Writer Betty Rollin, my old boss from our 1960s Look magazine days, published an op-ed in the New York Times earlier this week. The headline was provocative: “How to Talk to a Widow.”
In her essay, Betty tells a story that says a lot about what widowhood is like for many Americans these days. Betty received an email from a friend asking, “How are you?” She replied, “I’m better.” The friend wrote back, “Oh! I didn’t know you were sick.”
Betty was flummoxed. “Given that I became a widow more than a year earlier, she had assumed that I had moved on and that I was feeling better after, perhaps, a cold or Covid. But I meant that I was feeling better about my widowhood. I guess I was supposed to have recovered from that. Apparently, the correct amount of time is a year or so. Apparently I wasn’t doing the recovery thing right.”
Still Grieving
It’s been a full 21 months since Jon’s death, and I’m still grieving for him. I cry every day. When I sit down to write these blog posts each week, I hear myself fretting, “It’s been almost two years. I’ve written fifty-some widowed essays. My readers must be wondering, ‘Isn’t it time Barbara lightened up a bit?'”
I remind myself that my readers are a kind bunch. By the sound of their comments, they actually want to know what losing Jon has been like for me — for real and for the long term.
The truth is, yes, I have plenty of sad, grief-filled moments. They crash in on me out of the blue and at odd times of day. But I also spend a lot of time in a very nice, lightened-up place.
Green Things All Around
True pleasures are there to be had: Spending time with my far-flung family, nuclear and otherwise. Making new friendships and deepening the old ones. And, closest at hand, the slivers of land that surround my house — building stairways and retaining walls and filling new planting beds with green things — green things with futures.
Life is good, most of the time. And one of the perks of having an action-packed, 81-year lifespan at my back is living in a world that is now peopled with dozens (hundreds?) of folks I’ve known for decades. Some I’ve known intimately, some I’ve known only passingly, but all I’ve known indelibly.
These indelible people have accompanied me through life’s various stages. We were young and single together. We got married. We grew our careers. We cared for our elders or children. And now we — some of us — are losing our beloved life partners.
Betty is one of those people. We have not kept in touch since our days at Look. No doubt I remember her the way a high school freshman remembers a senior — better than she remembers me.
Keeping Tabs From Afar
But I’ve watched Betty from afar all these decades. I worried for her when she wrote about her breast cancer in “First You Cry.” I followed her career as a correspondent for NBC and PBS. I mourned with her when she wrote about her mother’s death in “Last Wish.”
Back in the 1960s, Betty and I were young, single career girls together. Betty was a staff writer, talented, successful and knock-out stylish. I was her secretary, a wannabe writer and a terrible typist. Betty was a sophisticate from New York. I was a naif from Michigan who thought it was OK to wear a flowered pastel shirtdress to our office on Madison Avenue — until Betty set me straight.
And now, a half-century later, glamorous Betty and her terrible typist are widows together. There is a comfort in that. I ache for Jon. I’m sad. But if Betty Rollin can be sad so many months in, so can I.
Betty Rollin on How to Talk to a Widow
So, what’s the word from Betty Rollin on how to talk to a widow? At the conclusion of her op-ed, Betty had this to say about that: “My Christian friends sent flowers; my Jewish friends sent food. Food is better.”
I dunno. I kinda liked the flowers.
About those flowers: “When Someone Dies, Send Flowers.” As for the earliest days of grief: “My Husband Died and Denial and Distraction Are My Go-To States for Now.”
Gina says
Amazing article. I too was feeling what is wrong with me. John was my husband, friend, the chopper while I cooked and we chitter chattered continuously. We went places and did things. Sharing and interacting was our daily course. Although he was dying, and is gone, I still miss what we enjoyed. People just don’t understand.
Barbara Falconer Newhall says
“We went places and did things.” That kind of sums it up. I miss sharing those daily things with Jon. I understand, and so do the many widows I’ve gotten to know since Jon died.
Elaine says
Always look forward to your blog. The path is a work of art.
Barbara Falconer Newhall says
Thank you, Elaine. And thanks for sticking by me on the path!!!!!
Deidre Brodeur-Coen says
You take all the time you need. I’d rather have an honest blog than a make-believe one. Grief is different for everyone. And no one can put a time line on it. It changes, thankfully, but it’s always there lurking behind the curtain. Your friend, Deidre
Barbara Falconer Newhall says
Thank you, Deidre. That’s how it feels — lurking behind the curtain. In a sad way, but also in a reassuring way.
Karen says
Barbara
I read you every week. This week touched my very soul. I still have my life partner and I know that I could go before he does. But I find strength in every blog you write that it’s OK to not be okay if I’m the one still here.
Barbara Falconer Newhall says
Yes. The sadness doesn’t go away, but Jon was — is — exactly that: my life partner. That’s still a fact.
Ellen+Becherer says
Soon, after all this rain, spring will come. The buds will start to form, your sprinkler system will keep all the flowers coming. That will be wonderful. No, Jon will not be here, and I”m sorry. You will have flowers though. I’ll bring flowers. Hugs, Ellen
Barbara Falconer Newhall says
Thank you. Spring is going to be really interesting. Right now most of the stuff we’ve planted looks pretty drab, but hopefully because roots are getting put down with the winter rain.