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10 RULES FOR NEW WIDOWS
I did not manage my grief better
than any other widow. But I
have learned over the past two
years that there are ways a
widow can help herself.
-
Stay in charge of your own
life. Do not let
your children or anyone else
manage your money and
activities. It is easy to
let yourself become your
child’s child. But you are
not a child, you are an
adult. You should be free
to make your own choices.
-
Avoid hasty decisions.
For the first year, don’t
sell your house, don’t move,
don’t make major purchases,
don’t make a major change in
your way of life. If this
is not possible – if
financial or other
considerations force you to
make a big decision – try to
get the best advice you can.
-
Maintain your regular
routine. Push
yourself to get up at your
usual hour, go to work, go
shopping, do your chores as
usual. The old routine
provides a framework that
helps you put one foot in
front of the other, at a
time when you think you are
too torn apart even to move.
-
Get
out of the house.
Do anything to get out, even
if you do not want to. Get
involved in a women’s club
or in local politics; take a
first-aid class; volunteer
at a library, hospital or
museum. Get a paying job.
Whatever you do, do not give
in to the inertia that will
keep you indoors.
-
Fight loneliness.
Get together with old
friends, and work at making
new ones. The number of
widow – support groups has
increased tremendously over
the past few years, and many
women find them of enormous
help. Your church or
temple, or the American
Association of Retired
Persons can put you in touch
with one of these groups.
-
Be
good to yourself.
The person who loved and
cherished you has gone, but
there is no reason why you
should not cherish
yourself. Get yourself to
the hairdresser. Make an
appointment for a facial or
massage. None of these
things will erase your
grief, but they will give
you an hour’s respite from
it.
-
Exercise. I
guarantee that physical
exercise will make you feel
at least a little better.
The secret is to find
something you enjoy and then
do it regularly. I swim.
You might try joining a
walking group, using an
exercise video, going to a
YWCA.
-
Cry
if you want. It
helps. And do not let other
people stop you. The
natural tendency is to say,
“Now, now, don’t cry –
you’ll make yourself sick.”
This is nonsense. You
cannot feel worse than you
feel now.
-
Beware of pills and alcohol.
Alcohol can seem to offer an
escape or blunt the edge of
grief, but this is a
temporary illusion. As for
tranquilizers, follow your
doctor’s advice; these can
become addictive.
-
Check your progress.
Take time every three months
to think back and assess
your progress. In any three
– month period, you may
actually feel that
everything is worse than it
was before. But as the
months go by, you will
notice small and consistent
signs of improvement. Each
widow has her own timetable
of grief, and yours may be
quite different from mine.
Listen to your inner self.
You know what is right for
you better than anyone else.
Good Housekeeping/November 1990 |