The Widow Vibe … and some feminist difficulties

1 minute read time.

 

I was far from ready to be a widow – in so many ways.   

 

Let’s think about the word 'widow.' 

 There is the Black Widow. 

There is the Merry Widow.

There is the Rich Widow. 

There are all those witches who are, without doubt, widows too. 

 

Chekov had a widow who wore her ‘widow’s weeds,’ but still powdered her face – a predatory widow, by implication.   

 

The word 'widow' is loaded with stereotypes which suggest that they are not to be messed with.     You must steer clear because they are dangerous creatures:  desperate, demanding, grieving.  Out of control.  

 

These negative stereotypes of widows most of us feminist girls of the seventies had not visualized as something we would have to experience ourselves and, stupidly, we had not created new roles for us to grow into.  After all, we didn’t really think we were ever going to fall for all that romantic happily-ever-after-richer-or-for-poorer-sickness-and-health sort of narrative. 

 

More fool us. 

 

Thus, the stereotypes are still there and, I don’t know about any of you girls out there, but none of these are roles which I feel happy to slip into. 

 

So, as well as this terrible problem of trying to fill the empty space in which my love used to live, a space which I sometimes see as this sharp cut-out of the shape where Jonathan used to be, with a howling black infinite nothingness yawning behind it, I have to deal with the new space I am supposed to fill.

 

 

 

 

 

Anonymous
  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Oh Grace - Sending you Big Hugs!!! Otherwise, words fail me. He will always be your Hero, and we will always be sending good vibes. Love, Mo  xxxxx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    There's not I can say other than your Mac friends are here you.

    Sending you the best possible vibes.

    Daffie xxx

  • Hi Grace

    there is no space you need to fill, you are you and need to be you so continue as you

    interesting view though, sounds like the soup is simmering

    take care

    john

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Yes my darling Grace, that is exactly what it feels like ... a huge space or void.  

    I have a theory about this, what I have found is that as time passes - imagine that the space is that good old stock pot .... yes the very one that you use to make the soup ....... and it eventually gets boiled and boiled and boiled, so it does become smaller - just much more concentrated........ a bit like Marmite.

    And gradually over time the 'void' that was all encompassing is, a lot of the time, managable because it is smaller - just be careful when you dip in it ... it is mighty strong.  

    And just like Marmite, there are times that you really don't want to indulge, but there are other quiet, personal times that you allow yourself to to jump right on in, immerse yourself in all those strong feelings and come out the other side with a bizarre sense of superiority because you and our Hero had something that very few get to experience.  

    I know this will sound very odd, but I know what I mean!

    So much love to you and your hounds.

    Judi xx

  • FormerMember
    FormerMember

    Why is it that those of us who have something so very precious, those of us who are still madly in love with our hero's have to become widows long before those who can't stand the sight of each other but stay together for the sake of the family.

    I know they say God takes the best first but if he left the best here on earth and took the worst then the world would be a better place. I suppose it would be called heaven then.

    Love Julie X