Question from a reader: I am currently dating a widower who feels the need to publish a picture of his ex-wife in the local newspaper twice a year, on her birthday and date of death. He has been doing this for five years. We have been dating for four-and-a half-years. My husband died suddenly of a heart attack just a month after my companion’s wife died following a two-year battle with colon cancer. At this point, I’m not sure how I am tolerating these very public displays of grief. I have been told that such public displays of mourning are indications of unresolved grief/guilt. My sense is that this is true, which causes me concern not only for my health and that of the man I am dating but for our relationship as well. Would you be willing to comment on the phenomenon of repeated mournful pictures being published ‘in memoriam’ in the newspaper? I can find nothing on the topic of this behavior. Intuition tells me there is considerable stuckness and guilt involved.
My response: You’ve asked me “to comment on the phenomenon of repeated mournful pictures being published ‘in memoriam’ in the newspaper,” and while I am certainly willing to do that, please bear in mind that I am doing so without knowing anything about you or the widower you’re dating, other than what you’ve told me in your message.
On the face of it, I can tell you that there is nothing intrinsically wrong with the need to honor the memory of a deceased loved one on a birthday or a death day. Years ago, those of us in the field of mental health worried about folks who engaged in such behavior, interpreting it as their having difficulty “moving on” or “letting go” in their grief, but in recent years. we have come to understand better the need for the mourner to maintain some sort of continuing bond with a loved one who has died.
As Carolyn Ambler Walter writes in her book, The Loss of a Life Partner (Columbia University Press, 2003, p. 251): “In the postmodern approach to grief, there is skepticism about the concept of closure, since there are serious questions about whether people ever ‘recover’ from a loss. This gives the clinician permission to allow the bereaved partner to work on his or her grief, regardless of the amount of time that has elapsed since the death of the partner. This approach to grief encourages ‘circularity’ rather than ‘closure’ and frees the bereaved partner to experience feelings and thoughts about the deceased partner at any point in his or her life. A circular approach can normalize, for bereaved partners, the ongoing or intermittent painful feelings about their loss, which friends, relatives, and society tend to believe should be worked through to a point of closure. Perhaps this need for closure is related to our society’s tendency to deny the process of death and to discourage people from discussing death and all its ramifications.”
Additionally, although you are a widow yourself and have experienced the death of a spouse, I urge you to be cautious when evaluating your partner’s grief responses as normal or abnormal. It’s important to keep in mind that, although certain patterns and reactions are universal and fairly predictable, everyone’s grief is as unique to that individual as his or her fingerprints.
There is no right or wrong way to grieve, and there is no specific time frame. Furthermore, everyone grieves differently according to their age, gender, personality, culture, value system, past experience with loss, and available support. Some folks experience grief in primarily emotional ways, having all sorts of feelings such as anger, guilt, sadness or loneliness.
Others react in physical ways, feeling a need to keep busy as a way of handling the unpleasant feelings of grief. Neither way is right or wrong; they are just different from each other. (For a more thorough discussion of this, see my article, How We Mourn: Understanding Our Differences.) The behavior you’re seeing in the widower you’re dating isn’t necessarily unhealthy; it may be perfectly understandable and normal under the circumstances in which this man finds himself.
I don’t know how long after your spouses died that the two of you began dating, and I don’t know what, if any, grief work either of you did in the aftermath of your spouses’ deaths, or how either of you came to terms with your losses. I could speculate on where your man is with his grief at this point in time, but you both are in a better position to evaluate that than I am.
Clearly you have a problem with his behavior in his continuing to publish the pictures of his late wife, but does this man see it as a problem? Has he shared with you any concerns about his progress in coming to terms with this death? Is there any evidence that he is unhappy or unable to function normally in his life (e.g., having trouble at work, or in his relationships with you and with others)? Keep in mind that this is his loss and his grief process, and only he knows where he is with all of this. So I encourage you to have an honest talk with him and discuss your concerns directly with him.
I also think you need to pay attention to what your own heart and mind are telling you. You are the best judge of what you are willing to tolerate in your relationship with this man, regardless of how “normal” or how “abnormal” he (or anyone else) considers his behavior to be. You say that this is causing you concern not only for your health and that of the man you are dating, but for your relationship as well. If you feel that strongly about this, perhaps you’ve already made your decision.
I hope what I’ve said is helpful to you, my dear, and whatever you decide, please know that I’m thinking of you and wishing you all the best.
© 2011 by Marty Tousley, RN, MS, FT, DCC
Tags: anger, signs and connections
Excellent! SO well written…sharing now.
It’s been almost two years since my husband died, and to this day “closure” is a word I dislike. I agree that it is everyone else who wants closure for the widow, so ‘they’ can stop feeling uncomfortable. I also believe they care about me and want my pain to stop. I post pictures of my husband on my Facebook page fairly often. I know I do it so people will think of him at that moment, as I am….
Diane, you’re in good company when it comes to disliking that word, “closure.” You might want to read “Can We Ever Accept the Death of a Loved One?” here: https://www.opentohope.com/2009/10/08/can-we-ever-accept-death-of-loved-one/ ~ and I think posting pictures of your husband on Facebook is a wonderful way to keep his memory alive ♥
My husband passed away 3 weeks ago today and I feel so lost. I try to keep busy and go out in the day so I’m not in our lonely house. I’ve been looking around town for group activities and have signed up for a trip. At night I cuddle his robe to help me sleep. Is there a website for grief groups so in a month or two I could mingle with other people who have lost a spouse. Friends are nice, and I’m making a lot more of them, but sometimes I think I’d like to be around folks who are going through the same thing as me. I’m 56 and retired. Eventually I will also perform some volunteer work. I’ve already approached the local firehouse where the ambulance came from for my husband. One of the EMTs already left a little note on my door, and another is coming for coffee this week. I have been meeting some really nice people but sometimes I feel like I’m just going through the motions. I used to kinda worry about death but now I’m not afraid because I want to be with my husband. He was my best friend and it’s hard not to be able to actually hug him and talk to him.
My dear Denise, I’m so sorry to learn of the death of your husband just three weeks ago, and you have my deepest sympathy. You’ve asked about Web sites for grief groups. Please know that you are most welcome to join the online Grief Healing Discussion Groups that I moderate, at http://www.griefhealingdiscussiongroups.com . I also encourage you to visit the Death of a Spouse page of my Grief Healing Web site, where you will find links to several other sites specifically designed to support the newly widowed: http://www.griefhealing.com/death-of-a-spouse-partner.htm . You are not alone, and you need not travel this challenging path all by yourself.
Denise,
I am sad for you, for I remember all too well how it was when my son died. For a few months after he passed, I slept with his pillow I missed him so much. It is some comfort, isn’t it.
Your grieving sounds healthy and the best way for you. Keep taking care of yourself.
Bless you, Jean
You are
Hi Denise, I lost my dear husband very suddenly while in Egypt of holiday at the end of January, still not managing to come to terms with it. Like you I would like to find a website for grieving people, friends and family are great but have their own lives to get on with. Like you I am retired and also my husband was my best friend, just trying to put the day in is not easy. Hopefully some day we will adjust and find a reason for living and may even be happy again.
Take care.
Carol
It has been 8 months since my wife passed suddenly at the age of 34. It’s amazing how much my life revolved around her to the point where initially I didn’t really know what to do with anything unless I considered her. It’s easier now and I laugh, not the fake one that makes everyone feel better but a genuine laugh. My family and friends and even co-workers have been supportive as I “learn what normal is.” It”s like being on an island where only your loved one spoke your language and now with them gone you feel like you don’t connect with anyone else. Hopefully that will fade, but if posting a picture allows him to connect then let him do it. Besides you may be doing something that makes him pause and wonder. Just spend every day you can loving those close to you and do it unapologetically.
I know what you are going through….my husband died 4weeks ago..I feel like I have lost part of my body…just try like I do to go out and join up with groups I have joined the red hat society… A fun group of ladies who wear red hats and purple clothes when they go out as a group…do look after yourself gloria
I dated a guy over 21 years ago. We were reaquainted in 2010 by his phone call to me two days after the burial of his wife. We met and things were as if we never parted. Now we have been dating 1 year and 1 months. He has started to grieve and I know thsi because he is pulling away in conversation and our time spent together. What should I do? We both decided to give him space, but it hurts me so bad now . We made a connection that was not expected. WHAT AM I TO DO???
Dear Ms. K,
I’m so sorry that you’re feeling so hurt right now, but given the situation you describe and the agreement you’ve made with this man “to give him some space,” it seems to me you would do well to honor that agreement. If the two of you came together just two days after he buried his wife, it sounds as if he may have put aside his grief to focus his attention on a new relationship with you. This may have been the only way he knew how to soothe himself. Now, 13 months later, the grief he ignored all this time is demanding his attention. I hope you will encourage him to seek the support of a therapist or counselor who specializes in grief and loss, so he can come to a better understanding of where he is with all of this. In the meantime, I encourage you to learn as much as you can about what is normal in grief, so you’ll have a better understanding, too. You might find this article to be helpful: Woman Nervous about Dating a Widower, https://www.opentohope.com/2009/02/27/woman-nervous-about-dating-widower/
I started seen a widower almost 6 months ago, at the time he was widowed for 10 months. Very young widower 32y/o and I am divorced 389y/o. On the anniversary of her death he asked for some space which I gave him and let him contact me when he was ready. After this short period of time (5 days), he said he wasn’t ready for anything serious but would be intrested in a friends with benefits situation. I agreed to it because honestly I was having the most fun I have had in years with him. He spoke once in a while of his wife, there were a few pictures in their house, which does not bother me at all. He would say and do things that lead me to believe as well as some close friends who knew if the situation, that he does like me but is afraid of what others would say or that he felt guilty. We celebrated my birthday which was the beginning of November together it was really nice. Then about a week and a 1/2 later He said and he is in a funk because of the holidays, and it had nothing to do with, but he didnt want to hurt me. I know Thanksgiving was their favorite holiday. Before this we would text almost everyday, now he only text me when I text him which was only 2 times. I like him a lot even though I am not supposed to, and I keep getting theses signs that make me think if him. So my question is has this happened to any of you widow/widower and/or significant others of, do you think he just needs some space to get through the holidays? Should I tell him how I feel?
The first year of grief is, for some, one of the hardest ~ mainly because it is the year of “firsts”: first anniversary, first birthday, first holidays without the one who has died. The bereaved person is especially vulnerable in these times ~ hypersensitive, looking for and in need of comfort ~ and sometimes not capable of investing the time and energy that a new relationship requires. This can be very difficult and confusing to a person in your position, and only you can decide if you are willing to give this widower the space he says he needs. If you want to get a sense of how others have experienced this, I invite you to read through the threads you’ll find in this online forum: Loss of a Love Relationship