Reflections on Regrets in a Lifelong Marriage: An Emotional Journey Through Quarrels, Decisions, and Behaviors After the Passing of a Spouse.
An essay on loss and grief.
Now that my spouse is gone, the empty house resonates with the echoes of the past. Fifty years is a lifetime shared, woven with threads of love, joy, sorrow, and regret. As I sit alone, memories flood in, some comforting, others searing with the sting of remorse. It was a journey of many tension-filled and beautiful moments.
The quarrels, oh, the quarrels. They come back to me with painful clarity. All those words we said in anger seem like just a trifle now. We bickered over things that, looking back, were so trivial. Pride and stubbornness fueled disputes, creating rifts that needed time to heal.
Still heavy on my heart are the times I was left with unsolved problems hanging in the air. It was anger and fear that clouded my judgments and made me say the things I did. We both opted for silence instead of speaking with each other and waited for the storm to end. Leaving or not getting involved left wounds that never quite healed. If only I had known then the power of the kind word, gentle touch, and 'I'm sorry.' How clear were behaviors born of habit and taking each other for granted now?
The petty annoyances grew into bigger grievances. All those times choosing convenience over effort and moments add to a tapestry of regret. I can now see. There were so many times when I took for granted the person beside me—the everyday routines, the grind of living that sealed my eyes from the small everyday acts of love and kindness she showed me. Now that she's no more, it makes the weight of these regrets almost unbearable.
Oh, how I wish I could go back in time and fix the past, hug it tight, and profess my deep love and gratitude. I would give anything for another opportunity to say the unsaid and heal the unhealed. In so many ways, though, their finality makes these regrets finally futile: they persist, at any rate, as acts of love that could prove greater even than flaws and failures.
In this house, which is so quiet with memory, I can only try to come to terms with the lessons I learned too late. With painful clarity, I see that love is a continual practice of patience, forgiveness, and presence. Each moment spent with my loved one is transient and now a memory. To solve arguments with love, decide with care, and inspect behaviors with empathy and respect.
I walk forward alone, bearing the weight of these regrets and an incredible thankfulness for our fifty years together. Our imperfect marriage was a trial to love, so with the past that I can't alter, I will only live regarding my spouse's memory by all that I have learned and hold on to the remaining love.
"I see that love is a continual practice of patience, forgiveness, and presence."
Thank you Allan for these beautiful words. Such an important way to hold relationships with those we love.
We were married for 62 years - I so understand the quiet house. I am filled with "wish I would haves" and "if only If's." And with the gratefulness of which you speak for having had the opportunity of share those years with him. It's been four years since he died - life goes on - and I miss him as much - or more - than ever. Take care.