The West's Awake


The West's Awake by Cormac MacConnell

How an Irish bullock prompted me to make my will

Posted on Thursday, July 26, 2012 at 09:13 AM

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Illustration by Caty Bartholomew
The high cost of dying in Ireland never crossed my mind until I was driving home cold sober one night last winter and met a black bullock in the middle of a wet black road at 40 miles an hour.

All parties just about survived the collision, but afterwards I reflected that, had I been driving faster, I could easily have been intestated there and then without even the mild sedation of being mildly intoxicated.

So I decided to make my will.  I did the job with a splendidly excellent solicitor (lawyer) in Shannon last week, with the greatest of pleasure and relief.

The only hiccup in the process came in relation to my powerful wish to avoid the worst excesses of the cost of dying and that, dear readers, is why what follows here is more of a legal document than a lighthearted yarn. As part of my extended family, you are hereby witnesses to my wish to depart this world as cheaply as possible.

The solicitor casually mentioned that the cost of an Irish funeral of the routine kind can now exceed 9,000. When I replied that I desired to insert a strong wish for cremation in the will he said words to the effect this would not do.

It was often weeks before the will of a deceased person was read, and by then I would be boxed and buried deeply unless I previously discussed the matter with my wife and family. And the bills would be rolling in.

I have already fully discussed my wishes with the immediate family but, just to be on the safer side, I am also informing what I see as the much wider family circle represented by all of you.

I do not propose to die for another two or three decades because I'm enjoying myself these days, but you never know when you might encounter another black bullock.

And, quite apart from the savings involved, I very dearly wish to be cremated when the time comes and, above all, for my boxeen of ashes to be buried among the roots of a mighty strong sycamore tree in some park or area which the clan will have access to down the years to come.

I love sycamore trees with their spinning parachute seeds each autumn and gently whispering canopies. I love them above all other trees.

If reposing in ashy form down at the roots I can always claim to be a living part of that power and beauty, to be somehow still alive in the west. And with tree hugging so common nowadays I will be delighted to be hugged occasionally by generations of MacConnells as yet unborn.

I abhor antiseptic funeral parlors and all that goes with them in modern Ireland.  Expensive oak caskets likewise, huge hotel functions for mourners, death notices costing small fortunes in dozens of newspapers, hugely expensive headstones, flowers that are already dead by the time they arrive at the graveside or artificial bouquets that somehow always look cheap and tawdry.

When I depart I want to be briefly waked in my own bed in Maisie’s cottage, I would like a kind priest to celebrate a quick Mass, and I would be very happy indeed if my clansmen and friends raised a few glasses, played some reels and sang a few songs before morning.

Then I wish to be speedily transported to the nearest crematorium ideally in one of those cardboard coffins currently being promoted by the Green Party.

When the family select the sycamore, I'd love if an ordinary six inch steel nail was inserted in the trunk. When visitors call to see me in the years to come I'd wish that they first wrote down the best joke they'd heard that week, or a wise and witty saying, or about anything lighthearted, and hang it on the nail before departing. That might mean that callers would depart with a smile on their faces rather than the somber countenances one sees emerging from gray graveyards.

That's about it but, I now have thousands of witnesses to my wishes.  I feel so much energized by that reality I will probably go past the century before eventually saying goodbye to the West.

Final thought for this week -- if you have not yet made a will then do it soonest. It's great craic altogether!


10 comments

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cormac thats great! i have already planned something almost the same.:)) you are even ripped of when you die these days.
Wonderful column, as usual! I love graveyards and thinking about long-gone people whose names I see, but I'd be happy to leave you a note on your sycamore with a joke. I hope it is decades in the future after many, many more columns. Hello from your long-time fan, Cheryl Dickinson in NY.
Very interesting Article! Thank you for highlighting your plight. I started a business last year - Farewell Funeral Planners which provides people with an extension of a will and describes in detail THEIR WISHES for their funeral. It is a pity your solicitor did not know about this service but thanks again for highlighting the issue!
yeah, I have to admit I wondered too about the bull, since you wrote "all parties just about survived the collision"... So it wasn't a near miss...? About that six inch nail, the sycamores in north america are moist site trees, very large and fast growing. Yous too? Easy to estimate at least a quarter inch growth ring each year. So maybe less than twenty years before that nail is swallowed by the growing trunk. Then again, maybe that's enough for visiting humorists and old friends...
A Cormaic, a stoir, there is no such thing as a black bullock (maybe in colour, but not in breed); he was an Aberdeen Angus; and in Scotland (where your forefathers probably came from) they are very proud of their Aberdeen Angus's--both bullocks and heifers; dont insult the proud Scottish people especially over what I'm sure was a fine specimen of the Angus breed. By the way,Cormac, maybe it was a bull; why didn't you check? Scotland forever.
You don't tell us what happened to the Black Bullock! eg: Did he taste nice? Were you both tested for alcohol content? ~~~ You say you have already informed your people of your wishes,did the bullock get the same chance? Has he also seen a Cowboy Solicitor? ~~~ As for your coffin, I always feel Ash is more suitable for Cremation. But really, you should go for a Sycamore one. There is a plentiful supply of this timber since most Sycamores have been killed off due to some demented philistine going around hammering nails into them - just for a joke! ~~~ meanwhile; drive better, use less lubrication and remember: 'Nobody knows the number of his days!'. Death is Life's way of telling you to slow down! and as Hamlet says : "The rest is Bullocks!"
Like many of our friends, my husband and I are going to be cremated. We made out our wills as soon as we had our 1st baby because we needed to name legal and custodial guardians for our kids and didn't want some court judge to make that decision for us. I don't want to pay for a casket to be shortly placed in the ground, nor have people viewing me and discussing whether I look "natural" "better or worse in death", or "just asleep." Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. I intend to speed up the process with cremation.
What sweet soul you are, Cormac.
WOW! Great article.
Cormac, Always enjoy reading your articles and discussing them with our friend Bill Drennan. In my will and in my wishes to my family I have asked that a case of Clontarf and Tyreconnel Irish Whiskey be served at my wake. At least then I can be assured that mourners will show up!
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