My Grief Share girlfriends and I often joke how it is our intent to not be a “NURSE or a PURSE “. We don’t say this out of spite. For me, these words are out of self-protection and great awareness.
I know this sounds harsh for a widow to say, but the truth is, “There are men out there in the world who are trying to gain from a woman’s loss”. When my brother in law died I remember hearing Loren warn his sister of those situations. Two of my eight girlfriends have personally experienced this (Purse) in the past 6 years. Of course, it could equally be said there are women out there who are happy to gain from a man’s loss. And yes, I know there are good men in this world…
Should you assume most widows have wads of cash sitting around you are dead wrong. The truth is, most of us lost a large percentage of our household income. Even if there might have been life insurance most of us paid off bills with that money. The circle of widows I hang with do not fit in the category of “Purse”.
When I married Loren at 20 years of age I willingly vowed to love him in sickness and in health, for richer or poorer, through happy times and hard times. Not understanding the depth of what all that might entail, both of us fulfilled those vows. Granted, we weren’t always on cloud nine, but I never lost my sense of commitment towards staying with the man I married, towards working alongside the man I married and enjoying the camaraderie with the man I married.
I was emotionally and devotionally prepared to eventually change his diapers….. whether it be because of illness or old age. I had loved his body well throughout the years and to care for his future aging-physical-needs would’ve been an honest privilege.
I’ve become quite the people watcher, that is “an-elderly-married-couple-people-watcher”…. I smile as I watch them help each other. I smile as I watch them communicate with each other, noting how each couple seems to have their own private language. At 4 ½ years out, I’m rarely jealous as I watch them. Honestly, for-the-most-part I feel grateful that my spouse won’t have to physically care for my body as I age.
By now, a variety of people have asked me or said, “Julia, do you ever think you will remarry?” “Julia, you deserve to be loved again.” “You are just afraid”. “I’d feel better knowing you have someone to watch out for you as you get older”. “The love won’t be the same as it was with Loren, there will never be another him, but you can find another love.”
I know I could (quote) “find another person to love”. I just can’t imagine there ever being another man I’d want to SHARE MY LIFE WITH. Loren, and our life together, set the bar very high. Our lives flowed in and out of each other. To live with anything/anyone that would not meet those (dare I say it?) “expectations / qualifications” would seem like a horrible letdown……plus:
- I’m not willing to take a relationship risk whereas I was when I was 20.
- I’ve also learned you don’t really know a person unless you’ve been around them for a few years in multiple life situations so, again, there’s too big of a price (emotionally and for the sake of my kids and grandkids) to take a risk.
Guess I don’t need to worry about becoming someone’s NURSE or PURSE. Ha.