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Over time, and no doubt a very difficult time it has been, there is no need to put a time table on your own personal grieving process. Let it unfold as it will, on your own time and in your own space. Know that you had a wonderful life together, and that there is a reason your husband passed before you...and your perhaps your greater emotional strength to survive a loss. It will never be the same, as there are no one or two people alike. However, you will learn to move forward, with greater strength and courage everyday. Remember, it's a day at a time, perhaps an hour or minute at a time.
Try and get involved with a grief group, to talk about and to listen to others that also feel like you do. Yes, you feel lost, but you are not alone in your journey for better days ahead. I attend a Men's Grief group, and it helps to share and listen to others that are experiencing similar feelings, from the loss of a loved one going back one year to ten years. It's a journey, and with time and people that understand and have experienced, you will start to feel and know that there are a whole lot of us just around the corner...with welcome and understanding eyes and ears to share with. We are out there. Try and take some small steps to reach out and to share your story and your pain, and your feelings.
You are not on a race track...it's on your own time...and with understanding people to share your experience. You see, I just gave you a hug.
After my father died we realized Mom was having problems and we took her to USC to a Neurologist who told us she had dementia and it had been brought on by her locking herself away, when my father died. She refused to go back to church, go out to eat with us, go to the store, just go out for a ride to see the scenery. It was as though she felt she was being unfaithful to my father to have ANY FUN without him. They were married for 60 years and celebrated their 60th Anniversary in the hospital.
Please I beg of you NOT TO DO THIS TO YOURSELF! You can find others to help or confide in. I know your pain due to the loss of your husband is horrible but God has seen fit to keep you around and he has a purpose for you and I am sure your husband would be proud to know that you love him and you are spreading that love around to others.
I too am glad that this question was asked as I am the caregiver for my mother. I have previously cared for my Aunt, my Brother in Law, my Father and now Mom. I am 61 and divorced with a child and I too wonder how my life will change when Mom is gone, will I be lost or become depressed? That frightens me, because I want and still need to live the rest of my life and not be a burden on my child. I want to enjoy what time I still have left on this earth. I would like to work but getting a job at my age will not be easy. I am currently checking out some different ideas because I would like to become involved in these things now, rather than waiting until Mom passes. I just feel that I need something to already be "in place."
You can make this loneliness pass but it will require work on your part. You will never forget your husband and the love you shared....now run and live the rest of your life!
God Bless You!
I do not think that we ever got over the loss; we simply re-channel our thinking and carrying around warm & loving thoughts of our lost loved one. My first husband passed away in 2000 from the dreaded Alz. Disease and I remarried in 2008 to a loving man who was diagnosed with Vascular Dementia in 2012. We had no clue that he had a heart problem but then these things happen. He is now in an assistant living facility since the doctors would not release him into my home care. There are just so many things that the doctors took into consideration & pointed these things out to me. I had to concede and place him & thank God he had long-term care insurance.
We sometimes beat ourselves up over having to place our loved one in a facility but I have found out that it is not the worst thing that can happen. I continue to stay busy facilitating an Alz. Caregiver Support Group & working with others who are going through the caregiving phase. Sometime just being able to listen to someone who has problems is a gift in itself. There are many ways to move forward & yet remember your loved one, keeping the good memories close to your heart. Be at peace with yourself.
alert. Now, I am so restless in my soul because I don't "have anything to do." I am thankful to read the good suggestions above on how to learn how to take care of myself, do fun things now in my free time, and learn to live a slower pace of life. But, I still miss them very, very much!
Permit me to share how I have dealt with grief, it may not all be right for you, but maybe something can help.
Grief, cry, scream for a period of time. When you are ready to move forward make a plan. I think you are ready, albeit difficult, because you are asking for help.
Your plan can include things you want - visit museums, exercise, learn to decorate cakes, join a book club.
When you are at a fork in the road of life, is the best time to create new habits.
Go on a vacation or visit a friend, something you could not have done while caregiving.
Use the return from the trip as the demarc for a new lifestyle.
Turn your goals into new habits: sign up for an exercise class, arts and craft class. Buy or rent a Series from Netflix - BTW, Breaking Bad is really good. Schedule yourself busy and productive - not necesarily stressful.
Give yoruself something to look forward to! Make new friends, with NEW interests, make sure you can converse about new things - weather, news, movies - NOT caregiving.
You are a caring and giving person, and you can be something other than a caregiver - reinvent yourself - your new widowed, but happy self.
If you focus on new things, new people and share superficial pleasentries, eventually you will develop a new life and new friends and be in a better place.
I wish you the very best.
L
I had been feeling better, walking regularly, then jogging, did a 5K on Memorial Day weekend, taking yoga classes and going to my gym three days a week. Then one day, on the way to yoga, jogging... I fell on black top road. Hurt two hands, elbows and knees. Went to the doctor a few days later with infected bruises on one hand. Got a tetanus shot (ouch) and antibiotics. Now the scabs are healing, but I am struggling to get going again two whole weeks later. Cried in two gentle yoga classes because everything hurts. Can't go to the gym, because my muscles still hurt. Now I'm reaching back out to a therapist and have an appointment on Friday.
I am so relieved to see this question and relieved to know that perhaps these feelings are normal. When I think about going back to work, after two + years out while caring for Mom, I start to feel very anxious and like crying. Why don't I look forward to it? Why do I feel like my siblings are not stepping up and taking advantage of me? I guess you would call this the definition of depression. Well, I'm determined to keep moving forward.
I use an AP on my I-phone called "MapMyRun" and walk 2 miles every morning with my dog and sweetheart. We try to do that at night too, total 4+ miles a day, but often I can't do it twice a day. I've been napping a lot since the fall... and for many, many years, I have been unable to sleep more than 1.5 hours at a time (bad habit of anxiety).
So, all I can offer is to say, thank you for helping me to know there are others out there struggling too. I am determined to keep trying to get back to feeling healthy again and trying to keep moving forward.
"More" Magazine this month has lots of good ideas on how to make new friends, how to take some risks and do exciting things. I hope it helps others to know... I'm with you on this journey. I'm 60 and hopeful that the next 40 years get better and better, and I know that will take some more work and good creative ideas from the people on this site.