Celebrity Reverend with Cork connections releases book on bereavement
Reverend Richard Coles. Picture: Andy Hollingworth
HIGH profile clergyman, ex-Strictly star and man of a myriad panel shows, Reverend Richard Coles, came to particular attention in Cork last year when he revealed family connections to the county and declared his support for Cork GAA, choosing St Finbarr’s as his club side.
The warmth with which the news was greeted is a sign of the affection there is for the BBC presenter and musician, who also had a No.1 hit with The Communards, in Ireland as well as the UK.
Now he has written a heartfelt, moving account of his grieving process following the death of his beloved partner David, from alcohol addiction.
Coles relates with disturbing honesty David’s body closing down as alcohol damage takes its toll during those final days, the blur of bereavement he feels as he wades through the ‘sadmin’ of the funeral and other arrangements, while attempting to keep a lid on his own mental health as he struggles to adapt to life without his partner.
We also get a glimpse of his life with David, and his pain and frustration with each alcohol-ridden episode.
Moving and candid, this book will resonate with anyone who has lost a loved one, or has had to cope with someone they love who they just cannot help.
The Madness Of Grief: A Memoir Of Love And Loss by Reverend Richard Coles is published in hardback, by Weidenfeld & Nicolson, and ebook £9.99). The book is his account of David's death and the aftermath, interspersed with anecdotes of their life together and his subsequent journey of grief, the 'sadmin' he had to complete with regards to the funeral and other elements tied to the bureaucracy of death, as he tried to tie up loose ends and navigate life without his partner of 12 years.
"It's been tough," he continues. "The first lockdown was okay, because just being at home and not being busy was good for me. But the third lockdown was really tough, so I'm seeing a bereavement counsellor now, which feels like the right time."

The title of the book reflects the effect grief has had on him, he explains. "Grief is mad. On the day that David died I went to the shop to get bread and milk to take home and I came out with three kinds of Parmesan. I was going through life not thinking things through. Your life is all over the place."
This is the first time Coles has revealed publicly that David, a former A&E nurse and fellow vicar - he later lost his vicar's licence - died from alcohol addiction, even though people who knew him had known he was an alcoholic for some time.
"The one thing that made it bearable for me was to be able to talk to people who were in the same situation," explains Coles.
David would have hated him talking about it, though, he notes.
"Like most people who have an addiction, he would have done anything to keep the knowledge of his addiction away from himself as well as everybody else. He wasn't good at facing up to the reality of his drinking."
At its worst, David's drinking made their social life practically impossible. He could become obnoxious - on one occasion the police became involved - and Coles would find him passed out on the floor surrounded by broken glass, the dogs desperate to be fed and let out.
Coles says he really tried to get David to seek help, but to no avail.
"In fairness to him, he did try, but he couldn't stop. He changed the way he drank when he realised his absolutely crazy drinking was unbearable. But he also realised that I would stick with him. So he changed it; he didn't get crazy drunk, he would sip all day, a Coke with something in it.
"I kept a surreptitious eye on the empties so I knew his consumption was way more than it should be."
Some might wonder why Coles, who had a busy career and plenty of friends, stayed. "
Coles joined an Al-Anon group, designed for those who have people in their lives who are alcoholics, which provided some support.
"David was pretty much in denial. Addiction is a very selfish little trope. It blinds and deafens the person it's got hold of to its reality."
He admits now that he felt angry towards David for some time. "There's an overwhelming frustration that this person who you love continues to do something that destroys them, and you. It's like being mistreated by someone. But eventually I came to realise that the last thing David needed was to feel worse about himself."

Coles escaped into his TV and radio career to avoid the turmoil at home - a world he says David found difficult.
"He thought TV turned me into an a*******, full of self-regard and that I would be too interested in looking good. But then Strictly came along and if I thought I was going to look good doing that, I was rudely disappointed.
In the book he records the peaks and troughs of grieving emotions, from the initial shock to feelings of loss, loneliness and anger, tears coming when he least expects them to.
"It's stupid little things. I remember finding in the garage a pot of jam that David had made with his writing on and it just destroyed me for a day. You have to manage that stuff otherwise you'd be overwhelmed by that all the time."
With the warmer weather, plants that David planted are emerging in Coles' garden, another heartfelt reminder of his loss.
"There's a lilac which is just budding now, and I think, 'Oh, why can't he be budding again?' But you have to be tough with yourself and grasp the fact they're gone and they're not coming back."
Each evening before bedtime, he gives himself a squirt of one of David's vast collection of colognes.
"It's still just a little bit there when I wake up in the morning. That's a comfort."
For now, he is contemplating a new life, a new future.
He is contemplating retiring at 60, although he says he'll carry on 'vicaring', has just finished his first crime novel, the first in a three-book deal, and is open to TV offers. He's clearly not ready to put his feet up just yet.
"One of the really tough things about when somebody dies is that they take the future with them. I've now put up a framework for my future. It can't be here or doing what I do now. I'm going to move towards changing that."

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