惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
量子位
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
Y
Y Combinator Blog
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
博客园_首页
雷峰网
雷峰网
I
InfoQ
罗磊的独立博客
博客园 - 聂微东
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
D
Docker
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
腾讯CDC
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
K
Kaspersky official blog
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
H
Help Net Security
小众软件
小众软件
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
T
Tenable Blog
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
C
Cisco Blogs
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
博客园 - Franky
A
Arctic Wolf
T
Threatpost
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
Security Latest
Security Latest
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
P
Privacy International News Feed
S
Schneier on Security
Latest news
Latest news
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com

TheJournal.ie

Court told Eleanor Donaldson placed bugging device in her husband’s car over fears of affair TD says she's been left with 20cm scar after skin cancer diagnosis Homelessness: Record number in emergency accommodation, including new high for children Blue Origin rocket explodes during test launch Uber app now allows passengers to audio record their journey if they feel unsafe John Gibbons: The planet is burning, but Ireland still isn't taking climate change seriously 'Truly devastating': Tributes paid to Masuma Sohrabi after stabbing in Clifden Mother and carer: You don't appreciate public services until your child needs them to survive Left or right? Sinn Féin's fence-sitting may be about playing the long game Gavan Reilly: Gerry Hutch and his 30% vote in Dublin Central's best-heeled area Gavan Reilly: The Gerry Hutch 37.1% share of the vote in the shadow of the IFSC Ebola on the rise: Why the latest outbreak should concern all of us Ireland's data centre energy drain: How Big Tech added €1.4bn to household electricity bills Living with myeloma: 'I chose not to fight this blood cancer, but to instead live alongside it' Alberta’s separation bid: How Canada’s next political crisis could come from within Kelly Earley: Militarism might be Ireland’s next economic disaster Raising them right: Ireland has a dog poo problem, and we parents are sick of stepping in it Money Diaries: A recently graduated digital journalist on €35K living in Dublin Global tech job losses: Is ‘AI-washing’ the new trend nobody wants to call out? Down on the farm with a difference: This is what happens when animals are allowed to feel safe Surrealing in the Years: Some shameful Irish attitudes take a leaf out of Israel's book Motoring: Should we trust self-driving cars? The physio is in: Ireland is growing older, but are we moving enough to age well? Tech dubbed 'creepy': AI smart glasses are here, but our privacy laws have not caught up Larry Donnelly: The polls point one way for Friday but byelections rarely follow the script The war on human thought: Educational institutions must take back control from AI The Bee Guy: World Bee Day won't save our little bee friends Kelly Earley: Could Mountjoy Square be Dublin’s most important park? Money Diaries: How is your spending and saving going? Would you like to keep a diary for us? Rearing them right: Should modern parents bring back ‘the man’? Ireland's energy future: What if the real failure here is that we stopped thinking bigger? Barry Cummins: I shudder to think I sat in Tina Satchwell’s home while her body lay buried there Richard Boyd Barrett: Sanction Israel now, the way we did Russia An Spidéal in a byelection: We're caught between dereliction, development and a lack of vision Growing old disgracefully: The older I get, the more I understand my granny Surrealing in the Years: How is Bertie Ahern still finding new ways to disappoint us? Drink-driving: If your chance of being caught is 1 in 77, where is the deterrent? Navigating an uncertain world: The adults are panicking, but the kids are alright Lynn Ruane: The evidence clearly shows that the 'war on drugs' was a failed experiment The Bezos Ball: This year's Met Gala sold its soul to billionaires, did anyone notice? Labour's long knives: Starmer may be weak, but his opponents are not strong Life on the road: Our shared MS diagnoses forced us to finally start living How are you dealing with the cost of living? Would you like to keep a Money Diary for us? Kelly Earley: Should we scrap HAP? Ireland urgently needs an alternative Body of Evidence: Why your body starts storing fat in your 50s — and how it affects your brain Hear me out: Every new school building site should also be a classroom Money Diaries: A software engineer on €100K living in Dublin Life with a stoma: My worst nightmare became a reality, but this has given me my life back Summer festival supports: At PsyCare, we aim to be the calm in the chaos Surrealing in the Years: Come on guys, we don't have it in the locker to pull off nuclear energy Car love: I have that strange affliction of seeing cars as having personalities and souls David Attenborough turns 100: He brought the natural world into focus for us, we owe him so much Leavitt steps away, DJ Rubio wings it: Trump’s White House looks increasingly chaotic Time to act: Animal cruelty still happens every day in Ireland – our laws must catch up The housing crisis: Like wildfire, we need to abandon the delusion it’ll burn itself out United Ireland: On the contrary, Northern Ireland is not a burden, it brings fresh opportunities Dr Catherine Conlon: Hantavirus at sea triggers a global health response — what is this virus? Ireland, an electrostate: 100 years after Ardnacrusha, we now face the same energy challenges Good Vibrations: The Cork choir helping cancer survivors to reclaim their voice Money Diaries: An apprentice mechanic on €22K living in the Midlands Opinion: Women over 40 have been sidelined for too long. Now we push back Neurodivergence: The phrases people with ADHD are tired of hearing Surrealing in the Years: I'm not a government minister and AI didn't help me write this article The people carrier: Why have they almost disappeared from Irish roads? AI not so ready: The government's new tech literacy platform needs some improvement From Gaza to Iran: Israel's regional conflict expands with little accountability Stephen's Green Shopping Centre: Jaded Dubliners have had enough of bland, soulless buildings Noeline Blackwell: Character witnesses expose a legal system that fails victims Minister for nature: We need to work together to protect against biodiversity loss Kelly Earley: Don’t fall for the idea that Dublin is dangerous Irishwoman living abroad: Like many of my generation, the 'bailout babies', I chose emigration Gender-based violence: It’s time to recognise survivors as experts by experience Money Diaries: A compliance officer on €45K living in the Midlands Blood donation: Ireland's stocks are a lifeline for patients, but the system is under strain An Irish conundrum: Why do 125 people a year buy a convertible in this country? When morality becomes law: The parallels between modern oppressive Iran and Ireland’s past Surrealing in the Years: Housing plans will have us living like Bosco, if Bosco had roommates Fail to prepare: Recent fuel protests have exposed Ireland’s lack of future climate planning Larry Donnelly back from Boston: The recent fuel protests have struck a chord in Irish America Caroline Foran's new book: I wish I'd known sooner that self-compassion changes everything The Spring Economic Statement: Ireland is no longer forecasting the future, it’s bracing for it Soccer academies: Football can unite Ireland, but the hard work to build its future starts here The physio is in: The rise of fitness wearables is changing how and why we move Pirate queens, powerbrokers & public servants: Anne Chambers on her life as an Irish biographer Dublin's screen-free school: We have no tablets, no screens and no regrets Money Diaries: A man receiving invalidity pension living in the west of the country Office vacancy rates: Dublin's busy office market isn't broken, the interpretation of data is The money dial: How we manage our finances best to protect what we care about the most Opinion: Carbon tax may be the tax we love to hate, but it's the one we can't afford to scrap From Idaho to Ireland: I chose to leave the US behind, and now I love my new home Maria Walsh: Hungary's election result shows the centre can still hold in Europe Opinion: With a 'looksmaxxing' influencer rushed to hospital, is the war on ageing getting ugly? Opinion: The protests aren't just about fuel, they're a revolt against a hollow state The Pontiff vs the President: Trump, Pope Leo and the Catholic contradiction Harm reduction drugs policy: Compassion for some cannot become a risk to all Women and the Catholic Church: Reform has long been promised, but real change has been denied Motoring: How we can all get a bit more from our fuel Surrealing in the Years: 'Fuel protests' are bad news for a society that's given up on nuance Some very creative accounting was needed to greenlight the Galway ring road It's his menu, not ours: Let's not rush to criticise Rory McIlroy's choice of dinner
Loss of a parent: I spent 50 years preparing for my father's death, but it still came as a shock
2026-05-12 · via TheJournal.ie

A sketch by her father's friend, the (late) artist and medallist, Tom Ryan. Caoilfhionn Gallagher

LOSS OF A PARENT

For decades, Caoilfhionn Gallagher’s dad, Colm, defied every medical prediction. When he died recently at 80, the grief still arrived like a shockwave.

A FORTNIGHT AGO, my father died. He was 80.

Everybody has to die sometime, but I always believed an exception would be made in my father’s case.

I’m not saying he’s Superman, but no one has ever seen Colm Gallagher and Superman in a room together. Every child believes their father is invincible, but then they grow out of that belief. But for me, the illusion persisted.

And persisted.

And persisted.

Death stalked my father from the moment he was born.

In October 1945, in a nursing home by Huband Bridge on the canal, weeks after the end of World War II, my father, Colm, was born.

“Don’t get too fond of this one,” his mother was told. “He won’t last long.”

He was given a life expectancy of two, which should have taken him to 1947 – but he defied that prediction.

And 50 years later, in October 1997, Colm had a catastrophic stroke. I was a student in UCD at the time, and received a devastating out-of-the-blue telephone call, telling me to expect the worst. But he defied that prediction too, and even confounded the experts by learning to walk and talk again, and return to his demanding job at the top echelons of the civil service.

A fighter

In 2015, he was diagnosed with advanced bowel cancer. The statistics on survivability were grim. It looked bad. And yet again, he defied the medics and pulled through.

WhatsApp Image 2026-05-11 at 19.32.40 Caoilfhionn's dad, Colm, who passed away two weeks ago. Caoilfhionn Gallagher Caoilfhionn Gallagher

Over the past six months, he was buffeted by multiple serious infections and sepsis, and lurched between his care home and Beaumont Hospital A&E. Each time, we were warned this might be it. It never was. He even managed to rise again on Easter Sunday, something we had an atheist chuckle about over the past few weeks.

I started calling Dad Lazarus years ago. Through his determination, a deep commitment to proving doctors wrong, and sheer bloody-mindedness, he just kept going, decades after that nurse gave him that tiny life expectancy.

But death was always looming in the backdrop. All through childhood, he would entreat our mother to have a life beyond him, a network of support ready for when he “snuffed it.”

Scarred by the loss of his own father at a very young age, and seeing how it devastated his mother, planning for his death and protecting his wife from the impact of it was foremost in his mind for the almost 50 years I have known him.

And for decades, he has had lighthearted discussions with me about wanting his body to be put out for recycling in the green bin or mischievous locations for his ashes to be scattered.

I have had conversations with him about his predicted death multiple times.

I have been brought into a family room with boxes of tissues multiple times.

I’ve had the call saying “this is probably it” multiple times.

But two weeks ago, his luck finally ran out.

And I got the news in a New York City Uber, speeding to JFK Airport to try to make it back on time (I failed).

The doctors had said he’d probably got about three days – but Colm couldn’t resist proving the doctors wrong one last time. He lasted under three hours from that prediction.

WhatsApp Image 2026-05-11 at 19.32.40 (1) The loss is a disorientating, discombobulating feeling; the world feels off-kilter Caoilfhionn Gallagher Caoilfhionn Gallagher

So although this was a long goodbye, it was sudden in the end. And unexpected, for this invincible man who defied the medical odds for his entire life.

I have been caught off-guard by just how devastating it is to lose my father, despite having had half a century of worrying about it. It is a disorientating, discombobulating feeling; the world feels off-kilter. And it turns out that the anticipatory anxiety – worrying about it, thinking about it, planning for it – for all those years was utterly pointless.

The lead-in was decades in the making. But nothing could prepare me for the real thing.

Caoilfhionn Gallagher KC is a human rights lawyer, barrister and writer. In 2023, she was awarded the President of Ireland’s Distinguished Service Award for the Irish Abroad for her work, and in 2025, she was named Irish Tatler’s International Woman of the Year.

Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone...

A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.