Don't grieve alone; 14,000 members and growing
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Lisa,
It is much the same for me. My husband died four years ago, when he was 40 years old, of a sudden and unexpected heart attack. Like you, I have a wonderful support system (in my case, my family -- my Mom, my Dad, my sister and her husband), and while that helps to some extent, and of course it's good to know that they love me, it doesn't really help all that much. None of them can understand what this hell is like. My husband was in a band with my sister and brother-in-law for many years, so they know him well and have a little bit of an idea (they were quite close with him), but it's not the same.
Like you, I don't care about anything. All I want is to be with my beloved again. It is all I can manage to take a shower or go to work or whatever, and it takes a huge effort. I can only do one such thing per day, most days. I only do it because my financial situation is very bad, so I have no choice but to go to work. If I could, I would just stay home all the time.
I would never tell you that time will heal your pain; in my opinion, it does not. It can make it a little better, for some people, but certainly not for everyone. Not for me. In any case, it isn't right for anyone to tell you how to experience or deal with your grief -- only you can make that determination for yourself. As for not having thrown out his toothbrush, who says you have to? I still have my husband's toothbrush, in the bathroom cup right next to mine, and I will always keep it there.
I know that the things I say aren't "hopeful", and I think it's probably good that Carole has also replied to your post, so that you can see that for some people it does get better, at least to some extent. I just want you to know that this horrible experience/event affects different people differently, and that the way you feel is not wrong or abnormal.
Hi, Lisa. If it's been three months then you most likely lost your husband around the same time I lost mine. It's very painful and I find my self calling his number even though I know he will never answer. Last weekend my kids were at a sleep over and I only had the baby with me. I decided to go downtown and walk by some of the club's and bars we used to go to. I felt happy and sad and then angry . All those memories and then the thought that we will never do the things again and he is gone. Sometimes I feel like if I were to walk around long enough eventually I would find him but that's just fantasy. It is nice to find other people who understand what it feels like , though I wish none of us had to loose our spouses or loved ones.
Lisa, its ironic I keep going through all Kevins stuff expecting to find a new precious paper, picture or note or even his dark hair on the bathroom floor. I keep looking like if I look hard enough, I can find something and feel better. But it is been 9 1/2 months--nothing new to find. I am reading the light between us book and it helps me. Take Care, Ruthie
I understand that, as I have done the same thing. In the month or so after my husband died, there were still new things, but not anymore. He never really kept a lot of "stuff" anyway, so there wasn't much to find. :(
Like you other ladies, I look for "things". The hair on John's comb. Pressing the clothes he wore that last day, to my face. His scent is gone. Using his electric toothbrush. Sometimes sleeping in his P. J.'s. Seeing his beautiful handwriting on something he wrote. Nothing brings him back. Nothing.
Oleta
Lisa,
You are very welcome. It's good that at least you were able to be with your beloved while he was ill and when he died.
I'm sorry his family is so distant/horrible. Maybe staying close with your stepdaughter would help both you and her, as you could share memories of your husband (if not just yet, perhaps in future)? Having to put the dog down is just adding insult to fucking injury, dammit. I'm sorry. I do not believe there is a god, particularly not a loving one, and if I'm wrong and there is one I hate the bastard as I believe it betrayed me. Anyway, I understand why your faith has been diminished. If you wish to maintain your faith, perhaps speak with a priest/rabbi/iman/etc. who you trust with your feelings and trust not to spout platitudes
I saw a medium about two years after my husband died (I made the appt. about 6 months after he died, but she is quite busy/popular, and was booked up for that long). I still don't know if my husband really communicated with me through her, but at the very least I believe that she is legit, in that I think that she believes in what she does, and that she is not trying to scam anyone. Be careful which psychics you see, as you don't want to waste your money, but if you can find good ones then maybe that will help you. If you want to look into the one I saw, her name is Janet Nohavec.
Hello Lisa,
My deepest condolences to you and my deepest sympathy to you. I don't know how to console a 46-year-old wife/widow who has just lost her husband, the love of her life. Life is so cruel and senseless! What you are facing is one of the most agonizing of all human experiences. All of us on this site are only too familiar with this loss. You have come to the right forum for support and comfort.
There is so much that you write that sounds familiar. Also in the responses to you there were many thoughts and sentiments that I could totally relate to. The journey of grief is individual, as individual as ourselves and the love and relationship we shared with our spouse. All of us grieve differently; some grieve for a year or so while others will mourn and grieve the loss of their soulmate for as long as they live. I fall in the latter category. However, there is no right or wrong way to grieve; there is no time limit, no prescribed length of time one does or should mourn or grieve. Like I said and others too, grief is deeply individual. We each endure it in our own way. Some heal over time, while others learn to live with the constant pain of loss.
In my case it's been 26 months since my most wonderful husband Joseph passed. He lost his battle to lung cancer at age 49 after being diagnosed nine months before. For me the acute, burning, stabbing pain of the first year has lessened some. I no longer howl or shout like an animal, but every single day I cry and I pray to die, to be reunited with Joseph. I am not interested in anything, I don't want to live; I'm just going through the motions because grief doesn't kill as all of us here found out early on in our painful journey from hell. I am alive because I can't take my own life, not out of choice. So even though the raw pain has softened some, my life is not worth much to me. I have a loving family (siblings, no children or parents) and I am not going to kill myself, but every morning as I open my eyes, my first thought is to be with Joseph. How I wish I were with Joseph! How I wish I were dead!
I sometimes go through a strange feeling. Of course, I know that Joseph is gone as in dead, but even after two plus years, sometimes it seems unreal that he is dead, that he'll never come back again, that I'll never see him again, we'll never hold each other, kiss each other, smile at each other. Sometimes it seems unreal. Very strange. Still in denial at some deep level.
It's still early days for you. You are still in shock, in raw grief. The pain is unspeakable, unbearable, physical. At this dark hour of your tragedy I send you warm thoughts and prayers for courage and strength. And may you find peace someday.
Hugs, Trina
Lisa, Most people mean well. There is no way a person can really understand what we are going through unless they have been widowed themselves. It's impossible.
You write because it eases something. Besides, no one really wants to hear about how you feel, so you write about your feelings,. Not your children, relatives or friends, they don't want to be made uncomfortable. Shame on them. . My best comfort was and is a cousin who was widowed six years ago. She called me daily for three months and literally saved my life. She knew/knows exactly how I feel.
Hang in there kid. Please be brave.
Oleta
Lisa, We have all thought the things you are thinking. Grief sessions let me know all of my crazy thoughts were not exclusive. Most of my new friends have felt the same things. I sat in John's chair and prayed for death more than once, so that I can be with him. His death happened two days after Christmas. There is not ONE DAY that I do not cry for him. the difference is that I don't cry all day long now. Really, friends and family DO NOT want to hear about how you feel. It makes them so uncomfortable. I don't care how they feel, I am hurting, you are hurting but we ACT better for them. Many people tell me that I sound better. It's an act. It's what they want. I act like they want me to be.
John's spirit is here in our home. I can feel him. I feel him protecting me. It comforts me.
He was my pillar. You don't have to be a pillar.
I drive with one of John's unwashed shirts on the passenger seat. Makes me feel much better. I pray for you. One day, like me, you will realize that at least you have not cried the whole day, just part of it. Keep writing and expressing yourself. We are all here for each other.
Oleta
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