Don't grieve alone; 14,000 members and growing
I lost my husband we were high school sweethearts we had plans and it was not suppose to be this way we had two kids together and I feel so lost and the pain i feel becuase of how much I miss him…Continue
Started by Nicole. Last reply by Martha Washburn Sep 22, 2022.
For 40+ years we were together…married 39 years….We were to celebrate our 40th anniversary…Nobody who hasn’t been married, and lost a spouse could possibly understand….even though he was into many…Continue
Started by Susan B. Last reply by Connie Sep 1, 2022.
I got married on May 1, 1992 and lost my husband on June 30, 2017. My wedding day was the happiest day of my life and if I had one wish, it would be to go back and live that day over. It has been…Continue
Started by Carol Klotz. Last reply by Carol Klotz May 3, 2020.
I lost my wife on the 25 of March after returning from my Dads funeral. She is everything to me. No matter how bad it got, no matter how much my PTSD drug me down, She has been my light in the…Continue
Started by Shane Hughes. Last reply by Shane Hughes Apr 16, 2020.
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I can’t say at present I know the answer but I am still reading and trying to understand. Two nuggets of treasure I have discovered so far is first as Frankel points out that the only freedom we truly have is how we choose to respond to those things which occur to our lives. Though I don’t find this very comforting in of itself I do find some solace in accepting the truth. As the serenity prayer reminds us; “God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change” which is everything outside myself, Frankel points out that in life we are only free to choose how we act and by accepting that which we do not control we can begin to find some peace. He does not say it will diminish our grief, but it does give us the opportunity to do something with it.
Anne’s father, Otto likewise lost his wife and two young lovely daughters. How does one pick oneself up and face life after so great a loss?
I don’t know the answer yet, Im still trying to understand it but both of these men did serve a purpose outside of themselves afterwards following their loss. They did something that contributed to serving the lives of those around them.
This didn’t eliminate or perhaps even lessen their grief but their grief empowered them more likely to carry on once they looked outside of themselves. I have to be honest, just typing that sentence makes me want to hide back in my bed and sleep more and wallow in my grief. That seems sooo hard to do and such a tall order, but I don’t sense they did it because they wanted to help themselves as much as they did it from the love they had for those lost.
In our culture that is particularly difficult to assimilate because here in Western Society the message really in more of one serving the self, but I fear if I fall prey to that message I will be eft to endure only more sadness and despair that I can barely stand to endure now any longer.
I suppose if I get to that ah-ha moment I’ll post it here but so far I’m simply searching like everyone else for a way forward.
Please don’t misinterpret this post to mean anything other than me simply sharing my search for a pathway forward. For those in the earlier phase of your grief it probably means little at this point. Believe me when I say I understand and I feel your pain, I know what it is like, Ive been there and still am. I just can’t find myself and to continue living in quiet desperation is not an option for me to continue indefinitely with.
And why I write this here is because one of the things I found early on that helped is to write and talk about this stuff with those who share a similar fate and can understand or relate because they do share that similar fate, and I write and talk to those because it helps me feel better, sometimes and clears my thoughts.
Eleven months I've been reading this forum and feel like I've gotten to know you through your grief. How weird is that. Grieving is brutal and I had no idea whatsoever how different it is in reality. That emptiness knowing you will never another conversation, joke, hip bump, with that one person you never had to explain yourself to. Neither of us are from the country we made our lives in. I have no family here, no children, just a couple of friends, and retired from work the year before he died. As he became sicker we became isolated but were quite happy with it with our family of dogs and birds. Two friends keep in contact, mostly texting, and I am so grateful for them. I go weeks without talking to anyone and mostly am okay with it though I can't imagine the rest of my life being this. I've only dreamed about him Jordan a couple of times but never in the dream have we made eye contact or connected. I would love for that to happen. Just to know that he was truly there in my dreams.
I hope Linda is still here, reading at least. Though her experience is very different to mine I want to hear everyone's experience.
After reading some of the posts and comments recently posted on this site which is called Online GRIEF SUPPORT, it seems that some people are being insensitive of those of us who are stricken and in deep mourning. While I understand that everyone has their own opinion and their own way of grieving, it does seem inappropriate to mock people who are grieving for their spouses and partners. As the title of this forum indicates, this forum is for supporting bereaved spouses and partners.
If some people find that widowhood is an adventure, something to enjoy, then more power to them, but perhaps they are posting on the wrong forum. There must be sites for widows and widowers who find their new life exciting and enjoyable, sites where they can meet like-minded other widows/widowers and date, start a new life. But for those of us who are in longterm mourning it seems that we are being mocked and that our grief is being belittled. I want to feel supported on my journey of grief on this site. I think that's what Jon-Paul Ackerman had in mind when he created this site/forum.
I am like rachel and morgan and many, many others on this forum for whom this existence after the death of our beloved spouse is absolutely brutally painful. It'll be two years on August 4th that my life as I knew it ended, the day Joseph passed away. He was the LOVE of MY LIFE and I will NEVER EVER be whole again. Sure I will go on surviving day by day, week by week, year by year, but I will never stop missing him, never stop longing for him, never stop pining away for him, darling husband who passed at age 49. I will always feel cheated on his behalf and mine. Nothing can take away that feeling of being wronged by the universe.
The only reason that I am still alive is that I cannot take my own life as horribly painful as this existence has been; I have siblings (no children or parents) who would be devastated if I took my own life. So as utterly horrific as this journey has been so far, I am still alive. Not because I want to be alive, but b/c I am unwilling to kill myself. The day when the end of my journey comes will be the happiest day of my life--I will go join my darling Joseph in the afterlife, and that will be for eternity.
My pain sometimes is so strong that I can hardly breathe, not to mention all the aches and pains that I have developed since Joseph's terminal diagnosis. And I know that for many of you it has been the same. For all those fellow mourners and grievers on this site, I send you my deepest empathy for the daily struggle that you face, and the pain that you have to contend with every single day, hour by hour. There's nothing else to say, no other way to comfort you. All I can is peace to you all!
And I don't mean the new thread comment degrading. I'm half serious. More power to them. I understand they need a place to share but those of us posting on this thread are living a much different existence.
Thank you Joanna and morgan. You guys put into words what I wouldn't/don't have energy to formulate. Those like Steve or Stewart who, I feel, have genuinely struggled and can offer a perspective of hindsight or some kind of beacon in the nightmare, I appreciate very much. But those who come here bright eyed and bushy tailed on the heels of 1, maybe 2, months of grief like it's no big deal baffle me and I can't help either to feel incredibly insulted. I think about where I was in that time frame - processing suicide with my counselors! Maybe they should start a thread called newly grieved and ready, hell maybe even excited, for the "adventure". For at least the first handful of months I felt like this was a bad dream I couldn't wake up from. Adventure my ass, least not for me.
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