Saturday, January 27, 2024

Widows don't always wear black

 

 

                In the years of my childhood, we had many aunts and uncles, of multiple generations. We called them all Aunt or Uncle but some were great-aunts and uncles and a few qualified for a great-great label. We also used the titles as one of respect – my dad’s godfather was always Uncle Jerry Ryan although he was not a blood relative. Like my dad, who was named for him, he was Jeremiah but always called Jerry.

                Aunt Mamie was my grandfather’s aunt so I think that would make her a great-great aunt. She liked to eat at the local hospital for her Sunday dinner and she still drove at an advanced age although she once got a ticket not for speeding but for driving too slow on the interstate highway. I was fond of Aunt Mamie but one thing that I remember very well is that she wore a diamond solitaire engagement ring on her left hand although she had never married.  Her finance had died during the Great War in 1918. A neighbor of my grandparents, Miss Ella, also wore a ring and lost a finance in the same era.

                As a little girl, it seemed romantic that these ladies had never wed, that they had given their hearts to men who died a long time ago.  Until my Pop died and my Granny became a widow for the second time in her life, my idea of widows came from “Gone With The Wind”.  Although I’d seen the movie once back when it came to theaters when movies showed up every few years and no capability to own or watch movies at home existed, I read the book at an early age.  I read it while still in grade school and for my 10th birthday, my dad gave me my own copy because I’d worn out the Book-of-the-Month club edition belonging to my mother.

                I thought widows wore only black with long, trailing veils thanks to Gone With The Wind. When my Pop died, however, my Granny wore a purple dress to his funeral and I began to learn that reality and fiction were not always equal. Over the decades, my other grandmother became a widow, some of my aunts, and my mother.  And then in January 2019 it was me.

                This month (January) marks five years of my own widowhood. 

                 Widows don't always wear black.

                By the time my husband of almost 25 years died, it wasn’t unexpected although I don’t believe anyone is ever prepared for widowhood.  He died after a year and a half of increased health issues, several surgeries, multiple hospitalizations, and residence in a long-term facility.  The facility had placed him on hospice in early November although when questioned by me, I was assured it didn’t necessarily mean he was on his deathbed but apparently, he was.

                I did wear black to his funeral where I talked about our life together after the Scripture and Gospel readings.  And in the past five years, I’ve mourned, I’ve had days that were hard and days that were not, times I’ve wept, and times I’ve raged.  Until those last months, I envisioned that we would grow older together but that wasn’t in the cards I was dealt.

                If I had realized what the realities of widowhood were like I would have prepared better, financially if not emotionally.  I’ve learned the hard way that it’s not as easy to make ends meet on a lesser income with one bread winner. I’ve learned that some credit cards won’t extend credit to widows. I’ve struggled to get his name off our bills but with little success,

                I’ve adapted to solitary life in many ways but I’m still adjusting. It’s taken years, literally, to rebuild a solitary life. I write. I volunteer at church and teach 7/8 graders for Confirmation. I fill the hours and I read an endless stream of books when I’m not writing.

                There are still gaps and probably always will be milestones which remind me of my husband’s absence.

                It is reality, however, and I continue, one day at a time by the grace of God.

1 comment:

tsont said...

Guess as Bill and you always said, "Keep on keeping on".

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