Friday, August 10, 2018

Widow's brain

Well, there's a new term that I had never heard!  But it explains so much of what I've been going through. You can google it.  I thought this was a good article (click here)

A few days after he passed away, I received a sympathy card from a dear elderly friend who lives about 150 miles away.  I couldn't figure out how on earth she had heard of his passing.  I picked up the phone to call her and thank her for her sweet note.  She said that I had called her the day after he passed away.  I had absolutely no recollection of making that phone call.  I still don't remember it.  And I probably never will.

Yesterday, one of my sisters said to me that I was kind of funny after he died.  I would say and do the strangest things.  So I decided to google and that's when I first saw the term "widow brain".  Who knew?

Yep, I think I might serve as a textbook case.  I knew I was in a fog and I just allowed it to happen.  I didn't care who did or said what.  I didn't really understand why I didn't care.  I remember so many people surrounding me and I just wanted to be alone.  I remember watching hours of Hallmark Christmas movies.....and I never watch Christmas movies in July!  It was simply my brains way of insulating itself, protecting itself.

Then today, someone posted this on facebook:


and that hit me hard.  It is so true.  Every. Single. Thing. Changes.  

No matter how much I hated his diabetes - we still did things together.  We were a couple.  And everything is changing/has changed.  I even lost 10 pounds.  

So I am still learning.  And while the diabetes aspect of my life has ended....the repercussions of it will never, ever end.  I wish I had known about widow's brain before he died and maybe I did - I just forgot that I did. LOL!  Yes, the humor is starting to return.....ever so slowly.  Life is getting into a routine.  I get up and walk with my sis, I spend a couple hours tending the gardens, I spend about 4 hours doing paperwork and then I do something I find fun.

One of the rather important things is once you get done with estate papers (to the point where you are just waiting for responses and more paperwork) you have to re-do your own paper work.  My will, medical and financial power of attorney all needed new beneficiaries.  My bank accounts, life insurance....all need new beneficiaries.  So just when you think you might be done with all of "his" paperwork, you have to start in on all of your own paperwork.  And there are days when it seems endless.  Four hours a day because sometimes, just one entity takes four hours.  That's how much time I spent trying to close out his 2 phones and 1 sim card for wifi hotspots while traveling took.  And then he hand another carrier with a sim card for traveling.  I'm grateful he had an app that had all of his accounts and passwords in it - that has helped immensely!

This week, I think I'm finally coming out of my widow's fog a bit.  I have started a daily diary on paper.  I write down what I need to get done today (and sometimes tomorrow).  I have daily goals.  I am keeping copious notes of who/when I talk with someone and what they tell me.  I have follow-up tabs on pages that need to be taken care of down the line.  If I don't do that, I know I will forget.  I should have been doing it since day 1 - but I didn't!

I'm feeling a little more organized.  I can't begin to look at the entire task ahead of me.  Downsizing.  Selling the truck and travel trailer.  Selling the house.  Keeping up with the flower gardens.  Giving up so much of what we both loved.  So I am breaking it down into simple tasks.  Do this today.  Find this today.  And I think it is helping.

They say don't make any major decisions for a year.  But I cannot keep this house.  It will financially drain me.  I have put my name on a waiting list in an apartment complex where my sister lives.  There are no vacancies and a year waiting list.  I know the management so there's always a chance my name might get bumped to the top.  Our mom lived there and they loved her.  

Monday it will be 4 weeks.  And I still don't have the life insurance paperwork.  That is a surprise.  The fact that it has taken this long just surprises me.  My advice....have at least $5k in cash in a lock box at home.  You will need to pay for funeral expenses, ambulance rides, health insurance co-pays, utility bills (they don't seem to stop), food, gas, etc.  I am surviving.  But barely.  Once the life insurance gets here, I will be just fine.  But that could take another 6 weeks.....a total of 2 1/2 to 3 months after death.  Yep, that is a surprise!

And this is a time when you just don't need surprises.  Not like that!  But it will get better.  I do know that.  And I am blessed beyond measure.  I have 2 sisters who live right here who are here almost every day.  I have a brother-in-law who will drop whatever he is going at the drop of a pin to come help me.  One of my sisters is a widow and has been through this and has been gently counseling me. So I know I am so much better off than so many.

I am learning that you cannot live on "what-ifs".  You go forward with what is.  You deal with life one step at a time and I know that it won't be long before there is a new, different beat.  Things will go on - but they will be different.  

Someone asked me the other day, "what's next for you?"  and I said that I didn't know.  It's something that I will have to figure out.  But that's a good question.  What is next in my life?  Do I move into an apartment and just live a daily life?  Or do I go do something extraordinary?   There is a light at the end of this tunnel. I'm not seeing it just yet, but I'm learning a little about why I can't see it - perhaps widows brain is more like widow fog - you just can't see it yet.

DW

3 comments:

calvinnme said...

Both of my parents died earlier this year within two weeks of one another. They were past 90, so I can't say it was a complete surprise, yet it was a shock and it was very sudden. Yes, the sluggish rate that the system moves at as far as insurance, settling estates, etc. was quite a shock. My dad died last, and the first issue we hit was his death certificate. Nobody at the hospital wanted to sign off on it. He died alone in his room in the middle of the night, but it was obvious natural causes - heart failure due to congestive heart disease. We had to finally get the family physician to sign it, and then it was another month struggle to get hold of their checking account so we could pay their bills. Now, in spite of their finances being well organized, in spite of most of the financial institutions involved knowing both of my sisters (the executors) because they often took dad to deal with his finances when he was alive, it took FIVE MONTHS before we saw any name change on any accounts. Things I never heard of - medallion signatures, having to go to court to probate my aunt's will because she died the year before and dad was too sick to deal with wrapping up her finances properly - she doesn't even have a headstone yet! Now mind you, my aunt never married and had no children - who would possibly legitimately contest her will??? Yet the system demands it. I can only imagine how rocky this would have been had my parents not sold their home of 44 years six months before they died. Oh, and the funeral home and cemetery - the biggest in my home city where EVERYBODY is buried - put one plaque with the wrong name on it across my parents tombs in the mausoleum, as if just one morbidly obese person was buried there rather than my parents in adjoining compartments. I do feel for you as you wrap things up. It's good that you have family nearby.

Managing said...

Dear DW,
Your honest and helpful blog is a saving grace to me.
Now too, knowing how much trouble everything is to deal with and then in the future, will you be able to just focus your memory on the good times and the great husband that you had before Diabetes wrecked him.
Those things coming from you in your honest and loving way mean the world to me in my similar struggle.
It is still True Love even when the person you love is so difficult that you can't even be around them. You honestly portrayed that in your blog.
THANK YOU SO MUCH!
Life is a strange thing with horrible and wonderful all mixed in together.
I wish you an abundance of wonderful as you move forward.
Don't choose anything but that as you begin allowing new things into your life.
Funny thing is I think these blogs last forever so this and what you put down in the future will help people for long afterwards too.
You are a Godsend to all those searching for help in this horrible thing - Diabetes.
With prayers for your peace and clarity to follow the path ahead as well as thanks to God for you sharing with us,
Managing

Managing said...

Are you starting to feel life on your own terms is taking place yet? Your days are filled with things of your own and no more the degenerative and heart-wrenching daily events of watching the man you love draw closer and closer to death?
I know you are caught up in lots of "admisistrative tasks" as well as the surreal aspect of life without him, but if you take a moment to yourself, can you feel a little bit of "freedom" in this new existence on your own terms?
Sorry if this sounds voyeuristic. I just imagine that there wil be some "release" of some sort when it is all over.
Managing