If she were here now,
she'd tell us to stop being such a puddle of wusses. If she were here
now, she'd tell us to rattle our dags and get the hell on with it. If
she were here now, she'd deliver the twitter equivalent of a clip
round the ear & tell me to get the bollocks on with writing
again. So that's what I'm doing.
She's not here though.
Like an awful lot of people I woke up on Sunday morning to the news
that Dr Dianne Tillotson – or @hipbookfairy as many of us will
always think of her – had died. I cried a bit. I suspect I'm not
alone in that. If you didn't know her, then that loss is yours. If
you did know her, then that loss is ours. Because she was one of the
best people I've encountered on twitter. She was funny, she was
clever, she was kind, formidable, gentle, straight talking,
fascinating, full of knowledge, yet she always wore her learning
lightly, and despite being hugely appreciative of other people and
their work, never once do I have a memory of her showing off all that
she knew and had worked on. All she ever wanted to do was share her own
enthusiasm in the hope of encouraging others.
And she did. She truly
did. It didn't matter to her how many letters you had after your name
or how many hours you'd spent in dusty archives researching esoteric
brasses or church crawling in ever increasing selfimportance,
she just cared that you cared. About anything. If it was important to
you, she took an interest, because despite her searing intelligence
and rock solid understanding of so many things, what fired her most
were people. I don't think there have been many I've come
across who were so joyfully engaged with people, regardless of
subject. There were no airs and graces, no pretensions, no false
front with Dianne. And she didn't entertain it from others either, her legendary bluntness coming to the fore as and when
required, but always with a gleam in her eye, and the unspoken
understanding that she would forgive you almost anything, but
wouldn't let you get away with much.
She told me off a lot.
She told me off when I was being a brat. She told me off for swearing
too much. She told me off for being lazy, being silly, for being a
bit of a twat. But always with kindness, and always with generosity.
Generous is the word that keeps coming to mind when I think of her. She gave so freely, so easily,
so simply that it never felt she was doing it as a favour or an
obligation. Her generosity was really altruism. She saw an opportunity
to help others, so she did. She never thought about receiving. Never
thought about what she got back from it, just a natural reflex to
help, and to make things better. And she did, she always did. The
number of word exchanged between us pales into insignificance when I
think about what they really meant. She was an absolute one off, one time,
one individual who took her own path and forever was drawn to those
who did the same. She inspired and encouraged so many others, and we
are all diminished by her loss. She was, in her own words, a
volunteer with attitude. I shall miss her, and I lack the eloquence
to truly pay tribute to her. All I can think is that if she meant so
much to me and others who never even met her, then how much did she
influence and shape the lives of those who really knew her best, who
benefited from her calm, witty, insightful wisdom?
A better person than I
reminded me last night that 'No one is actually dead until the
ripples they cause in the world die away'. With Dianne, those
ripples will continue into the foreseeable future, for at least as
long as I strive and endure. She pushed me forward whilst holding my
hand. I shall miss her presence, almost more than I can say, the kind consideration for everyone she came across, the humour, the biting wit and silliness that never once hid just how good a person she was, and just what a hinterland there was behind every insight.
If she were here right
now, she'd be wagging a gently chiding finger at me, telling me to
write more, telling me that I have the same spirit in me, telling me
to put my boots on and kick the arse out of the things I can do to
make the world a better place. If she were here right now, I'd know
she was right. She always was. But she's not here, and won't be, so
instead I've written this. Mawkish and self-indulgent it may be, and
she'd almost certainly give me a good ticking off for it, but I know
the difference she made to so many of us. So I am writing this in my
most bright and colourful clothes, with my biggest boots on, flowers in my hair, being that 'spunky chick with attitood' that she said I was, because she
believed in me. And I never took the chance to tell her how much she
meant to me, and to so many others.
RIP Dianne. We've lost
our irreplacable twitter fairy, so instead we've been calling angels down
to earth in your stead. Because I believe we need them.