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What should I do for neighbour who has lost DH?

9 replies

Conundrumish · 12/05/2010 00:00

A neighbour who I do not know terribly well (though our children have had a couple of play dates) lost her husband recently. I did not know he had cancer and he seems to have deteriorated quite quickly at the end. I only found out when he had died, so I think they were a private couple.

I feel I need to help in some way but I want to be sure I am doing the right thing and not doing it just to make me feel better about her awful situation.

I have offered to help on the school run if necessary (very young children). For those of you who have lost your partners, is there anything you can recommend I do that would make her life easier but not intrude?

Many thanks.

OP posts:
furious27 · 12/05/2010 00:57

Not lost a partner to death myself- divorce though which I know is not the same. But I fet incredibly lonely. I think maybe inviting her and her children around for tea would be nice, maybe sunday lunch.

Conundrumish · 12/05/2010 01:04

Thanks Furious

OP posts:
onlyjoking9329 · 17/05/2010 15:01

sorry to hear that your neighbours husband has died, my DH died almost 2 years ago, i have found joining WAY (widowed and young)a very big help.
this article is often posted on there and i know lots of people have found it very true and very helpful.

HOW YOU CAN HELP ME

Please talk about my loved one, even though he is gone. It is more
comforting to cry than to pretend that he never existed. I need to talk
about him, and I need to do it over and over.

Be patient with my agitation. Nothing feels secure in my world. Get
comfortable with my crying. Sadness hits me in waves, and I never know
when my tears may flow. Just sit with me in silence and hold my hand.

Don't abandon me with the excuse that you don't want to upset me. You
can't catch my grief. My world is painful, and when you are too afraid
to call me or visit or say anything, you isolate me at a time when I
most need to be cared about. If you don't know what to say, just come
over, give me a hug or touch my arm, and gently say, "I'm sorry." You
can even say, "I just don't know what to say, but I care, and want you
to know that."

Just because I look good does not mean that I feel good. Ask me how I
feel only if you really have time to find out.

I am not strong. I'm just numb. When you tell me I am strong, I feel
that you don't see me.

I will not recover. This is not a cold or the flu. I'm not sick. I'm
grieving and that's different. My grieving may only begin 6 months after
my loved one's death. Don't think that I will be over it in a year. For
I am not only grieving his death, but also the person I was when I was
with him, the life that we shared, the plans we had for watching our
children and grandchildren grow, the places we will never get to go together, and the
hopes and dreams that will never come true. My whole world has crumbled
and I will never be the same.

I will not always be grieving as intensely, but I will never forget my
loved one and rather than recover, I want to incorporate his life and
love into the rest of my life. He is a part of me and always will be,
and sometimes I will remember him with joy and other times with a tear.
Both are okay.

I don't have to accept the death. Yes, I have to understand that it has
happened and it is real, but there are some things in life that are just
not acceptable.

When you tell me what I should be doing, then I feel even more lost and
alone. I feel badly enough that my loved one is dead, so please don't
make it worse by telling me I'm not doing this right.

Please don't tell me I can find someone else or that I need to start
dating again. I'm not ready. And maybe I don't want to. And besides,
what makes you think people are replaceable? They aren't. Whoever comes
after will always be someone different.

I don't even understand what you mean when you say, "You've got to get
on with your life." My life is going on, I've been forced to take on
many new responsibilities and roles. It may not look the way you think
it should. This will take time and I will never be my old self again. So
please, just love me as I am today, and know that with your love and
support, the joy will slowly return to my life. But I will never forget
and there will always be times that I cry.

I need to know that you care about me. I need to feel your touch, your
hugs. I need you just to be with me, and I need to be with you. I need
to know you believe in me and in my ability to get through my grief in
my own way, and in my own time.

Please don't say, "Call me if you need anything." I'll never call you
because I have no idea what I need. Trying to figure out what you could
do for me takes more energy than I have. So, in advance, let me give you
some ideas:

(a) Bring food or a movie over to watch together.
(b) Send me a card on special holidays, his birthday, and the
anniversary of his death, and be sure to mention his name. You can't
make me cry. The tears are here and I will love you for giving me the
opportunity to shed them because someone cared enough about me to reach
out on this difficult day.
(c) Ask me more than once to join you at a movie or lunch or dinner. I
may so no at first or even for a while, but please don't give up on me
because somewhere down the line, I may be ready, and if you've given up
then I really will be alone.
(d) Understand how difficult it is for me to be surrounded by couples,
to walk into events alone, to go home alone, to feel out of place in the same situations where I used to feel so comfortable.

Please don't judge me now - or think that I'm behaving strangely.
Remember I'm grieving. I may even be in shock. I am afraid. I may feel
deep rage. I may even feel guilty. But above all, I hurt. I'm
experiencing a pain unlike any I've ever felt before and one that can't
be imagined by anyone who has not walked in my shoes.

Don't worry if you think I'm getting better and then suddenly I seem to
slip backward. Grief makes me behave this way at times. And please don't
tell me you know how I feel, or that it's time for me to get on with my
life. What I need now is time to grieve.

Most of all thank you for being my friend. Thank you for your patience.
Thank you for caring. Thank you for helping, for understanding. Thank
you for praying for me.

And remember in the days or years ahead, after your loss - when you need
me as I have needed you - I will understand. And then I will come and be
with you.

liliputlady · 17/05/2010 15:51

Brilliant article Onlyjoking, I've never seen that before.

When someone close to me lost a partner recently I was advised to offer concrete help ie NOT "call me if you need anything", but "I'm just going to Tesco, would you like me to get you a paper?" or "would you like a quick coffee with me while the children come and play?"

Your neighbour is lucky to have you, Pinkpan.

ArsMamatoria · 17/05/2010 23:31

Things I really appreciate:

Someone sorting out meals for the kids and for me. Maybe you could leave something on the doorstep for her.

Someone offering to take the children - not just 'whenever I need', because I can never bring myself to ask for help unless it's from family, but on a specific day. Perhaps you could say 'is there any time on X I could take the kids for a couple of hours? I'll give them lunch too...' That kind of thing.

Perhaps offer to go to the post office too - even 9 months later, I'm having to send probate certs and death certs by recorded delivery and it's a real pain getting to the post office with a small baby and a toddler.

Ringing every so often - she may not answer and you will think perhaps that she's trying to avoid you, but if she's anything like me she will be very grateful that someone is just acknowledging that things are appalling for her.

Even more importantly, 8/9 months down the line, when her friends aren't calling her as much as they were and she's feeling abandoned, don't stop calling her every so often to say that you are thinking of her.

If she's a private person, she will doubtless feel a bit uncomfortable about accepting help, so don't push it, just make it seem like the most casual thing in the world. Then she won't feel like you're making sacrifices. I can't bear to take up offers of help if I think I'm actually inconveniencing someone.

What a good neighbour you are. She will appreciate you more than she will be able to say, I'm sure.

tunnocks · 18/05/2010 10:32

I really agree with the lovely Ars.

Concrete offers of help mean so much. I'm too tired to think for myself. Finding food parcels for me and DD on the doorstep makes a big difference, texts from friends in the supermarket asking what I need or even leaving bags of basic provisions on the doorstep (my recycling bin resembled a red cross food drop at one point!). Another friend sent a text saying she would pick up dd at 8.30 on a Sunday morning and bring her back after lunch so I could go back to bed/have a bath/get some headspace was also really helpful

Conundrumish · 18/05/2010 22:08

Thanks all. Really good ideas. I really don't know her very well at all and she is outwardly strong at the moment and is managing to hold her children together amazingly. I'm just trying to take my lead from her at the moment.

OP posts:
Monty100 · 18/05/2010 22:13

Pink - it might not even have hit her yet. A friend who lost her dh got worse as time went on and it began to sink in that it was permanent.

OJ and Ars - I'm so sorry.

Conundrumish · 19/05/2010 23:48

Onlyjoking and Ars - I'm so sorry to read of your own losses and thank you for taking the time to post such detailed replies.

Monty - thanks

OP posts:
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