Remember the Loch Ness Monster? The mysterious creature with the long neck protruding up out of the water? No one ever actually saw the monster and it was discovered that the grainy, black and white photograph of it was a hoax.
Well, there is another monster that you cannot see, one that is just as mysterious as the Loch Ness Monster, but more frightening and real.
We widowed people know this monster very well. It antagonizes you 24/7 but is even worse at night. It is in the quiet hours, when your mind is at rest, that this monster is most active and on the prowl. It infiltrates the dark corners of your mind with thoughts you cannot escape while you are lying in bed alone.
This monster has a name, too. It is called the Loneliness Monster, and it is a beast.
Coping with loneliness is the hardest part of being widowed. The moment-to-moment loneliness of no longer having someone to share the details of life with can leave you without a sense of direction or purpose at a time when you need it most. Even Mother Teresa pointed out that loneliness is the biggest hurt, not illness.
It is by far the worst thing about losing a spouse or partner, but it’s not the only thing.
When you lose the love of your life, you not only lose a romantic partner, but also a friend, who hangs out with you, a confidant that you share life experiences with, and the main person who makes you feel special, important, and unconditionally loved on a daily basis. You don’t realize how lonely you are until it’s the end of the day and you have a bunch of things to talk about, but no one to tell them to.
It can be scary and overwhelming to think of the future without the person you were supposed to spend the rest of your life with. Coping with these profound thoughts leave you feeling sad, hopeless, and fearful, and you wonder if you will ever be truly happy again.
But the Loneliness Monster doesn’t care about all that. Its job is to remind you, in every way possible, that you are alone – right here, right now – and that your life will never be the same. The monster creeps up on you and uses all sorts of ways to alienate you and keep you feeling forgotten and excluded.
“It antagonizes you 24/7 but is even worse at night.”
For instance, there are days when you notice that your phone hasn’t rung once all day, nor has there been a knock at your door with someone stopping by to pay you a visit. Weeks turn into months, and not one person decides to drop by to do a wellness check on you. Social invitations dry up and key friends lose contact with you, especially if these friends are part of a couple.
Friends and family members who were there during happier times have now nonchalantly, and some even brazenly, walked out of your life without a second thought. People continue to move on with their lives.
And because grief makes people so uncomfortable, they give you your space – and lots of it – until you return to your old self again. Naively thinking that waiting out your grief from a distance makes more sense than reaching out. Truth is, society doesn’t do well with grief, especially long-term grief. People want a quick fix for problems, and the grief of losing a spouse doesn’t fit neatly into that category.
After a while, people forget you ever even lost the best part of you.
But the Loneliness Monster never forgets, and it won’t let you forget either.
It reminds you, day after day, night after night. Like when you find yourself driving home late from work or school, and out of habit you reach over to pick up your phone to make a check-in call to your spouse. Something you have done countless times before. But then you immediately remember there is no spouse to call. No one on the other end to answer the phone no matter what time it is. No one for you to check in with simply because you know they care about your whereabouts.
You put the phone down and proceed to have a meltdown while driving. All you can do is pull over to keep from crashing.
You realize your whole sense of security and well-being is gone – it’s just as forever gone as they are.
The Loneliness Monster smiles with glee at the thought of you being so isolated and alone.
And then there are the clothes in the closet that remain untouched day in and day out. Yet another reminder of your aloneness, as well as the fact that you haven’t marked “get rid of clothes” off your to-do list. How can you? The thought of it is just too unbearable.
Some days you feel like a loose piece of thread hanging from one of those sweaters in the closet that if someone just so happened to tug on, you would come completely unraveled, just entirely undone, and wind up in one big messy ball on the floor.
That is what the Loneliness Monster does to you. It makes every day feel like you are at your wits end because the void of losing someone so vital to you takes such a toll. It takes everything that is within you to pick yourself up, pull yourself together, and get through each day by yourself.
And if that wasn’t enough, out of the blue, you may even have strange thoughts about what it might be like for inmates when they endure days, weeks, months, and sometimes years without physical contact from another human being. You think about how your life is just as devoid of human touch as theirs, and how depressing it is to realize that you have that in common.
“But the Loneliness Monster always remembers. It never forgets, and it won’t let you forget either.”
The Loneliness Monster smiles with glee at the thought of you being so isolated and excluded.
There are moments when the Loneliness Monster is most egregious, like when the quietness in the house is so palpable, that it engulfs you as if you are drowning. It dawns on you that you haven’t heard anybody’s voice in the house except yours in a long time and it’s enough to drive you crazy. You think about how the silence of loneliness is deafening, and how the oxymoron of that describes your life so perfectly now.
Everything about your life without your person feels like a paradox of confusion that you must wade through on a regular basis. Everything becomes too much, and nothing makes sense anymore.
Sometimes you feel powerless to stop the Loneliness Monster from taking over your life. You don’t want to be a recluse, but the disabling grief caused by the devastation of losing a spouse is ever present. Just as night follows day, the hurt and loneliness is very real and it’s constant. It never leaves you.
Not only is the Loneliness Monster relentless, but it’s also tricky. It plays games with your confidence and self-esteem. It devours you from the inside, even when you’re in a crowd of people. You feel lost and out of place in this big world of human beings all by yourself after being tethered to someone for so long. You are no longer part of that married couple that once was, and that scares you to death.
You think, “My God, how long will this go on?” You are surprised and dismayed when you awaken to a long period of loneliness that grows worse before it gets better.
Still, throughout it all, you can’t help but wonder how you have experienced one of life’s toughest challenges and survived.
Facing the future without someone you love can be terrifying, especially if you have never lived alone. The pain that comes with experiencing loneliness after the death of your spouse will linger for the rest of your life, but it will soften. Eventually, there will come a time when you learn to live life again, on your own terms, and you will have slayed the Loneliness Monster once and for all.
Until then, stay hopeful.
PS: This being the month of Halloween and all things frightening, I figured this post would be very fitting.
Let’s keep in touch! If anything resonated with you, please leave a comment below or find me on Instagram @tofrankwithlove
Thanks, really helped.
Only someone with 1st hand experience can write something of this magnitude. Every word and paragraph gave clear insight on whats to come after losing a spouse or partner. Another masterpiece you have blessed us with and I hope more is to come. Reading this actually felt like I was reading an autobiography, it is so well written. I wish you love, peace, and happiness on your road to healing.
P.S I hope a book is an the making “hint hint”.
Domonick,
Thank you for your comment.
It means the world to me that you took the time to read the article and it moved you.
I have lost a lot of people whom I loved, but losing my husband and becoming a widow has been by far the hardest experience of my life. I never expected loneliness to be so prevalent and all-consuming, but it is unfortunately. I just have to remember to take each day as it comes and know that everybody is doing the best they can at this difficult time.
I appreciate your words about the article. Hopefully there’s a book somewhere in my future. (fingers crossed!)
With gratitude,
J
Joyce…….this was stunning and absolutely true !!! NO ONE’S words have been able to bring me truth and comfort as yours have done. A tragic and forthright account of the realities of partner loss. I recently lost my loving partner of eight years late in life and the struggle without him is MASSIVE !!! Much love and respect to you for giving all of us a place of shared crisis to with healing . God gifted you with a clear destiny after Frank passed over , to share the essence of his importantance on this earth. Their souls are restored and free of bodily affliction, but they are with us forever !!! Thank you for helping the wounded. 🩷🙏☮️
I lost my husband of 51 years fine days after our anniversary in September, 2019. He was a disabled Vietnam veteran, who’d been ill for years. I took care of him. In April 2020, I knelt down and fractured my kneecap. It was surgically repaired. It took me 2 years to be able to get my range of motion back and walk well again. Then, in February this year, I fell and fractured the same knee in two places. I didn’t need surgery this time but I was immobile in a long brace for three and a half months. Thankfully my daughter, who is a disabled veteran, lives close by so she was able to help me until I could get up and move around. She went home after that. I know I’m blessed because she does check in on me. If I didn’t have my daughter, I don’t know what I’d do. I live alone and the loneliness is sometimes overwhelming. I lost all my friends because of my grief and injuries. They just got tired of me. Thank you for your story. It really resonated with me. I spend a lot of time in prayer and Bible study and meditation. That helps my loneliness. May God bless you.
Barbara,
Thank you for commenting.
My heart breaks to know that you lost your husband five days after your anniversary. That is not how you want to remember such a special day.
You have gone through a lot of struggles in your life with injuries, death, and loss of friends. I pray God will continue to bless you and heal your broken heart and knee. I’m so glad you have a daughter who loves you and helps you through your pain and loneliness. It is very hard to lose a spouse, but there are people who love you and want to be there for you, so hang on to them.
Stay hopeful,
J
I lost my husband January 1, 2021, Covid and I could not even be with him because the hospital would not allow me until they called me at 5am and told me he was dying. I didn’t even have time to go be with him so me and my son watched him pass away on my cell phone while we was passing and we were pouring out our hearts to him.
It was the worse day of my life. 😢
We were married 35. 1/2 years and he was the only man I had ever known. He was everything to me. I still have numbness of unbelief that this has happened.
I have pored
I have poured myself into my job and church and family to try to keep going forward. It’s extremely difficult!!!
I have hope in God that I will see him again but now is now and it’s a painful life to live.
Thank God for my son, who is a rock and strength to me. I know he will eventually meet his wife and have a family of his own, which I want for him but it does leave the thought of “I will be alone” I’m praying for purpose in life.
Anyway thanks for listening.
Geana,
Thank you for commenting. My God, we so many similarities in our stories! I understand your pain all too well.
When my husband was in the hospital battling COVID, I couldn’t go see him either. He was in the hospital for 14 days and I begged the doctors and nurses to let me see him and they wouldn’t. Not until it was time to remove him from the ventilator. It is so cruel how they treat the loved ones, especially the spouses who need to be there.
My heart goes out to you and your son. You both had to witness someone so special to you pass away virtually rather than holding his hand. Thank God you have a son who cares about you so much and doesn’t want you to be alone. That is truly a blessing.
I pray for your strength and peace.
Stay hopeful,
J
I’m not there yet, either. My husband Fred died January 5 of this year from Alzheimers. Early onset, no less. We were only married in 2007 and didn’t have kids because we were too old. No that having kids would help because they wouldn’t be Fred. At least we had some good retirement years before but not enough. Everything I do would be better done with him and I too, am living alone for the first time in my life. It’s not fun, but at least I’m an introvert like Fred, so it’s not as bad as it could be. I’m still very angry and broken hearted. I try not to think about the long, lonely years ahead of me and just take it one day at a time. Navigating life without him is horrible but I am doing the best I can and maybe even all right. At least sometimes.
Mary
Hi Mary,
Thanks for your comment.
I’m very sorry to hear about the passing of your husband Fred this year.
This widowhood journey is just beginning for you and I hope you know that you are not alone in it. At times it may feel like you are, but please know that HforW Foundation is a community of wonderful widows just like you who care about how you are doing.
You are right, living alone is zero fun. It is lonely and scary. I pray you have a few people in your life you can count on to help you through this time.
Stay hopeful,
J
YES! to all of what you wrote – but, I’ve been able to successfully stave off “the beast” by actively starting a New Life. This didn’t happen … I had to make it happen by actively starting to rebuild my broken life: that is what Bob aasked me to do before he never spoke again – and that is what I promised I would do (even when my heart was breaking).
Last year, around this time, I took stock of my life as it was – and realized I didn’t want to live a life that was stagnant, anymore. But I didn’t want to rush headlong into unstable relationships either, like so many widows do: I don’t want to replace my husband; Bob is irreplaceable! But I did want people in my life. This revelation was shocking to me, because I have always avoided people, and the dramas they bring with them. But, I’ve come to realize that people in my life is like having the TV or radio on … you can always turn it off when you’ve had enough 😉
I don’t feed “the beast”.
I occupy my thoughts and life with activity and thoughts that don’t allow the beast a chance to nip me.
And this year … life is actually on an upswing 😉
Do I miss my husband? YES – we were together 44 years; and I’d literally moved from my mother’s house to my husband’s house down the street. I’d never before Bob’s step off this planet, been alone. Being suddenly alone was a scary experience when it happened. My whole being went into shell-shock mode; and I experienced emotional missles frequently for the first 18 months of Widowhood. But now, 4 years into this New Life, I’m dealing with stuff much better. Bob and I were ‘joined at the hip’ my SIL tells people; and we “were a Team’ our daughter tells people. I MISS THAT. But, I also know that being stuck in the missingness will destroy me. So, I don’t allow the beast to play with my emotions.
I fill my time with long Daytrips to places I’ve never been too, before; and sometimes I do a loop drive through 3 counties just because I like the long drive – and the memories along the route (it soothes me). I have a small intimate group of people (mixed: gals & guys – some old friends, some new friends) that I surround myself with during daylight hours – and they keep me so busy with living life to the fullest in the moment, that I’m too tired at night, to pay “the beast” any mind 😉
Stay hopeful: things DO get easier. Not better, just different – easier.
Valeria,
I love everything you said here! I admire you for stating that you can relate to “the beast” of loneliness, but you taking an active role in not letting it consume you is where I want to be. I’m just not there yet.
I have activities that I am involved in but to be honest, I can’t say that I am completely committed to them yet. My husband passed away last year, so it’s a slow process. I love the idea of taking day trips or staycations. I need to give that a try, even if I have to go alone.
Thank you for commenting and sharing a bit of your journey.
J