Welcome to the Misadventures of Widowhood blog!

Welcome to my World---Woman, widow, senior citizen seeking to live out my days with a sense of whimsy as I search for inner peace and friendships. Jeez, that sounds like a profile on a dating app and I have zero interest in them, having lost my soul mate of 42 years. Life was good until it wasn't when my husband had a massive stroke and I spent the next 12 1/2 years as his caregiver. This blog has documented the pain and heartache of loss, my dark humor, my sweetest memories and, yes, even my pity parties and finally, moving past it all. And now I’m ready for a new start, in a new location---a continuum care campus in West Michigan, U.S.A. Some people say I have a quirky sense of humor that shows up from time to time in this blog. Others say I make some keen observations about life and growing older. Stick around, read a while. I'm sure we'll have things in common. Your comments are welcome and encouraged. Jean

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Cottages, Funerals, and Echoes of the Lives We Build and Leave Behind

If blog posts are a slice of life then this post is like an entire pie because I crammed enough stuff into this past week to last a month. If you asked me what kind of pie I'd say it was a fruit pie because my activities were chunky and chewy, not smooth like a cream pie. I'm not really a pie person---I prefer to eat cake instead---but if I have to pick a favorite it would lemon meringue. My mom used to make them from scratched which I suppose was the norm back in the '40s and '50s when I grew up. She made fruit pies in season, too, and we had an unlimited source for wild huckleberries so mom made lots pies and cobblers that were guaranteed to turn our teeth temporarily blue. 

Cottages and Memorial Day go together like peanut butter and jelly. The one I went to over the holidays has been in the family since I was two years old. It's an easy drive straight south of town, no way to get lost which at my age is a dreaded sign no one wants to see. It happened to my dad in the early days of his dementia and it happened to my brother. So far I've only gotten lost once, two years ago but it was in an area of town I never go to so I didn't punch a hole in my Old Person's Card with that incident. It's getting lost when going places you've been to a thousand times before that count. That's my story and I'm sticking with it. 

Opening day at a cottage is when you put the docks in, blow up the water toys, bring out the cushions for the screened-in porch and start restocking the kitchen for a simple meal of hot dogs on the grill, potato salad, chips and dip and this year my niece made chili---I'm guessing because the weatherman whispered in her ear that it would hit the spot on the cooler than normal holiday. Anyway, I brought a store bought apple pie as my contribution. Her family is not big on sweets and I've yet to figure out how to hit a home run with a dessert that pleases them all. I also brought store bought peanut butter cookies for the kids. Recently I dug out my mom's old recipe for peanut butter cookies, thinking I'd like to make them because I remember them as being so much better than store bought. One look at the ingredients and it was easy to figure out why back in the day when no one cared about sugar, fats and carbs, her cookies were a favorite with everyone. They had a cup of shortening, a cup of brown sugar, a cup of white sugar, a cup of peanut butter and three eggs in each batch. Still, it's a goal I set for myself before I die, to make a batch of peanut butter cookies from scratch. I've got a bad habit lately of setting goals to accomplish before I depart this world and I need to take a deep dive into that self destructive behavior one day, but not today.

Also this week I went to a funeral of the daughter of a woman I've known since the day she was born and that's a long time considering she's only a year or two younger than me. Her daughter was only 54 years old, died of cancer but she did more in her short life to add goodness and positivity to humanity than I've done in my 80 plus years. She was a teacher and the service was standing room only. It doesn't seem fair, the way someone with so much to give, dies young and suffers at the end while someone like me who tends to be a tad self-centered keeps on going like the Energizer Bunny. I left the funeral home being proud of my friend for raising such a great daughter but by comparisons feeling like I've wasted too much of my own life. We were summer friends who spent a great deal of time together growing up. Our parents were life-long friends but she took the giving nature of her own mom and passed it on to her daughter while I took the lessons passed down from my folks and kept them mostly to myself. 

At another party this weekend---one given by a great-nephew from my husband's side of the family and where the desserts literally numbered in the double digits---I was sitting next to a niece-in-law who has MS and, like me, never had any children. She's been in a wheelchair since her late 20s and hasn't had the easiest life. She looked around at all her nieces and nephews and out of the blue she said, "I'm glad I never had any kids." Her reason for thinking that is because during the years when her friends were all having babies, she said it was all she could do to go to work each day. She was so tired and didn't think she had anything left over to give. She figured any kids of hers wouldn't have turned out all that great. 

I also wonder from time to time how any kids I might have had would have turned out. Some people will scoff at me for saying this and call it apples and oranges but I was a good mom to my fur babies and I think I would have approached motherhood the same way I approached raising them to be well behaved canine citizens. I would have researched how to do whatever it took to be a mom including I would have even applied myself to the dreaded experience of learning how to cook. But would I have been as devoted to any kids of mine the way my mom was to my brother and me? I can't imagine me being completely void of the self-indulgent person I know I can be. Or did the self-indulgent part develop organically from having more time on my hands than my cottage friend had whose daughter just died?

I ended the week with what they were calling a Spring Fling here on campus, a party that was arranged and paid for by the daughter of a fellow resident. They come from money and spent lavishly on this party. After two glasses of wine I was ready to call it a night and that's when I got a call informing me that the husband of my best friend since kindergarten died. I'm in the season of my life when I buy sympathy cards by the box---and there I go again, making it about me instead of the loss of my friend's soulmate. But she has dementia and her husband was her caregiver and if I think too much about what is ahead for her and her sons my heart will break. At times like this I haul out the Scarlett O'Hara line from Gone With the Wind, "I'll think about it tomorrow. After all, tomorrow is another day." ©

Until next Wednesday.

P.S. The title of this post was generated by Artificial Intelligence. How do you think it did? ChatGpt is fun to play with. Thanks 'Awkward Widow' for introducing it to me.

 

42 comments:

  1. I'm also in love with ChatGPT. I haven't even tried any others. I even upgraded to the $20/mo version. I can ask questions or ask for recipes or turn photos intio cartoons.

    I gave them a photo of a native Seablush flower and asked them to turn it into a water color. PERFECT. Then I added the company name (Seablush Natives) and her name and phone number. And printed out at home. Until the printer sucked in all the cardstock and despite all three adults try to get it out ... we still get "printer is out of paper". New printer arrives tomorrow.

    Maybe the teens can figure it out and if so, it's there for them to tinker with and use. I limit their printing unless it is school related.

    Glad you had your traditions!!

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    1. Card stock paper nearly ruined my printer too. It took me several hours to get it working again and then it would only print one copy at a time...until I remembered the trick of turning it off and back on again. Wouldn't it be nice if we could do that with humans.

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  2. I think you're being a bit hard on yourself, perhaps the loss of your friends partner has affected your mood. We all have days when we indulge ourselves and why not, if we have buffered our way in life to 80, surely we're allowed some things for just us!

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    1. I hope you are right and even if you're not, it's kind of you to say so.

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  3. Well, I think it's better to know who you are and stick with that knowledge. The world is full of lousy parents, people who should have never had children, and it's not just the kids who suffer.

    And hey! Cookies aren't supposed to be healthy; that ruins the whole idea of Cookies. Besides, those ingredients are spread out among at least a dozen or more individual servings. It's not like you're eating a whole cup of sugar and butter each time you have a cookie. (And you're not eating the whole batch all at once. ...Are you?!)

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    1. Cookies aren't supposed to b healthy? LOL I love that. If you look at modern recipes for peanut butter cookies they have a whole lot less sugar and no shortening in them. I have not baked cookies from scratch in decades so I can't predict if I'd eat them all at once. And I've only baked cookies from a box once in the past 50 years and that was this year.

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  4. You've had a month in that week! I hear you on the sympathy cards -- not surprisingly, I sell a lot of them at my sale (or blank cards people tell me they are using for sympathy cards. I decided next year I would include a sheet with three or four simple things they could write if they don't want to write a real note.) I've yet to get to the cottage -- end of June. Chili is perfect. I feel like I'm making it a lot these days! I would have gone for the cookies. I'm not really a pie or cake person, though I won't turn down a piece, especially cherry. But cookies? It's hard to stop! In any event, apart from the deaths, it sounds wonderful!

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    1. My husband always said we go to funerals to honor the dead and comfort the living and I get that and never shy away from going to them. It's also a good time to reflect on our own lives, a reminder that our time is limited.

      I imagine up where your cottage is at it's still pretty cold. Or it was. Michigan is finally warming up. You guys had storm damage to clean up here that delayed your cottage's opening day.

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  5. I agree with nance's comment about knowing who you are and sticking to what is best for you. Have kids, great. Don't have kids, great too. I have to smile about the idea of buying a box of sympathy cards. After a certain age who hasn't entertained that idea? Oh, and yes, lemon meringue pie is the best.

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    1. I'm on my third box of sympathy cards since moving here four years ago. I order them off Amazon.

      I would never question someone's decision not to have kids. For me, it wasn't a choice though.

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  6. Well, it does no good to look back and wonder what our lives would have been like if we had done things differently. We didn't do things differently and so life goes on. From your many stories, it sounds like you live a wonderful life and you have made a big difference in many lives. A life well lived, a job well done - pat yourself on the back! Enjoy yourself! :)

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    1. I do normally try to live in the moment and enjoy myself but I also enjoy trips down Memory Lane. If I didn't, what would I write about?

      There's also that pesky quote about an unexamined life not being worth living that Socrates penned. I absolutely loved philosophy class in college and fully embraced the idea that self-reflection leads to a meaningful life. Socrates believed that if we blindly accept our values and actions life can get unfulfilling.

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  7. Sometimes death takes the good ones and we question why but supposedly we are not to question. Why the caregiver and not the one being cared for just doesn’t make sense does it? Oh well who we are not in charge. Your cottage was a favorite of so many generations as there was so much fun and happiness there. It wasn’t big, it wasn’t grand, but it was highlight of many summers for many years. The pump to get water, the outhouse, and Saturday night baths in the lake were so memorable. Your parents were so welcoming to all of us cousins each and every time we came that we never wanted to leave! Great memories, great times. I love how your niece has re-created the cottage and kept it in the family. JJ

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    1. Me too. Even though I don't visit often I know I'm always welcome. Mom made sure that all my cousins got a week at the cottage---on both sides of the family. Although my mom's side enjoyed it more than my dad's brother's kids who didn't come very many summers.

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  8. It feels as though this is the season of loss. I've counted five deaths in the past month, or so. And I hate to admit this, but I keep hearing my mom's old adage, "Deaths come in three." Doggone, we're at five. I haven't started buying sympathy cards by the box....yet. It makes sense, though. I feel for your friend who lost her 57 yr-old daughter. It sounds like she really packed those years with extraordinary good, though. Whenever you mention going to the cottage, it brings back great memories. My family lived in Minnesota for many years, and going to the cabins was an integral part of summertime. It's just like you described. So much fun. Hope you have a good week, Jean. BTW, make your mom's cookie recipe then tell us what you think. I'd rather have one of my mom's cookies than a dozen of those modern types. Lol

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    1. The store bought peanut butter cookies aren't worth the calories, are they. Minnesota, like Michigan, has so many lakes that cottage life is commonplace. I'll bet half the people I know has or had a cottage in their life at one point in time.

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  9. I haven't tried ChatGpt. I think the title was perfect. I guess I'll have to break down and try it. You could look at your before I die ideas as simply bucket list ideas. Sounds a little better but who really cares. Death is there for all of us so why not plan what you want to squeeze in before the end. I know I do.

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    1. That's kind of way I see it...like a bucket list. Living in a continuum care complex death is never far away. And my mom had a list of things she wanted to do before she died so I watched her checking things off.

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  10. That's a LOT of sugar and fat, but I'm guessing it's also for a huge batch of cookies. That's dangerous, having a huge batch of cookies around the house. I don't eat them all at once, but I do eat them all eventually - unless a friend visits. Then I send them away with a portion of the sin load. Shortening? Bad stuff. Butter is better, and if you make them, try reducing the sugar by 1/4. I guarantee they'll be just as good. I've been doing that for years and when I eat a full sugar cookie it's absolutely cloying. Peanut butter cookies is on my future agenda radar now!

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    1. Ya, I am a little afraid to have a batch of cookies in the house though I can always put a plate of them out in our lobby. Lots of people here who bake do that.

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  11. Oh and yes...the title is great, but what did you put into ChatGBT to get that? The entire post? I've been using it to calm my verbosity, but it also removes a lot of the personality of my writing.

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    1. That was the best part. I only put in something like: "a blog post about going to funerals and cottages and reflecting on life."

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    1. I was happy with several of the titles they suggested. I will use them in the future.

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  13. It seems like we have patches where there are several deaths in a row. I know I have been having those feels too. I am in the angry stage right now - my friend should not have died, I am tired of going to funerals, I am tired of what would have been. I appreciate the gallows humor. A former co-worker who now lives down the street has christened us the "funeral buddies" as we seem to have several funeral outings a year now. It keeps both of us from coming up with excuses not to go.

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    1. My niece seems to be my funeral buddy in the last few years. It do help not to have an excuse not to go. I truly believe it helps to show up. It helps the family see that they are not alone in grieving a loved one, the the loved one touched a lot of lives.

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  14. There's a reason I changed the tagline of The Task at Hand. Now it says, "Powered by Human Intelligence." If others want to use ChatGPT and such, that's just fine, but for me the process of creativity is as important as the final product. I have a friend who's a painter who feels the same way. As he puts it, if he were in an ad agency and the product was all that mattered, it might be different, but all of the decisions he makes along the way regarding subject, color, and technique are satisfying in a way his brief experiments with AI weren't. I may produce schlock, but it's going to be my schlock, doggone it!

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    1. I understand what you're saying. For me, I've never enjoyed the part of writing or painting where I have to come up with a title. It's my weakest point in the creative process. So I may play around with AI for that. AI is a tool and here to stay and I'm thinking we need to understand how it works so we can recognize it when we see it.

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  15. What a week, so busy, I also like lemon meringue but we call it a tart not a pie, also I have never had peanut butter cookies and AI did ok with the title

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    1. We have lemon tarts over here too but they are made in individual servings where our pie isn't. Are peanut butter cookies just not a 'thing' down under? Or is it that you just haven't ever had them?

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  16. The AI Generated Post Hook Title isn't as Creative as yours are, but, I don't think Artificial Intelligence can be Creative, it can only mimic. As for you and Motherhood, I suspect you would be a Fine Mom to any Living Thing in your Care. My Mom was an excellent Nurturer and when she didn't have Kids to Raise anymore she was as Devoted to her Fur Babies as she had been to us. It is an indicator in Humans that how they treat Non-Human Living Sentient Beings is a good indicator of how they also treat Humans. Your Cottage Summer Kickoff sounded so much fun and full of good times and Memories made. I'm so sorry to hear of the Losses tho', especially the Daughter of your Friend, much too Young and too Good a Human Being to be Lost prematurely and in a way with much suffering. The Friend who Lost the Caregiver first, sadly, that often happens due to the demands of the Caregiving and the Stress. It's something us Caregivers must Guard against and worry about most, what if we succumb first, what will happen to the Loved One who needs such intensive Care? I know for the Kids and Grandkids that The Man would be too much for them, even if they take turns with him. They give me respites but always relay they don't know how I manage it 24-7 and 365 and it does scare them if they inherited that, tho', of coarse they don't want anything to happen to either of us or for me to eventually need a Caregiver, as they think I'd be a real handful. *Bwahahahaha, True that* I told them my Long Term Care Plan is to go on an epic Crime Spree and get a Life Sentence so that the State has to Care for me, fuck The Establishment and The System would be a fitting way for any Militant Old Hippie to blaze out, don'tcha think? *Winks*

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    1. You would do fine in the prison system. Just show them Dark Dawn on the first day.... LOL Seriously, though, I understand your worry over who would care for the Man if you can't. My husband's brother was next in line as decision maker if I couldn't but it would have meant a nursing home for him.

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  17. Kudos to ChatGPT for the title! I should stop being so curmudgeonly and use that tool more, LOL!

    I read your post Jean and thought: What is wrong with looking after yourself if you have the time and no other responsibilities? Why is that considered self-indulgence and not self-care? Why do we (especially women) feel guilty if we are not giving of ourselves to others whenever we have a free moment? I wish I had taken more time for myself when I was raising kids but instead I did what was expected of me and put myself dead last, supposing I had ANY energy left over after taking care of everybody else's needs, wants and desires. And now people sometimes ask what I do with my time, am I volunteering etc., now that I am retired? My answer is always: I am getting to do whatever the hell I want with my time now, and I love it and it hasn't gotten old yet!

    OK rant over...what I am trying to say is: Jean, you don't need to feel guilty or owe anyone anything for living your life the way you do. You have not wasted your life. For example, you cared for your ailing husband for years and you shared your experiences with other caregivers as a way to help. I have no doubt you have touched so many others in many positive ways throughout your entire life and continue to do so especially through your writing. You rock, woman!

    Deb

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    1. You know what! You are right about how we women need to rebrand ourselves as doing self-care instead of being self-indulgent. At least those in our age bracket. I'm not sure if women under 40 haven't already learned that lesson by watching their moms, or not.

      Thanks for the praise, too. I do tend to undervalue the years I was caregiving and volunteering in the stroke support community and writing about Don's and my experience. I did rock the roll back then.

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    2. I am late responding, having had a busy week and just now reading your post. But I couldn't resist seconding what The Widow Badass said. I came to your post while looking for help dealing with my mom's onset of dementia. Although she was in Skilled Nursing at the time, she had a daily visit from one of her 3 daughters; we were always trying to find ways to reach her and I got a lot of insight from you. I also second the "please yourself" retirement. I refuse to fall into the pattern of overscheduling as if that will somehow stall off aging. I do what I enjoy, full stop.
      Nina
      Nina

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    3. Funny you should say that about over-scheduling yourself. I was just looking at the calendar of things we can do here over the next month and thought to myself, "I can't possibility do all that!" One day in particular are four back-to-back things ---- a teaching kitchen event, Mahjong, a magic show followed by a cookout.

      Thanks for what you said about my blogs giving you insight. Dementia is such a hard/sad family issue to deal with.

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  18. When I was growing up we lived in Minnesota, and lots of my friends had lake cabins that their families would go to in the summers. I got invited several times, and it was great fun to go for a week or 2, but usually the moms and kids would stay and the dads would only be there on the weekends. Since my dad was a university professor, I was used to him being home in the summers unless he taught summer school, and every other year we would take a very long vacation to California to visit his parents, stopping in Utah to see my mother's family on the way. Thanks for dredging up those memories, I haven't thought about those summer vacations in a long time. As for the funerals, they are now happening with more and more frequency, but I usually don't go unless they are local and I was close to the person. Traveling is so difficult in a wheelchair, even just for the length of a funeral, that I usually just send my condolences and regrets, and try to spend some time thinking about the person and revisiting my memories of the times we spent together.

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    1. Our cottage was close enough to town that my dad drove back and forth. He worked nights so there wasn't a rush hour to deal with and we'd just all go to town every couple of weeks for groceries and doing laundry. I'm glad I stirred up some good memories for you. Your summers of going west sounds like great experiences, too.

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  19. Hi Jean :
    you were amazing caregiver & pet mom & I am sure you would have been amazing mom too, but does it matter, you made this world better & comforted so many with your writing & volunteering, your support got me off the ledge I was ready to jump off after my stroke. yours & Don's story gave me courage & strength to give good fight. Also I also recently discovered & love chatgpt, it has been helping me learn AI programming & having so much fun at it. I guess once a nerd forever nerd & proud of it.

    Asha

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    1. Thank you for your kind words. I tend to forget my time helping out in the stroke community because I was getting as much out of writing and mentoring there as I was giving.

      Look at you, being a nerd on the cutting edge again! This was my first experience playing with AI but it won't be my last. It's here to stay so why not embrace it. I won't be learning programming like you but I will play with the AI 'toys' like ChatGPT.

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  20. You need to try 3 Ingredient Peanut Butter Cookies: 1 cup pb, 1 cup sugar, 1 large egg. Mix, roll into balls (roll balls in extra sugar if desired) press out with fork, bake 350° for about 10 minutes. Makes about 2 dozen. As someone who bakes and consumes lots of cookies, I assure you that you can complete your cookie baking goal with this recipe and be pleased with the results.

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    1. I've noticed the modern recipes leave out the brown sugar and shortening....basically the recipe you shared. I may experiment and split a batch and add the brown sugar and shortening to one half and make a side by side taste comparison on the results. New goal LOL

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