“Not in Assisted Living (Yet): Dispatches from the Edge of Independence!

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, October 22, 2025

Writing Sympathy Cards and Redefining Friendship: the Octogenarian Edition

Living in a continuum care community means becoming fluent in the language of sympathy cards, quiet goodbyes, and the bittersweet art of selective friendship. Because friendship at this stage isn’t about forever—it’s about showing up when it counts. In this post, Jean reflects on the rituals of card writing, the emotional math of attending memorials, and the complicated ways we define friendship and connections when time is short and goodbyes are frequent. It’s part grief, part grit, and part gallows humor—because even in the face of loss, there’s room for wit and wisdom. It’s tender, irreverent, and full of the kind of wisdom you only earn by living it.  AI…

One thing you get plenty of practice doing in a continuum care community is writing Sympathy and Get Well cards. I buy sympathy cards by the box—three boxes in four years, to be precise. Few weeks go by without a basket collecting cards for someone in the hospital or for the family of someone who passed away.

Get Well cards are easier to come by. Charities trying to squeeze one more donation out of us often send blank greeting cards as incentives. I used two of them recently to write sympathy messages for grieving dog parents—both had to say goodbye to a beloved pet. No one moves into places like this with puppies and kittens who outlive their humans. It’s old dogs and ancient cats. And I know firsthand what it’s like to be a lifelong dog person who not only grieves the loss of a four-legged companion, but also the very real possibility that we’ll never get another fur baby.

Right now, cats outnumber dogs in our independent living building but it didn't start out that way. We're down to two dogs in residence. Some of us are plotting a petition to get a resident dog we could all share. Some CCCs have them—it’s not out of the question. And a month or so ago our Life Enrichment Director arranged for a dozen baby goats to roam our piazza. We've even had horses and a cow on campus for us to get up close and personal with. Management does understand how we can miss bonding with animals.

Yesterday brought another kind of card-writing moment. The daughters of a woman in my writing group spread the word that their mother was refusing further treatment and a feeding tube. Her time left could be measured in days. “If you want to say goodbye,” they said, “please do it very soon.” My writing friend reportedly is in good spirits and at peace with her decision.

I’ve said goodbye to my dad and husband in similar circumstances, but never to someone who falls somewhere between a casual friend and a close friend—the kind of person I know I would’ve grown close to if we’d met earlier in life. She’s the first person to leave this place (for Hospice) who I’ve felt truly sad about. When I moved in, I made a conscious choice not to get too close to anyone. Too many goodbyes ahead, I thought. Probably not the smartest decision I ever made, but it is what it is. 

So I googled what to say to a dying person and came up with a lot of platitudes as well as a few good suggestions and I finally decided a straight forward, from-the-heart message would be better than a Hallmark inspired ditty would be. So here’s what I wrote:

“I’ve always appreciated you for your warmth and grace and willingness to uplift and support fellow residents in our building—especially in our writers’ group. I’ve admired your wisdom and insightful comments in book club and at the farm table. My only regret in knowing you is that we didn’t meet years ago. As hard as it is to say goodbye, I want to tell you how much I’ve enjoyed knowing you. The devotion and love your family is gifting you during these final days is a testament to a life well lived. May your transition to the Great Unknown be gentle and pain-free.”

One of her daughters texted me last night after picking up the card I left for her in our mail room: It read: “Your card was so kind and thoughtful. You’ve been such a warm friend. I’ll read this to her in the morning when she wakes up."

I’ve never attended a funeral or memorial service for any fellow residents, but I might make an exception for her. If I do, will that open the door to going to others? I’ve never avoided funerals in the past, but those were for people I’d known my whole life or I had close ties or a connection to. Here, there’s only been one service I’ve felt guilty about missing—the daughter of the woman who taught me Mahjong. I didn’t know the daughter, but I tell myself I would’ve gone if I’d found a ride to the Catholic church downtown. In truth, in my heart I know I didn’t try very hard to find one. Instead, I wrote a heartfelt sympathy card and offered hugs and whispered condolences in person. 

Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about friendship and how we define it because I do feel lonely sometimes without a close confidant on campus. A widow's kind of loneliness, I suppose. Not the raw, early years kind but I do find myself envious when I see the close bonds others have formed here. If I didn’t keep this blog to share the ups and downs of my life, I’d probably diagnose myself with mild depression. It saddens and shames me to admit that I have a tough litmus test for friendship. But being an octogenarian, I’m not about to change habits honed over a lifetime.

I’ll continue my wait-and-see approach to swapping the kinds of life experiences that help build friendships. Instead, I'm known around here for dropping laugh lines into conversations. Growing up in a judgmental, religious area taught me not to share confidences until I know they’ll be kept and not be used as a weapon to ostracize me. Telling certain people here that I’m Pro-Choice, for example, would get me accused of eating babies for breakfast. There’s always someone nearby with a sense of moral superiority who divides the world into Black and White. 

I’ll also continue to be slow in offering help—especially car rides, when I don’t even like taking myself places. We have two Mother Teresa types here who run themselves ragged doing favors for others from taking them shopping after they give up driving to watering plants or feeding cats when someone is off campus for whatever reason. I admire their selflessness, but I don’t want to be like them when I grow up. Nor do I want to emulate Mr. Hermit across the hall, who never socializes and comes and goes so infrequently I barely recognize him as a neighbor. If I had to write a sympathy card for him based on what I know about him, it would read: “The Amazon and FedEx delivery guys will miss him dearly. Apparently he's in the Shopaholic Club."

 Until next Wednesday.  © 

24 comments:

  1. I nodded my head all the waybthrough reading your blog! I also have a high benchmark for making friends. Always had only a few, but each 24K gold. Much prefer quality to quantity.

    Ditto with volunteering - brought up my kids and now my remaining years are mine. The few instances I've helped people, I've been backstabbed, so no thank you!

    Hope this comment goes through (in the past had to use a different browser but that now has a prerequisite app to instal - nope!). Libby from Oz

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    1. Glad you found a way to comment. I always enjoy hearing from people from other countries as it usually shows how much we all have in common.

      I have really close friend all through grade school and high school and then my husband was my best friend for 42 years. I just never about needing others.

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  2. Your sympathy card so beautiful - what a gift you have for writing.

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    1. Writing one to someone who is still alive was a different challenge than writing one to the family of someone whose passed. Never had to do that before.

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  3. Beautiful good bye card. I would have been so touched and grateful to receive something like this.

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    1. Wasn't it thoughtful for her daughters to give us the opportunity to say goodbye before she passed.

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  4. I'm going to copy and save your goodbye card words. I have a saved sympathy card and I just add a sentence or two.

    My friend circles are small, maybe 2-3 in the close friend category. The next ring has 6-7, and so on. I do count some Facebook friends some of whom I've never met (you, for example) as I think of them to send a message, an article or even a meme.

    I buy boxes of blank "Thinking of You" that come in handy.

    Thanks again for blogging.

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    1. I love the blog community because of people like you.

      That goodbye card message wouldn't work for everyone because few people are as nice as my writer friend. But the general formula I used was to pick out qualities in the person your writing about that you admire and will miss.

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  5. I think you qualify as a “does not suffer fools gladly” person. That’s me, too. Years ago I saw a comment..”any one can get married if they set their standards low enough” as a comfort to singles who wish they weren’t. Same category.
    My diagnosis of you is that you have a subtle, introspective intelligence that most people lack. You find them boring because they’ll never stimulate your mind or sense of humor….something you thrive on. The lovely message you wrote to your fellow writer is evidence of your need of this.

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    1. I think I'm blushing after reading your comment. Thank you.

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  6. That was such a lovely message to your dying friend. I agree that those of us who wait to make friends often miss out for various reasons but I've always felt that making a friend then deciding you didn't want to stay close friends was worse. Just me. We have a similar lady here who runs herself ragged for people. Since there are many without cars and/or disabled, they keep her busy. It irritates one of our friends that she does this and I want to say you don't have to do all this but I guess there is something inside her that needs to do this. I think I'm glad I'm not like that. Feels mean but true.

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    1. I've tried to figure out what makes the do-gooders want to run themselves ragged doing for other. I'm guessing it gives them a high to be needed. Either that, or they don't know how to say 'no'. My dad was the kind of person who helps others as well and often at the expense of things my mom thought he should be doing at home. So that kind of mindset runs across my mind from time to time.

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    2. I think about this a lot as I realize that I am no longer the person who volunteers to take care of whatever somebody needs. I worked long and hard in challenging jobs, and everyone relied on me to make sure things were taken care of. In retirement I find I am perfectly content to concentrate on taking care of myself. I do have a couple of friends who take me to doctor appointments, etc., and I do the same for them, but we don't overly rely on each other.
      Nina

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    3. What said about having a job with lots of responsibility is how I felt about my caregiving years with my dad and husband and why when I moved here made the choice not to get involved in volunteering. What I forgot to figure in is that most of had lives like that which makes me feel guilty from time to time that I don't do more than I do.

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  7. You have a way with words, Jean. That card you wrote was just beautiful, and I'm sure your friend was happy to receive it.
    It's hard to make new friends as we get older, and I also find I have lower tolerance for things I dislike but might have put up with when younger. Our neighborhood isn't quite as close quarters as your CCC, but I do find that a lot of the gatherings don't tempt me -- either because they include activities I'm not interested in, or people I have talked to and decided to avoid. LOL.

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    1. Living in close quarters like I am here makes me more tolerant rather than less for people I'm not interested in getting close to. I do my share of avoiding but it all works out just fine, fining seats away from them etc.

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  8. I'm glad you had a chance to write that card while she could still read it/have it read to her. ❤️

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    1. Me too. It was a gift not only to her but to all her friends.

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  9. When I went through all the cards mum had in her box of cards I was surprised at first how many sympathy cards she had, then when I thought about it, it made sense as the older we get the more people we know will pass away. I have sent more then a few sympathy cards myself in the last couple of years

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    1. Everything has a season. For a while in our lives all we needed were birthday cards, then wedding cards, then baby shower cards...and so on.

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  10. A lot of the Shopaholic Club find Stuff connections easier now than Human ones, which I suspect could be Mr. Hermit's reason for appearing infrequently and probably knowing his Delivery Persons and Online Shopping Employees more than anyone at the CCC? My Mom got to be like that due to Isolation, she knew everyone on the Shopping Network and they knew her. Like you, she had a litmus test for becoming close to people and only a select few passed it, even tho' she was a likeable sociable person actually and people genuinely liked her. She was nice to all of them and close to none of them and I may have picked up that Trait too, I'm very guarded about Real Life Relationships, these Online ones have Served me way better. I can be all Friended Up with just a select few people in my inner Sanctum. I have often mused about how I'd approach living in a CCC or Assisted Living Environment with only my Peer Generation? Mostly becoz with few exceptions like yourself and some other older Blog Friends, I tend to have more Friendships now who are Younger Generation people. I don't know if that's by design or not? Most of my lifelong Friends of my Age group or older have Died now and I just don't want to have that string of Sorrows and Loss I guess. The Younger Friends more likely will outlive me. Fur Babies the same, I want no more for myself and it took a Year for Princess T to talk me into taking on Eli. The Daughter will be bringing Chickens soon as a Mini Farm Friend is going into a Senior Living transition and needs to divest of all her Livestock, we've agreed to take her Chickens if the Kiddos build a Coop and only take the Hens, no Roosters. They will have to keep them Alive and I'll just fuss over them like we do with the Wild Birds that come. *Winks* I enjoyed this relatable Post Jean, the Older we get the more Mortality comes into Play, doesn't it? I don't do Funerals or Weddings anymore unless it's immediate Family... and then, sometimes I don't. Most would involve Travel and we simply can't take this Show on the Road even if we could afford to and we can't afford to. It's a graceful way of declining, people understand our circumstances/situation.

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    1. Deliver guys and gals just leave packages by Mr. Hermit's door. We see them sitting there and then sometime when no one sees him do it, he takes them inside.

      You'd be surprised how many young people are on our campus. Staff, therapists, maintenance, entertainers and grandkids who often eat in our dining room. I can see why you have more younger friends than your peer age. I think that is true with most of us.

      Thoughts of our own Mortality really does come into play in our plans and activities. How could it not.

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  11. Oh, at age 83 I do hear you. I have a good friend a few years older than I am who has just stopped communicating. I think I know why and am afraid to phone her daughter for news.
    And yes, fur babies hurt too.
    I write sympathy letters, still. My mother would rise from her grave and get me if I used a card. For myself, I think cards are fine but ... my mother had a strong arm with the hairbrush.

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    1. The hairbrush! How could I have forgotten about the power of a hairbrush in a mad mother's hand?

      I do use sympathy cards with a very short one sentence message then I fill up the rest of the card with a tailor made notes. Some are so much harder to write than others, aren't they.

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