Emily
Thackray was a committed and enthusiastic campaigner and fundraiser
for the Cystic Fibrosis Trust for many years, and sat at the very
heart of the community throughout her life. Emily died on 28 December
2014 and today she will be remembered and celebrated at her funeral
and wake.
This
blog was written by Oli Lewington, Engagement Director at the Cystic
Fibrosis Trust – a friend of Emily’s – in the days following
her passing.
Lots
of things will be written and spoken of Emily Thackray in the next
few days and weeks. She died yesterday after a second double-lung
transplant proved too much for her body to withstand.
Emily’s
unique ability – using unique in its literal sense, as I’ve never
come across anyone with the same gift – was to make everyone she
ever came into contact with feel like they were the most important in
her world.
There
are dozens of people who will be grieving the loss of a best friend
today, because that’s who she was to everyone: selflessly sharing
her love and compassion for the world with all she brushed against
and, in the process, making everyone she touched feel special, feel
like they mattered. She made a difference.
Equally,
everyone who knew her will have their own ‘Emily’ with whom they
spent time, shared laughs and cried when it was warranted. We all
knew a different friend who gave different things to our lives.
My
Emily came into my life in the early days of the internet when I
first discovered the Cystic Fibrosis Trust forums: she was already
there and dispensing support and advice as needed. I struck up a
friendship with her and with some of the other frequent posters and
we supported each other through tough times of losing friends that we
were terribly close to. It seems nothing much changes in a life with
cystic fibrosis.
When
she set up the organ donation campaign (now charity), Live Life Then
Give Life, with her great friend Emma after the loss of more than one
mutual friend on the waiting list for transplant, I offered to help
in any way I could. I ended up being one of the first Trustees of the
charity and being part of the team that one Best Campaign Team at the
2008 Charity Times Awards and Best New Charity the following year.
My
Emily was always one step ahead of me on my CF journey. She was the
first of us to start needing supplementary oxygen. She was the first
to use a wheelchair. She was the first to have a lung collapse. She
was the first to be assessed for transplant and, thank God, the first
to receive it. She was the first to be married after her transplant,
and the first to have serious complications. Now, she’s the first
of the two of us to go.
What
became indelibly unique, though, was that everything she went through
became a source of help and information for others. She never hid
away from anything and always used her own lived experience to make
it even a tiny bit easier for others going through it. She supported
me as I took every step and misstep she took, a few months further
down the line.
The
day I finally got my transplant call I remember sending her a message
and getting an immediate phone call back.
“Take
some paracetamol now,” she told me.
I
wasn’t sure if I should, but she countered immediately, “The
stress of the situation might raise your temp and if it does they
won’t go ahead. Take two paracetamol now and it will drop your temp
if you have one, but it won’t mask anything more serious that could
be a real contraindication.”
I
took them. I passed the tests. I got new lungs.
The
story that sums up Emily, though, came through on my Facebook last
night from one of my oldest friends and was one that I’d never
heard before. This stands as testament not only to her willingness to
help and support anyone and everyone, but also to be humble and quiet
in going about it.
“She
was so wonderful when you got your call, patiently, calmly keeping me
informed about the stages, what to expect, what were the good signs,
what to worry about & what to cheer.
“All
the way through your surgery and recovery she stayed in touch,
answered my many emails and sent me random messages asking how I was
doing – she had volunteered herself to essentially be my support as
I didn’t want to bother your parents or K too much with my need for
information and updates. It meant such a lot to me and I was
incredibly appreciative knowing she was a message away to answer a
question or calm a worry.”
That’s
Emily: friendly, warm, generous and patient. And not just my Emily,
that’s everyone’s Emily.
Em,
you will be missed far more than most of us can understand, but we
remain ever grateful for the joy and happiness you brought to our
lives, for the connections and friendships you forged that will last
long into the future, and for the blessing of finally understanding
one of my favourite quotes:
“She
was a line of poetry in a world of prose.”Polly
Toynbee
Thispost first appeared on the SmileThroughIt blog. If you would like
to make a donation to the Trust in Emily’s memory, please click here.
Gosh Oli, that's a lovely tribute and sums up Emily and how lovely she was.
ReplyDeleteI met her in the same place but in different circumstances and she was exactly as you've described.
She was the most amazing, positive and resilient person I've ever had the pleasure to meet. I can imagine she will be sorely missed by very many people.
What a lovely tribute to an amazing person
ReplyDelete