A Widow’s New Address Book

There is a saying over at the YWBB that widowhood rewrites your address book. It’s based on the very real fact that many of the family and friends you thought you could count on to be there for you when tragedy strikes will not be.  Or at least they will not be there in the ways you want, expect or need, and very often these people who meant so much to you disappear from your life completely.  Sometimes this happens gradually, and other times it seems to transpire overnight, but they go and usually never come back.

Widows love to indulge in the outrage of this.  It’s wonderfully cathartic to spew venom at those people we loved and needed whom abandoned us in our most wretched hour.  What we don’t do, nor do we want to hear, is acknowledge that often we play a role in our own abandonment.  What’s that howling?  It’s the shrieking of outraged widowed people undoubtedly.  However, I just can’t buy into the idea that we are entirely innocent victims anymore, and the reason is that I know better.  The tendency to push people away by not asking for help, by not answering the phone or letters or email, by not returning calls, or by not accepting invitations, all in the name of grieving is a pretty strong one that is not helped by the idea that is propagated among the grieving that anything done in the name of mourning is okay.  While conversing anything someone else does while caught in the same grief or simply in the ripples of our grief is heinous.  I am being over-simplistic but, in hindsight, I realize now that being widowed was not a pass for me.  I still had a level of responsibility in my relationships, great and small, that my hurting state didn’t excuse.  And I know grieving has to be done.  It just wasn’t meant to be a part-time profession or even a hobby.  We are the masters of our lives, actions and reactions, and if we emerge from the black crepe days friendless – we should take a closer look at the fingers pointing back at us rather than exhausting too much energy calling attention to those at the end of the one finger pointing out.

This last Christmas Rob and I sent out one of those obnoxious holiday chain letters.  The “hey, this is my wonderful year and family” kind of missive that makes most people wish they’d been sent fruitcake instead.  I tried to be as low-key Sgt. Friday (“just the facts, ma’am”) as possible and then decided that I would send it to just about everyone in my address book, including those people I hadn’t heard from since before Will died – and even further back than that in a couple of instances.  Why?  Because some of the reason I had this address book chock full of phantom numbers, addresses and emails was due to my own lack of initiative.  I simply let some of these people slip away through lack of attention.  I didn’t call or write or email, so what did I think would happen?  Why did I expect them to carry the relationship?  One of the worst things I ever learned as a widow was that anything I had to do to survive was okay.  It was an effort to call or write for a lot of reasons, so I didn’t.

One friend called regularly in the early months of Will’s illness.  She really was in over her depth and I think a bit frightened because when a close friend’s husband is really dying, it brings too many scary thoughts about your own world and – what if – into play.  I have to admit it was hard to just talk about nothing in those days and anything that was immediate to Will and what the hell I was going to do now (aside from teaching) was immaterial to me.  She tried to carry on our phone conversations as though nothing had changed.  Eventually, I screened her calls and stopped returning them.  What I should have done was been honest and said, “I appreciate what you are trying to do but I need to talk about me and Will and our options because talking through them helps me think and focus.  I don’t need forever to do this, but I do need right now.  Can you just listen to me?”  I was afraid I would hurt her feelings, so I ducked her.  She got the hint and took to calling every couple of months and as time stretched it become every six months.  I resented the calls.  I felt they were burdens.  What was really going on was that I knew I was being rotten and resented her reminding me of it.

She was hardly the only one.  I pulled away from many people.  And then I wondered why no one helped.  Of course, the reality was that I needed far too much help and people were as frightened by this as I was.  I blamed them and I shouldn’t have.  My reality was that I was too far from my own family and stuck with in-laws whose family dynamics left them poor substitutes.  I could have remedied some of this had I taken control and focused my efforts out but being raised to care-take and be “the strong one” my instincts took over and I did much of everything myself.  I was fortunate that a few of my friends and family pushed and insisted on helping, but I could have done a better job.

This friend was one of the recipients of the Obnoxious Christmas Letter back in December.  I got an email from her today thanking me for the pictures of Katy, reminding me that she had tried to stay in touch and could we not let so much time go by again?  I wrote her back and agreed.

When we are in crisis we expect so much and never stop to think that the people we are expecting things from are being tested too and that often they will not be capable of meeting the demands.  We will encounter worthless souls who slink off or implode or explode all over us and then leave, but it’s our reaction only that we have control over.  Most people in our lives are good people who are just as lost as we are in a tragedy.  We should be more accepting. Our address books are ours to write and no one else’s.

8 thoughts on “A Widow’s New Address Book

  1. Very glad I found your blog (maybe through b over at relaxedalert? can’t remember.).

    This is a timely post for me to read, as I sit looking at the list of ten phone calls I keep meaning to return. I have always been a ‘giver’ in relationships, and have struggled with my newfound ‘taker’ role, while at the same time finding myself resentful of being asked to ‘give’. I think you are very right about how people like to rant and rave on ywbb about how all friends have deserted us… and I will still be a ‘taker’ for a bit longer, but I do need to remember that relationships are a two-way street.

  2. Thanks Uncle Keith, I like to think that I have “matured” though I am still not a big enough person to reach out to a few people for the most part, I know that relationships are never 50-50 deals regardless of circumstances. One person is always the “heavy lifter”.

    Pammy, It never hurts to reach out. A very close friend, like a sister really, just couldn’t deal and I was hurt about that but she is a friend and does love me, so I choose to put that behind us as though it never happened because our relationship was too important to let something she really couldn’t help get in between us. I hope your friend responds in kind to your letter.

  3. Annie thanks for this piece.

    I have a very similar situation with a friend who I no longer communicate with. Now, years out, I see that I probably expected too much from her and she just did not know how to talk to me during the grieving. I think I will sit down and write a letter today to her.
    Pam

  4. I think you probably have to go through what you did to gain that kind of wisdom. Difficult times are the test of every relationship, be they family, friends, or acquaintances. I think the measure of your wisdom is that you own up to a part in the breakdown. My Mother said after the loss of my Grandfather, that she was amazed at the people who stepped up and those who stepped back.

    I kind of feel like in these cases, the people on the outside bear a greater burden to exhibit an understanding of how a loss this significant knocks people for a loop. Truly, some people never get over it. It is important just to be there to listen, and not talk. There is nothing we can say to make it better; I don’t know why we think we have to say something.

    By the way, I love your line that people would rather get fruit cake than Christmas letters.

  5. I am sorry about your friend. People can only be who they are though, and even though it seems to us that they should change to meet the current “way of things” there are a lot of people in the world just incapable of growth or even just stretching the tiniest bit outside their boxes. I don’t know why that is but it doesn’t necessarily make them awful people. It might indicate that they are transient in our lives when we thought otherwise or it might be that we have to just accept them for who they are – shortcomings and all.

  6. Your points are valid, but that was not my experience. I was angriest at the disappearing act of one friend in particular, whom I’d be there for crisis after crisis, and despite my being very clear about my needs when he, too, tried to be “business as usual,” he just couldn’t step up. It was a betrayal of the friendship I thought we had. Looking back, those who fell away shouldn’t have surprised me in the least. They were takers. Those who stuck around are my real friends, and always were. If nothing else, bereavement and grieving gave me clarity on that.

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