Yesterday marked 17 months since my husband died. So much has changed in my life since then. I’ve grieved, and grieved, and grieved some more. I’ve worked through the grief, written through the grief, talked to my grief counselor, cried on the shoulders of family and friends, and – to be honest – I’m really, really tired of grieving. Shouldn’t I be done by now? Over it? Shouldn’t I have accepted it and moved on after nearly a year and a half?
Yes, I’m tired of grieving, but I guess that’s just my tough luck, because every time I think the grieving is over, my life is moving forward, and I have hope for the future, I have a little relapse, and feel the pain of his loss severely all over again. For example, although I had a really great time celebrating New Year’s Eve with my oldest besties, the days that followed seemed bleak. I finally realized that I was still extremely sad that I hadn’t been able to ring in the new year alone with Rick, playing Boggle and drinking Peppermint Schnapps, as I had for years and years before. That’s how I wanted to spend my NYE for the rest of my life, and I still feel robbed of that little pleasure.
However, the benefit of having journaled my way through this grief journey is that – when I reread things I wrote just after Rick died, or I revisit how I was feeling a year ago – I know I’m different, I’m better. In those entries, I see a woman still consumed with loss and mired in grief, attempting to hang onto the past. And I don’t feel the same today. I’m pretty content with life 90 percent of the time now. I even feel joy, again. I might go so far as to not consider myself as grieving anymore… maybe just a woman who gets sad once in a while, a woman who feels remorse for what she lost – if I have to label it at all.
Despite the knowledge that I’m more “myself” again, it still came as quite a shock the other day to realize that I don’t feel like a wife anymore. Having spent the last 17 months alone, I suppose that there’s no way I could. I truly feel like a single individual. I’m no longer an “us.” I’m a “me.”
Yes, now and then I say things like “we used to go there,” or “we did this or that,” but it’s usually meant as a historical reference, it’s not that I still feel like part of a couple. It’s the “Rick and I used to do this” we. But after 17 months of me doing things as just me, I do feel different today. And now it’s easier to picture being alone in the future without that panicked feeling of loneliness or impending doom – or whatever it was – that I felt when Rick first died.
So, now that I feel like a single unit again, the question that’s uppermost in my mind most days is do I take off the wedding ring? I’ve crossed many different milestones since Rick’s death: all the firsts, all the lasts, birthdays and holidays without him, traditions forever changed. And throughout these months and milestones, I’ve been wearing his ring as if I’m still his wife, because I’ve still felt like his wife. But, at the one year mark, I started to think, OK, it’s been a year, I guess I should take the ring off now. The problem was, when I actually grabbed ahold of the ring and started to pull it off my finger, I got a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach. So I let go – of both the ring and the idea.
Every so often in the months since then, I’ve consider the idea again. I picture taking the ring off, and I get that feeling in my gut, and I know I still can’t do it. He put this ring on my finger on one of the the most important days of my life, the day I vowed to love him for the rest of my life. Not only to love him for his too-short life, but for my entire life. How can I take it off? Wouldn’t I be breaking that promise?
But another part of me says taking off the wedding ring is a symbol of healing, of my acceptance of a new and different future. I have survived the death of my dreams for our future, and wearing the ring is a constant reminder of what I’ve lost. It’s a sham. Like it or not, I am no longer a married woman. Like it or not, I am a single woman now, so get realistic, and take off the damn ring.
And, of course, as a person who always tends to overthink things, if and when I’m truly ready to do the deed, how do I do it? Do I just reach out one day and grab it and pull it off? Do I plan a special occasion that’s somehow significant to our marriage? Or do I remove it in a place that we loved to go together? Do I wear it on a chain around my neck? Have it made into a widow’s ring or a different piece of jewelry?
No, I’ll probably keep it in its original condition and put it on my right hand. I like the ring. It’s a set, my engagement diamond and my wedding band, shaped perfectly to almost look like one ring – except in 20 year’s time, I never got around to having them soldered together. And it’s the nicest ring I’ve ever had. I remember how impressed Rick was when it came time to buy the engagement ring and I told him I didn’t want him to buy me a diamond, because I already had one that I wanted him to put into a new setting. He just needed to buy the setting and a matching wedding band.
I remember him being surprised that I would turn down a new stone. He shook his head in disbelief and said, Wow, I can’t believe I’m marrying a woman who doesn’t want me to buy her a diamond! I guess I lucked out!
Although he was surprised, he definitely wasn’t unhappy about the cost savings. But when I explained the history of the diamond that I already owned, he understood. My great aunt Mary, born in 1880, was a spinster. Not a flattering label, but true of the time in which she lived. In fact, she and her sister Katherine, were both spinster school teachers. And both of them, at some time in their lives decided to buy themselves diamond rings. Who needed a man, anyway?
When Aunt Mary died a few years before I was born, she left this particular diamond ring to my Aunt Patsy. Aunt Patsy, was also a spinster. And this would be the only diamond ring she would have in her short life. She was 57 when she was diagnosed with lung cancer. I cared for her in the 10 months between diagnosis and death. (Ironically, this same scenario was to be replayed 30 years later with Rick – same cancer, same treatment, same time length.) Before Patsy died, she told me, since I was also unmarried, she wanted me to have the ring. At age 28, I was the last in the family’s long line of spinsters. (Sidenote, I was the only one of the three of us who had a baby despite not being married. I guess you could say I broke the tradition a bit.)
I’ve never been a real jewelry person, and I couldn’t imagine having more than one diamond. So that’s why, when Rick was planning to purchase my ring, I asked him if he would put their diamond in a new setting that he chose for me. I felt like I was doing it in honor of both my aunts. (Look ladies, I got a man! And he’s putting our diamond in a ring, and he’s going to marry me, and love me forever! Score one for the spinster team!) I felt very fortunate to find the love they had missed in their lives, and it just made the ring all the more symbolic.
I don’t think it’s a great quality diamond. Rick was going to get it appraised for me, but then he asked if the jeweler discovered that it was a poor quality, did I really wanted to know the answer? I decided that the diamond’s worth was in its history and not something that could be calculated financially. So, we didn’t have it appraised, we selected the setting together, then he placed the diamond ring on my finger for our official engagement, and the matching band beside it on our wedding day, where it’s held its place of honor ever since.
After considering the options, I think if I finally break down and take the ring off my left hand, it’s definitely going on the right. Now I’m still trying to decide if I should have some kind of “ring removal” ceremony. After all, it was during a ceremony that Rick put it on me. I don’t mean a gathering of hundreds of people, like the wedding. I mean something that makes it meaningful to me.
Perhaps I’ll sit outdoors in Rick’s favorite chair under the gazebo, under the wind chimes that hold his ashes. Maybe I’ll start a fire in his little burner just like he did on winter evenings, drink a glass of red wine in his honor, and have a little chat with him before I move the ring from that significant place of honor on the left hand to the right. Maybe I’ll sit and talk with him awhile and tell him how much I still love him and miss him. And that, although I may be forced to live as a single woman, I’ll never stop being his wife.
Because that’s the truth of it. In the “real world,” I’m a single woman again and Rick himself would be urging me to move on without him and enjoy the time I have left on this earth. But in my heart, I’ll always be married to the man who put this ring on my finger, looked into my eyes and said…
With this ring, I thee wed.
I saw this posting and thought how ironic that I should fin this today of all days. I lost my husband 17 Months ago today and tomorrow will be our 57th Wedding Anniversary, my 2nd Anniversary alone. I’m trying my best to continue without him, but it’s not easy. I keep telling myself that he’s not suffering anymore and he’s with our youngest daughter who past away at the age of 26 1/2, way too young, but God had other plans for her. It will be 26 years in June that we lost her and I still miss her terribly. I know deep down in my heart that they are at peace and not suffering anymore, but it’s so hard for the ones left behind. I know that my Son & Daughter are grieving too but they work so hard to keep me happy and I know I should”t keep leaning on them because it’s not fair to them, so I try to cover up my feeling in front of them but it’s not alway easy. I love them so much and I want them to be happy, but they promised their Dad that they would take care of me and they’re doing a great job. I know we will all be ok, I thank God everyday for my blessing and I know that someday everything will be ok, but in the meantime I will continue to wear my wedding rings because I will be married forever not even death will take that from me.
Juliet
Your story sounds like mine. I was my husband’s 3rd wife but I was the only one who had no care for expensive jewelry. My engagement ring is almost a full carat diamond, I had never had a real diamond. We lived together and I was driving his truck, used the backside of my hand to wipe the inside windshield and scratched the window, he couldn’t believe I didn’t know diamonds cut glass. 😱😁. He couldn’t believe his luck that he got a woman who didn’t want expensive jewelry.
He had lost so much weight that I can wear his wedding band with it just a little loose. But I bought ring adjusters and my engagement, wedding band and his wedding band are held together. He’s been gone 17 months and like you, my days are roller coaster trips.
About the ring, my cousin took her husband’s ring to the jewellers. He put an angel charm in the ring by drilling thru the ring and attaching the angel in the ring opening and an attachment to thread a necklace and she wears his ring around her neck to keep him close to her heart.
When my husband was alive, his last hospitalization, he was in for 9 days and became unresponsive. Transferred to hospice and died 2 days later. It happened so unexpectedly, I had no chance to prepare for his death. I think that’s why I’m having such a hard time realizing he’s gone.
I lost my husband of 50 years(we dated 5 years) so together 55 years total, on October 12, 2018. He was an Agent Orange Vietnam victim. His last few years were tuff. Last hospitalization he was told he had 6mos or less, he died in two weeks. I feel like I didn’t get to tell him all that I wanted to as he slipped into a coma unexpectedly his last 2 days. The grief I am going through is overwhelming. I can truly understand how you can die from a broken heart. I don’t know how I am going to continue without him. To hear your hard grief lasted so long…. I just don’t know. Sometimes I don’t want to go on. It’s just hard. We had the kind of love for each other not many have.
I lost the love of my life on November 13, 2016, due to complications from hip replacement 36 hours earlier. We had been married for almost 32 years. I continued wearing my rings until July 2018 when I took my rings and his ring to a local jeweler who mounted my rings onto my husband’s ring. I now wear this ring on my left hand. After 26 months, i still have my “not so good” days, but every time I look at this ring, I am reminded of the love and life we shared.
The love of my life, G. E. TwoFeather, died in March 2017. We had been together since Aug. 2006, each of us 53 years old and finally finding our “soulmate”. I still wear the diamond ring he put on my finger, and have replaced the plain platinum band with a black titanium widows ring. I wear his wedding ring on my index finger of my left hand. I wear the plain silver band from my deceased husband of 29 years and the platinum band from my marriage to TwoFeather on my right hand. They bring me comfort whenever I look at each of the rings, symbolic of two men I shared my life with.
I lost the love of my life on August 7, 2016. I moved my rings from my left to my right hand, not sure if I could ever completely take them off. Reading your story sounds so much like my grief process, most days I think I’ve got this and will be fine but I have days that I don’t want to even get out of bed. I said 2019 would be the year for me to get out and start doing things again but so far I have turned down a couple of outings with friends but its baby steps.
Melissa