Grief & Loss: Vale Bridget Collits

by PAUL COLLITS – MY PRECIOUS daughter has passed away, after a year of serious illnesses and intensive care. 

Bridget Louise Collits (1982-2025), like JFK (as per Robert Dallek, one of his biographers), led an “unfinished life”. 

The life sentence imprisonment of the grieving parent might best be seen as a version of the Hotel California. You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave.

The first point is, all that anyone has ever said about the loss of a child is barely scratching the surface. It is all they all say, only exponentially worse.

The fictional Fr Brown’s lamented, “God knows what it is like to lose a child”. Well, yes.

NEVER LEAVE

The life sentence imprisonment of the grieving parent might best be seen as a version of the Hotel California. You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave.

Then there are the cliches.

Taken too early, for example, comes to mind. She is at peace now. Well, I sure hope so. They did all they could? No, they did not. Surrounded by friends? Alas, no. More sinned against than sinning. Too true. A gift for friendship? In spades.  A heart as big as Phar Lap’s? True, again.

Of all the locations you could choose to die, Townsville Hospital, an appalling place, would be at or near the bottom.

My late uncle’s old line about wishing he knew where he was going to die, so he would never go there, rings true.

Bridget’s life wasn’t always easy. There were pain points.

No one who knew her well would disagree. There were the voices, which occasioned her take-up of Big Pharma’s anti-depressants over a quarter of a century. (I know that place, myself).

There was her serious eating disorder in her teens that all but did for her. (And we thought that 1998 was the annus horribilis, a mere six years after the Queen’s).

There was nasty bullying at school, by the head-girls-in-waiting. There were routine unkindnesses in the work place. There were uncompleted studies.

There was, sadly, travel in the outback cut short. There was the physical decline of her partner, which ushered in years of home-caring as her second job.

Then there was the final, painful chapter, of course.

But these form only part of the story. There was much joy too. And achievement. And fun, facilitated by Mr Smirnoff on the odd occasion. And much love all around.

She got to travel overseas, including a visit to her beloved Big Apple and to Europe for her brother’s wedding last year.

Her great passions in life were care for God’s creatures, mostly those with four legs and especially Ella; her love of family; her deep, though sometimes physically distant, connections with her wonderful brothers and her eight, adoring nephews and nieces; her much loved, now grieving partner; her cherished Balmain Tigers of yore and her equally cherished NSW Blues; her excellent art and cooking; her affection for outsider-pollies like The Donald; and her OTT customer service and passion in her chosen profession.

She wore her vegan badge with honour and with not a jot of embarrassment, in the face of periodic alt-right sneering.

There is no peace for us, even in death. A coronial inquiry is under way, such are the ongoing questions about quality of care and cause of death. This will take time, and we will be making a detailed submission.

The last six months have been living hell. Thousands of miles from our home, enduring a tropical summer and floods, with nil support on the ground and bungling and malfeasance in play.

DAYLIGHT

An away game, as they say. But an away game readily accepted. What, after all, are parents for? It is our life’s work, with daylight second.

The what ifs, for us, will never pass, probably. How could they?

They say that healthy people have a thousand dreams and ill people, only one. We had dreams for a third (fourth?) go at life for Bridge. Now our one dream is, sadly, no more.

The wonderful Jess at the funeral home said to us – how can this have happened – you both look so young? Well, maybe, but yes, she had a point.

Thank you to all my friends. I need your prayers and energy and sheer will to go on, now, more than ever.

In the end, we just ran out of miracles, I guess, despite the unrelenting work of our massive, global prayer-team.

Now it is time, in the words of the late, beloved Jimmy Buffett, to take another road to a hiding place.

Bridget Collits.

Seen the false horizons fade away like bisons
Headed for the jungle, cowboy can’t endure
Never look back, that’s what he swore
I’ll take my pony to the shore
Somewhere, somewhere

Take another road to a hiding place
Disappear without a trace
Take another road to another time
On another road in another time
Like a novel from the five and dime
Take another road another time

Follow the equator, like that old articulator
Sail upon the ocean just like Mr Twain
Never look back, this is my plan
Run my pony through the sand
Somewhere, somewhere

Take another road to a hiding place
Disappear without a trace
Take another road to another time
On another road in another time
Like a novel from the five and dime
Take another road another time

Leave my cares behind
Take my own sweet time
Ocean’s on my mind

Take another road to a hiding place
Disappear without a trace
Take another road to another time
On another road in another time
Like a novel from the five and dime
Take another road another time

A hiding place? For us, certainly? For Bridget?  An eternal hiding place, far, far from the pain and the fear.  It was Bridget’s very favourite Buffett song, among many.

Requiescat in pace, dearest girl. We hope and pray that your unfinished life can now be sweetly and sublimely completed, in the bosom of Abraham.PC

Paul Collits

Hiding Place

MAIN PHOTOGRAPH: Vale of Abraham. (courtesy Public Orthodoxy)

13 thoughts on “Grief & Loss: Vale Bridget Collits

  1. I haven’t checked in here for some time because I thought it was getting boring, but the last few posts are great quality so I guess I will add you back to my daily bloglist. You deserve it my friend 🙂

  2. Just so beautiful and painful a memoriam one rarely reads. Mass has been said for the Repose of the Soul of Bridget, and for the intentions of Paul and Melissa.

  3. “Some people come into our lives and quickly go. Some people move our souls to dance. They awaken us to a new understanding with the passing whisper of their wisdom. Some people make the sky more beautiful to gaze upon. They stay in our lives for awhile, leave footprints on our hearts, and we are never, ever the same.”
    I have not checked out and keep walking past windows.

  4. Grief & Loss: Vale Bridget Collits
    Posted on : 07/04/2025- by Paul Collits (Bridget’s loving Dad)
    https://politicom.com.au/grief-loss-vale-bridget-collits/

    Thank you Paul for sharing this incredibly painful tragic information about your precious daughter Bridget.
    I don’t know you personally Paul, but I know your incredible work to bring the truth to the people and I am sure your beautiful Bridget would have been so proud to have you as her Dad; and when I read this extremely sad post I cried for you – it is just so awful; please accept my most respectful and heartfelt condolences.
    Goodbye to you dear Bridget Collits.
    Warmest regards, Diane

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  5. To lose a child runs against the order of nature.

    My condolences and a prayer for God-given strength in the days, weeks and months to come.

  6. It’s what we dread when they are growing up, isn’t it? And by the time they have arrived at a certain age, the anxieties have eased greatly. Then for you, the nightmares from their childhood come true. My condolences. God bless you, and Bridget, and all of your family.

  7. Deepest sympathy to you Paul and your grieving family. It’s hard to imagine any other loss as great as losing a child, no matter what age. My thoughts are with you in this awful time that you are suffering.

  8. Dear Paul and family,
    We are strangers but our hearts go out to you at this time when Life
    delivers one of its worst blows.
    Treat yourself kindly and remember the love she had for you is always there.

    12
  9. Paul, My thoughts and prayers are with you, your wife and your family. There can be no greater sorrow than for a parent to lose a child. Thank-you for sharing your words during this difficult time. God bless.

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