This small green bear, your name embroidered on its chest, was never yours. It would have been our Christmas gift to you, had you lived a month longer. The ones you would give you had already bought, wrapped, labelled - thoughtful, organised to the end, to the bitter end. We unwrapped them on the day, smiled at your kindness, wept at our loss.
Early Christmas gifts that you had not organised, that nobody could have anticipated, went to strangers: your pancreas, a life free from daily injections; your kidneys, two lives free from dialysis; your liver, divided, to a young girl and an older lady, who would quite simply have a life they had almost given up hoping for. Your heart, damaged by extended life-support, not suitable for transplantation, yielded its valves to repair the damaged hearts of others. Even bone and skin were harvested for people you never knew. That Christmas you gave hope to so many people, and to us the consolation that they live on because of you, and that you live on in them.