Oct 20, 2013

Keeping the Faith

Keeping the Faith

“My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever.” Psalm 73:26
After my husband, John, died suddenly in 2000, I felt totally alone in my grief and struggled to make sense out of my life. Alone in the house, I screamed and cried asking God to bring John back. I wondered why a loving God ripped my fifty-four year old husband out of my life. Ravaged with anger, my faith faltered and I fell into a deep pit. Grief does that.

Raised in a Christian home, I attended Sunday school, confirmation classes and even belonged to a youth group at my church. My mother taught me the Lord’s Prayer when I was four years old. Each night standing in the dark by my bed she recited the prayer with me and placed a kiss on my cheek. I believed in God and loved Jesus. My Sunday school teacher saying that Jesus loved us and I believed her.

My husband John and I were married in my church in 1972. After saying “I do” we looked forward to a lifetime together. Never imagining it would end so soon. During our marriage we attended church weekly, praying, taking communion and singing hymns side-by-side. When we faced our infertility problems together, I prayed that God would bless us with children. As the years went by and no babies appeared, my faith began to weaken. With no obvious answers from God, we eventually fell off the faith path.

Struggling with the grief after John’s death, I wondered where was that loving God and Jesus when I needed them? For years, I looked for answers in books and in the world around me. I joined a new church, participated in a Bible study group and even volunteered for a Habitat for Humanity project in our community. Attending church alone was a tough stretch for me. I usually sat way in the back so if the message or songs triggered tears I had an escape route. As the years passed, I continued to attend church services and devoted time morning and evening for meditation and reflection.

Thirteen years have passed since I said a mournful goodbye to my loving husband. After six years alone, in 2007 I married a wonderful man. My pastor performed the wedding service, sending us off with a smiles and blessings from God. My husband and I have found new meaning in life and continue to carry memories of our spouses with us as we build our life together.

Looking back on those difficult years of grief, I realize facing a death often challenges our faith. Attending church on September 8, 2013— Allan and my sixth anniversary— my pastor’s message triggered memories of facing John’s death. The pastor spoke about Asaph’s struggle to understand why the wicked and immoral appear to succeed in life while the humble and loving face tragedies that change their lives forever. Asaph wonders where is God in all this? The pastor reminded us that God offers us assurance that He’s always with us in difficult times; he has a plan for us. I know he did for me, just took me a lot of time to figure it out. 

At the end of the message, our pastor told the congregation that one of the members in our church wrote a book, Twenty-Eight Snow Angels, about the death of her husband and finding her faith after the loss. His comment brought tears of happiness to my eyes. After the service, I gave the pastor a hug and thanked him for the support during those dark days of grief, for officiating at our 2007 wedding ceremony and for sharing my story, Twenty-Eight Snow Angels, with others. He looked at me and said, “I loved your book.” His smile and words said it all. I'm glad my book's bringing hope and inspiration to others.

Twenty-Eight Snow Angels information at http://www.outskirtspress.com/snowangels 

Oct 8, 2013

Friends Come and Go



Losing my loving husband a week before my fifty-third birthday turned my world upside down. Gone were the daily hugs, the heartfelt “I love you” and candle light evenings at home together.

At the funeral friends and family hugged and wept with me, but within weeks the phone calls faded and their lives returned to normal. I on the other hand wasn’t that lucky. A few longtime friends continued to hang in there, but eventually most of them evaporated like the steam off a hot mug of coffee. Tiring of my tears and sadness, some of my long time friends disappeared.

Starting a new job just three weeks after the funeral blessed me with a few new friends who embraced my grief and never gave up on me. Even though they weren’t always sure what to say or do they stayed by my side, some how they understood. At night, after working all day surrounded by colleagues and students, I returned to my empty house in a tiny rural town. Each night a lonely silence greeted me at the door. To keep myself company, I tuned in the nightly episode of “Friends.” They weren’t my real friends, but they made me laugh and broke the solitude as I ate my microwave dinners at the empty table.

On my first training trip for my new position, I found myself on an airplane headed to Washington, D.C. with a group of people I had never met. That night, gathered around a table in a local bar, we talked, sipped drinks and laughed. The laughter felt strange yet good. As we visited, I realized the woman sitting next to me lived just a few miles from me, and we attended the same church. We traveled together, supported each other through hard times and have been friends ever since.


Several months after John died, I joined a grief group at a local church hoping to connect with some new friends. After the first few sessions, I realized I didn’t have much in common with the older widows. Many of them had spent fifty or more years with their husbands, had adult children, and numerous grandchildren. Fortunately, I continued to attend and met another widow closer to my age. We called each other regularly, went out for dinner and offered each other support. Some how we bonded and developed a wonderful friendship that has lasted for thirteen years.

Each day we're blessed with a new sunrise and the opportunity to touch other people's lives. After a loss, friends may come and go, but I truly believe that
God puts special people in our lives when we need them most. 

Read more about the process of rebuilding my life in my memoir, Twenty-Eight Snow Angels: A Widow's Story of Love, Loss and Renewal. Available online in e-book and paperback at: