My husband died suddenly

I am lucky to have a ver supportive sister and a good friend. So far I have not been alone with my grief but I am sure it will come. I don’t watch programmes we used to watch together it is not the same. I have a cushion with my husbands face on and cuddle this every night. I also talk to him and tell him what I am doing during the day. It gives me comfort. I think Kirsty Allsop Location is getting me through. She seems to have a calming influence. I feel okay and then suddenly my husband pops in my mind or i catch die of a photo and I get an overwhelming feeling I grief and the tears begin to flow. I sometimes feel paralysed with fear at the thought of the future without him. I am trying to go hour by hour sometimes minute by minute as this is all I can cope with. I know you will understand this as we all have the same in common. We have lost our life partner. The one we love forever.

Dear Nel

Am glad that you have your sister and friend. I have a good friend and two of my husband’s friends are staying in touch as well as his older brother but they have their own lives so only call once a week, usually in a cluster, so the rest of the week I do not have anyone to really talk to. I visit our son’s house but they are a different generation and phone’s dominate their lives and you can see they are not really interested in what I have to say. Sometimes get more attention from the grandkids.

I also have stopped watching certain programmes that we watched together. Tend to watch utter programmes just as background noise as I find the silence in the house now unbearable.

Yes we have lost the person we will love forever and it is heartbreaking.

@Sheila26
I have my boys at home but they are in their bedrooms or off out with their girlfriends.
They talk about their Dad occasionally but I need to talk about him everyday and all day.
It feels lonely grieving for our loved one, family, friends don’t have that deep crushing feeling of loss, the yearning for our loved one. I’m just moving and talking when I can, but I don’t feel connected to anything or anyone, I’m at a total loss without my Marti. Climbing this mountain isn’t easy.
Sending you all hugs
Amy x

Dear Amy

I feel the same. I need to know that people are not forgetting about him as they move forward with their own lives but the reality is except for me and the kids he is shrinking from other people’s minds.

Awwww I’m so so sorry for your loss
Been on here will really support you I have only been on a week and you realise other people are going through the same thing
The people on here are amazing

Audrey-Rose

4h

I lost my husband 18 weeks ago today. I’ve managed to get through the horriendous times that faced me, but only by the skin of my teeth. Emotional support stopped exactly 1 week after he died so I was bobbing up and down in the ocean of grief since then.

Slowly after 3 months I began to go a bit longer with crying at the drop of a hat. I began to do things around the house that had stacked up. I lost 2.5 stone during that time. But I felt I was not getting used to him not being there but starting to accept my fate.

This past Sunday I ordered 10 house plants to bring some new life into my home. So that is something to look forward to.

Now, for the Guilt. I’m 71yrs old and my husband was 45yrs old. He died suddenly in his sleep and the coroner has not found what killed him. For months before he died when I would try to talk about the day I’m gone what I wanted him to do such as what jewlery goes to who and mainly I wanted him to move on with his life. He would always come back sternly saying if I die he would be following me quickly. This became a soar topic and we stopped talking about whatifs. A week and 2 days before he died I got my first covid jab. over the next week i had mentioned i was thinking about not getting the second one. He fought me on this and made me promise I would get the second. Then he died. Mar. 31 I went and got my second jab but only because I had promised him. I didn’t want it but I don’t break promises. So my guilt is I’m still here and if I had died he wouldn’t be. I feel i’ve let him down I’m rationalising it that I’ve done the right thng but the guilt hangs over my head.

1 Like

I know how you feel. My husband died in the 24.4.21. He had a cardiac arrest in front of me and never regained consciousness. 8 weeks later he died. I feel I am drowning in grief. I cry every day when I wake up realising I have to spend another day without him. I have really bad anxiety and have had my initial session with a clinical hypnotherapist next week. She made me feel so calm and am very hopeful she can improve my wellbeing. I do not want to go out or be alone. I feel so empty. We have been together 18 years and I thought we would be together for another 17 years. I feel I am going through the motions and there is no joy in life. I keep thinking things will never change. I lost bit my parents within the last 7 years and have a very supportive sister. I am trying to move on day by day. I contacted a medium who spoke a lot of truth and my husband.came through. I was very sceptical but after hearing what he said and his name it gave me comfort to know he hears me when I speak to him and he is around me all the time. I wake up to see what each day brings but know I will love my husband forever and there will never be another x

2 Likes

Dear Nel and everyone else who has posted here and shared your loss and grief, I just wanted to say thank you for being so honest and to offer you a virtual hug (a bear hug if that’s not too much). My husband died eight weeks ago. He was 57 (I am five years younger). We had gone to bed after a lovely evening. I think he got up to get his reading glasses shortly after. I found him at the bottom of our stairs the next morning. He had sat down and died - probably almost instantly - and was quite dead by the time I found him. We were together for over 25 years. We had commuted for periods but I had sworn that was over and we had great plans for the future; the lockdown had been our most intense period of togetherness since we met. I was utterly unprepared for his death, devastated by the sense that he had evaporated in an instant and pole-axed by the decisions and actions I had to take in the aftermath. Friends and family have been amazing but the tears keep flowing and I endlessly replay the events of his final hours, of finding him and the hours afterwards. Like many I am also getting my head around a sudden shift in finances and things I’m not used to doing. I keep wanting to ask where x or y was tucked away. I’ve got through most of the death-min and started to push his things a bit further away from me (he gets the top bit of the cupboard now; his razer is inside the bathroom cabinet not by the sink) but it all weighs heavily. I worry about the impact of my grief on our older teenage children. They were terribly close to him but also have very different reactions and their own lives to lead. I am also preparing to go back to work in a week and feeling quite anxious about my ability to operate. Part of me hopes it will be a relief and a diversion but I have found I am less keen to return as the weeks pass. I was determined to go back as soon as possible at the beginning so I could feel ‘normal’ again. If anyone has experience of that, I’d welcome hearing how you have managed. With best wishes and solidarity to you all.

1 Like

Hi very sorry for your loss awful circumstances for you. 15 months for me and I still cry most days I took a year of work we were in lockdown as a nurse couldn’t face going back to the trust that had let my husband down with delayed treatment for cancer. I’m back at work now and can function at work it is a distraction keeping busy. I don’t think we ever feel normal. They say it get easier I think we learn to live without them. When you feel ready to go back to work do so early days for you.
My 2 grown up children were and still are my rock but grieving in a different way they have there lives to get on with. As a parent we feel we should be strong for them at first I was no use at all.
Husbands belonging I have all in same place but I know I will have to sort things out all in our own time
Take care x

2 Likes

My 50 year old husband died suddenly 3 months ago - we’re still waiting to hear why. It is such a shock and my two young adult children are reacting in different ways. I haven’t felt strong enough to go back to work yet but hope to soon. Friends and family have been great but the amount of paperwork I still have to do is ridiculous. Nothing can prepare us for losing the other half of us. Life can never be the same again and my outlook on life has altered completely. I can’t make sense of it at all. Sending hugs

1 Like

today i lost it, this coming tues would have been our 24th wedding anniv and my first one without him. my mind went back 24yrs today and i remembered what we did, what the weather was like and everything about that day just getting ready for our wedding. i bawled my eyes out. Everyone have been telling me how strong I am and how well I’m handling everything. They haven’t realised it’s all a mask. I don’t try to put it up but happens automaticly when someone comes around which is rare. Usually it’s 3 or 4 weeks between anyone coming by for a few mins. I dread the next 3 days. I fear each one will be worse than the day before. Just don’t know how much more I can take. I had managed over the past few weeks not to cry but i’m catching up now. Next week I’m calling the coroner to get an update on the investigation over his death, been 19 weeks now. I just have to know why he died. I love you my sweetheart and miss you beyond belief.

1 Like

I’m still waiting for the report 14 weeks on. It just adds to the heartbreak doesn’t it? I spent my last Wedding Anniversary with him at the Chapel or Rest - heartbreaking but at least I could see him. Next year, I won’t even be able to do that. Sending hugs

2 Likes

yes it does make the heartbreak so deep and delays the full grieving process no knowing how or why our loves passed. My heart goes out to you during this painful time. I have his ashes in a special urn on my mantel so I have him in a way with me but in some ways it seems to make it worse. so close yet untouchable. Thank you for the hugs and I send warm hugs back to you my friend. One day we will be reunited with our loves.

2 Likes

Dear Audrey-Rose

It is so unbearable really isn’t it. I spend hours just sitting by myself staring at the seat where he would be sitting. Like yourself other than our kids it is rare for anyone to drop in or even call now to just say ‘hello’. All we want is our loved ones. It is nine months now since my husband died and now I can feel I am on count down till the first anniversary. Finding each day harder and harder to function.

I too had to await an inquest but knew the cause of death as he was involved in a road traffic accident. However, the waiting and the processes before and after just add to the pain.

Will be thinking of you on Tuesday.

2 Likes

that’s a grueling process. The diagnosis of my wife’s condition was clear so although it was a coroner’s case (pass away <24 hrs after admission) things settled fairly quickly. But it was just one of the things we have to go through. To me it was the realization that I’m going to spend the rest of my life without the love of my life my best friend that was really hurting. Everyday when I woke up this reality is like a knife ripping through my heart again and again. Anyway I hope things get settled soon for all of you.

1 Like

It’s the loss of a future that we worked so hard for that really hurts. I can continue with my job, I like it most of the time, but the whole point of it in these latter few years was to secure a good retirement for us to enjoy. That has now gone so what am I aiming for?

3 Likes

I feel the same. Suddenly I am at a loss. But at least work becomes a distraction to keep my sanity.

Nel my heart goes out to you having been In a very similar situation to yourself.
My husband sat on the edge of the bed sept 1 2020 and said he had a pain in his shoulder and collapsed I like you had to do cpr I did get him breathing again . To cut a long story short he made it to the hospital where myself and our two grown up kids were with him as he slipped away from us , after the nurses and doctors many attempts to save him his heart was too weak .
The day before he thought he had heart burn and was taking anti acids there were no other sign or symptoms of it being a heart attack . We were totally in shock and my world was destroyed and has been ever since . He was only 56 and we were married 33 years
Take care Karen

Unfortunately as part of the process I had to give a statement of my conversations with my husband the hours before he died. The pension companies have also asked for statements as to how he died and the circumstances of the accident. Every day just brings back the memories of that tragic and life changing day. Each day I just sit and cry at the loss of my husband - I have few friends because I only needed him. I don’t see myself as having a life anymore. I am invited into other people’s lives but always return to the empty, silence place that used to be our home.

1 Like

I understand that’s a torture to go over that day again. That heartache is so unbearable.
I too had my wife as my best friend so didn’t bother to cultivate other friendship( but to be honest at this age it’s difficult to make real friends; my wife was my childhood sweetheart we were so innocent then) so dunno who to turn to. I have a cousin and mother in law but they can never replace my soulmate though they meant well.
It’s all very sad that our home once full of love, laughter and warmth were forever gone in the blink of an eye. My thoughts go to you.