply too huge. It’s overwhelming. 

When I went to bed on that fateful day, I had no idea what my future held. How I was meant to carry on. How I could raise my daughter without him. I’d never been an adult without him, how was I meant to start at the age of 39? 

A month later, after one of my honest Facebook posts, someone suggested I start writing a blog. I didn’t really know if I could or if I’d have anything to say. But after launching that blog in March 2021, I realised the power of sharing my story. 

Since that day, I’ve been asked countless times if I’m going to write a book. Again. I didn’t really know if I could or if I’d have anything to say. But at my team’s Christmas gathering in 2023, as we went round the group and spoke about what we were hoping to achieve in 2024, I told them I was going to write a book. 

On 22 September 2024, after being away at the Widowed and Young AGM and while having a coffee in the castle my nan spent five years in when she was evacuated in World War II, I wrote the last words of that book. 

I hadn’t quite anticipated what would follow. A return to therapy for me. A realisation of how much I hadn’t processed about my late husband’s death. Another bereavement which knocked me for six. A return to therapy for my daughter. My book felt like the least of my problems. It was written, if it never saw the light of day, did it really matter? 

Except deep down inside, I knew it did matter to me. So. Eventually, I started the process of trying to get it published. I’ve learnt so much this year about just what it takes to get a book published. But for the last few months, I’ve been working intently on making it a reality. And on today’s pertinent date, I’m thrilled, honoured and just a teeny bit scared to reveal more details. 

Is Daddy Going to Be OK? by Emma Charlesworth will be published in November. 

Wow. That statement is almost as sobering as saying my husband died in a global pandemic. 

I’ve done it. I’ve written a book. It’s going to be published. I wonder if I’ll look back in five and a half years and realise that today was the day that I finally took stock of what I’ve achieved? That I’ve spent so long writing, editing and making decisions about it, that I haven’t really reflected on just what it means to have not just written a book, but to have also published one. 

I’m so conscious that this will not be an easy read for so many people. That it might be incredibly painful. As with my thoughts when I launched my blog, I don’t actually know if anyone will read it. But what I do know is that since 19 April 2020, my aim has always been simple. To create a legacy for both my daughter and my late husband to make sure he never becomes a statistic of the pandemic. I hope in some small way, that this book helps me achieve that. 


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