As I finished my first post, I was already thinking about the new one.
Hope for Widows has given me much food for thought. I know that there are countless experts who have written on grief: the stages, how to cope, being resilient, advice on how to laugh again, how to find joy again, the emotional processes involved in grief, the list goes on and on. However, my grief is not like yours. My love was not like yours. The age was different, the time together was different, the fatal end was different.
Was there an accident? Did it happen out of the blue? Was there an illness? How long did the illness go on for? Did they take their own lives? Did you know it was inevitable? Are there children involved? How old are they? How are they coping? Do you have to keep them all together? Were they a first spouse or are you coping with other children or family members, too?
I guess where I’m going with this is that there are as many “griefs” as there are people. I hate applying labels to situations and emotions. You cannot label grief. At times you cannot even pinpoint it.
I’ve been thinking long and hard about my feelings. I can now say, in hindsight, that my grief started on March 4th, 2021.
I was at my daughter’s house babysitting. She had just gone back to work after maternity leave. She’s an English teacher, too. She works with primary school kids, I work with adults, so the arrangement worked perfectly for us. She went to work in the mornings, I babysat little Africa. Then, I would drive back from Lucena to Antequera, have lunch with my hubby, and go to work.
Except that day, he called me and told me he had fallen and that he couldn’t get up. I drove like a madwoman from Lucena to Antequera to see what had happened to the love of my life.
I thought he might have broken something. But no. He was sitting on the couch; he couldn’t really remember much. My daughter had called the ambulance, I arrived before they did. When they did get there, they did all the COVID procedures, and we went to the hospital. That’s when he was diagnosed, he had a 10cm cancerous tumor in his left lung.
You know, I don’t know if this happens to the rest of you. I find it hard to remember the fun happy times, but this, all of this, I remember with such clarity!