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  1. November 7, 2008 at 6:41 am | |

    Excellent article. I am a widow of five years and feel this is a really relevant article and will be of help to those in such a situation. http://www.ajourneywelltaken.com

  2. jlew
    December 2, 2009 at 11:06 pm | |

    I have fallen in love with a widower. His wife died of cancer almost three years ago. He is so good to me, but he still loves his first wife dearly. He takes little gifts to her gravesite on holidays. I can tell he misses her deaply. There are pictures in his house of her in family photos. He has their wedding photo up in a curio cabinet with some other momentos. Her baby picuture is up on his desk. I can see the pain in his eyes when he misses her. I don’t know if I can live with all of his missing her. It hurts me terribly to think I am second and always will be. I don’t know if I can live a life with him forever dealing with his pain. It breaks my heart because I will always be second.

  3. ann
    January 7, 2010 at 8:43 pm | |

    jlew,

    You don’t have to put up with all that heartache and pain. Why not find someone who’ll make you his number one woman as you truly deserve?

  4. olemissreb123@aol.com
    March 8, 2010 at 10:10 am | |

    I am dealing with the same thing jlew said – I did get married and when we go to his home the pictures are still hanging and she seems to pop up in may ways – i suggested he put these in an album – not!

  5. liza
    April 27, 2011 at 11:04 am | |

    SOME widowers feel so much guilt about falling in love and living a full life with another. These widowers should never marry until they fully understand that their new love should be treated with the same respect, honor, joy, and love that they had at the beginning of their first marriage.

    I married a widower and he never, ever made me feel second in any way. He had a healthy mind and felt that our marriage was just as important as his first. New beginnings for both of us and we felt fortunate that we had and have the chance to be passionate about life together.

    Neither of us feel that we should forget (never could)about our past and what we shared during those years of marriage with another. That was another chapter in our lives. Life is for moving forward while cherishing the gift of another glorious day in this life time with a new found love.

    Each must be able to grieve, and move forward without the guilt of feeling that we must constantly prove to others and ourselves that we have not forgotten our other spouses. Neither of us needed pictures of our late spouses in our home as my husband felt that this is now OUR life, our marriage. If we had young children at home, then that would be different and both of us would want children to be comforted by having lovely pictures of their deceased parent.

    Neither of us have dreaded any significant date and have never felt we had to make a big deal of those special dates of our deceased spouses. Yes, we do honor them by putting flowers on their grave.We know our deceased spouses must be happy that we found one another as they are alive in another realm and understand the full picture. Real love never dies.