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Posted By Community Living Advocates on 05/23/2022 in Senior Information

When heartstrings are strummed with sorrow

When heartstrings are strummed with sorrow

When heartstrings are strummed with sorrow  

by Janet Polech 5/19/2022  

Our wedding was a wondrous celebration, a joie de verve; a culmination of the growth of our  love for each other and the anticipation of sharing it with the people who mattered the most to us.  Everyone was in high spirits as we gathered on Memorial Day weekend to commit ourselves to a  future that was yet to unfold, that we would create together by the joining of our lives and souls.  

A treasured wedding gift that we received was thoughtfully compiled by a cousin and his wife.  He crafted a poem to capture the spirit of our union, and his wife lovingly toiled to create a  needlework of his words, then custom-framed it for a one-of-a-kind keepsake. The decorative  needlepoint design included our names and our wedding date, followed by this script:  

 The road is bright before us,  

 As hand in hand we start;  

 United in love forever,  

 One mind, One soul, One heart.  

This precious gift was a lovely summation of the sentiment of our mutual feelings for one anoth er, along with the eager optimism of our future together. I occasionally pull it out of a storage  closet as Memorial Day approaches, and as I reread this expression of Love, with its dramatically  extended needlepoint loops on the capital letters, it still moves me to this day. My heartstrings  get strummed like a harp, with softly flowing notes of beauty that resonate an invisible energy.  But now, having been widowed at mid-life, the tones seem different, lowered to a level of bitter sweetness due to the absence of my beloved spouse. It has been several years since he passed,  but the tender feelings that arise with each occasional reading are still vulnerable now, tinged  with the soft pain of loss. Gone is the burning optimism that once made my spirit soar, replaced  by a familiar twinge of sorrow in my heart that is hard to describe but deeply felt. Missing is that  comfort in my spirit that I shared with my husband, in person.  

Loss has been my greatest teacher. Grief can return unexpectedly, without warning. Being susceptible to its jolts and whims, it can be a struggle to deal with the impact of emotions that can  erupt with the slightest provocation. Its essence makes itself known to the heart, being more a  spiritual and mental sorrow. An intangible essence that makes it hard to grasp and control - but  no less real than physical pain. 


Grief makes me fragile, and prone to missing my loved ones more during certain times of the  year. I find myself getting pulled back into the past as the calendar circles back around to the  dates that hold special meaning, that were special to us, our union, etched in my memory. As the  years progress, more losses accumulate as family members, friends, and others pass on due to  aging, disease, or special circumstances. Now it seems that there isn’t a month on the calendar  that isn’t a recurring reminder of loss. But the long Memorial Day weekend is the big one for me,  and it starts a domino effect of reminders of loss that topple into each other. The month of May  used to be my favorite month, and I still appreciate the warmth that it brings along with the glorious growth and accompanying bursts of beauty. But now a myriad of reminders of loss fill my  May calendar - Mother’s Day, College graduations, and the extra long holiday weekend when we  were married. June quickly follows with Father’s Day, and my deceased spouse’s birthday, both  of which I now memorialize at the cemetery. My parents passed in July and August. My husband  died in September, the World Trade Centers collapsed on 9/11 … on and on, the reminders continue.  

I have learned to anticipate potential feelings of grief that will crop up, and make plans to memorialize certain dates with a ritual to honor my loved ones. I visit the cemetery a lot, placing a rose  on their graves and pulling out weeds that grew tall around the headstones. I’ve learned to create  distractions too, that fulfill my need for connection. So I plan get togethers with family or friends to fill some of the emptiness, and make new memories while having fun at the same time. The  kindred spirits understand, knowing what it’s like to lose a spouse, a parent, or other family  member. New traditions are born, and the ties of devotion to family and friends become stronger.  

During the first year of losing my spouse, I found out that there are a lot of us that are members  this club that we didn’t want to join. And the words of a stranger stuck with me. “You have to  stick together,” I was told by a hotel employee as he sympathized with me and my daughter. He  was referring to family, as he shared his own story of personal loss with us. Bearing in mind his  wise words, as the years progressed my (adult) children and I have remained close, closer even  than before their father died. We’ve been more understanding of each other, with our hard won  lesson of how precious life really is, and have been there to support each other when needed.  And we make it a point to get together regularly to enjoy each others company, even though we  don’t live in the same cities. Devotion to family can be part of the magic of healing. And appreciating the people who are still present in my life has made a positive difference that keeps me  optimistic and involved in good times and supported in down times. We’re all imperfect, and we  all have wounds that can reopen, even when it’s not convenient. I’ve learned that while we have  each other present in our lives, we are stronger, more resilient and more loved.