Last year, I removed the date of Mr. Virgo’s death from my calendar so I would no longer receive reminders on my phone. After all, I’m not likely to forget such an event as that anyway. I do have a hard time remembering the exact date of my mom’s death and my grandma’s and my dad’s. I know approximately when they occurred but I have to look it up if I need to know the exact date. Not so with Mr. Virgo’s. I’ll never forget that…or him.
It was six years ago today that we set out to buy the travel trailer to take us into retirement. It was a beautiful sunny day with a hint of spring and we had everything to look forward to. Although I had been having premonitions all week, it was still a shock when he died so suddenly.
This was something I didn’t believe I could recover from. I swore to my girls that I would never, ever get married again because I couldn’t go through this a second time. Yet, here we are…six years down the road and I’m married again…to an equally wonderful man. I’ve been blessed with good men in my life.
My friend Deneene lost her husband in March a few years after me. I began to mentor her through the widow experience when she was going through a particularly rough patch. We don’t get to see each other much anymore as she has moved to South Carolina with her new love. We connect frequently via chat and yesterday, she sent a note telling me she was thinking of me and the angelversary of Mr. Virgo’s death. She asked how I was going to commemorate this day. Last year, when I removed the alarm from my calendar, I thought five years was enough of that. I figured I wouldn’t want to do anything special anymore. But, once I thought about it, I decided I was wrong. Time doesn’t change the facts.
It’s interesting at this point to think of my marriage to Mr. Virgo. He has now been gone the same amount of time we were married. And, just because time has passed, and just because I’m crazy in love with Mr. FixIt and I’m happily married, doesn’t mean my love for this wonderful man I shared my life with has diminished. Daughter #2 called me yesterday and we talked for quite some time about this. When we lose someone so special, our hearts expand at some point. My heart is much, much bigger than it was when Mr. Virgo died. There are spaces there with the names of every person I have truly loved. Those spaces do not become smaller in order to allow room for other to come in. The vessel itself had to grow.
As time has passed after each loss, those spaces that remain from the love lost aren’t empty shells. I’ve filled them with love and memories like filling a beautiful vase with thousands of blooms…only these flowers will never die. There were times, especially with the divorces, that I held onto bitterness and anger, but those things did not serve me. Filling each space in my heart with love has been my saving grace.
I am so blessed to be married to such a wonderful man who does not expect me to clean house and rid myself of those spaces in my heart. I would never expect him to do so. If you have truly loved someone, no matter what the end result of the relationship, filling those rooms full of flowers can set you free.
So, I’m at the farm. I’m writing and drinking good coffee and eating chocolate hearts. And I’m counting all my blessings for a heart filled with blooms by remembering my life with a good, kind man. ❤️
“My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever.” Psalm 73:26 NIV
What a beautiful read to wake up to this am! I love your writing. I can feel the heartfelt emotions. Thank you for sharing your thoughts, feelings and love with your readers,Ginny!
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My six year mark of losing my Steve is coming up on the 17th & March has started off a bit bumpy. I think my angelversary months always do. I needed this today. I’ve thought about unfollowing the suicide survivors FB pages that I joined after losing my son as well as yours because of those days when reading about another’s grief seems to make me feel worse rather than better. However, the days when it helps far outnumber the ones when it doesn’t. I still need to be reminded that there are many others in the same place. Trying to carve out a life in the midst of loss & a broken heart. I have my surviving daughter & son-in-love & two beautiful grandchildren that keep me going. Thank you for all that you share with all of us! ❤️
Bless your heart. Grief is one of those subjects that trigger people and I lose followers all the time. It used to bother me a little till I realized people don’t need grief support forever. That’s why I try to throw my other stories in the mix. It demonstrates that I don’t need to talk about grief all the time either. We grow. Healing comes. But so do the waves. I’m glad you’re here. ❤️
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I was sitting here reviewing your “love history” with my husband (#3, 1that deceased) and before I got half way through your post I told him that with both him and me we did have pockets of good happy memories with the ex’s otherwise everything from that “I Do” was a total misery but it wasn’t. There was laughter and romance and great times regardless of the ending in divorce or death and when we acknowledge that for each other then thinking of or mentioning “when he and I and the kids” or “I remember one hilarious time when…” does not make you feel guilty for remembering the good times. There is a memory freedom with the current love of your life. I told him all that and was pleasantly surprised when I finished reading your post out loud to him and you basically said the same thing. Thank you. I knew i have felt a kinship with you. Keep posting. We never stop learning.
You made my heart smile! Thank you for sharing, dear one. ❤️