National Widow's Day 2023
Every day is an important day to remember our family members and friends who have lost a husband or wife, but that's unrealistic and beyond anyone's scope. So, we have this special day to remind us to stay in touch with them and to remind them we love and/or care about them. To also remind them we remember the one they've lost. Oh, how important that is!

Because I can't pull words together today, here are some wonderful words from The Hope for Widows Foundation blog on this date back in 2020.

"Today on National Widow’s Day, do every widow you know a special favor. Talk about their dead spouse.   Speak their name. As a widow one of the most painful things is to the think that others have forgotten your late spouse.  Remember, that our lives were forever changed in a single moment. Our life as we knew it ended when our spouse died. The future we had planned vanished, never to happen. Our present became one of basic survival.  We no longer felt whole, complete. A part of us died in that moment. And our loss should not and cannot be ignored. Our loss shaped us into who we are now. Someone new, someone who has lived in darkness and fought their way back to the light. 

"Acknowledge our loss.  Don’t ignore it, change the subject, or refuse to speak their name.  These actions are hurtful, they make us feel alone. Like an outcast.  Today of all days, honor a widow. Remember their life before death. Speak their spouse’s name.  Honor a love so deep that even death cannot end it. "

1 Comment

  1. The National widows Day is very important for the communities. The day remain encourage widows their
    livelyhood.

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Welcome!

 
Hi! 

I’m Marsha, a wife and a mom who became a widow in my 40’s.

When my husband died I was completely blindsided by the realities of widowhood. Even though I had widows and widowers in my life, I wasn’t remotely prepared for the depth of grief that flooded my entire being . . . or for the life I was suddenly having to live. Yes, we had all of the important things taken care of. But, who knew everything about our lives would change? And, who knew the words we say to the grieving would sound so different from the other side?
 
We need to set aside our predisposed beliefs, assumptions, perceptions, and expectations of widows, their grief, and widowhood and align them with the reality of what they are living. It's the only way we can truly  be the support we want to be for those we care about. Doing so will also help immeasurably if and when our time comes to enter widowhood. 

 
We can do so much better! I'm here to show you the way.

Let’s do this, together!!!
Marsha

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