Toughen Up Buttercup!
I offer this mostly in jest but with a bit of personal truth also.
Over the years raising three daughters with my dear wife, she was always the one with superhuman intuition. She knew what our daughters were thinking or plotting before they did and would often be able to intercept their actions. If she did not stop them, she, for sure, knew their tall tales afterwards were just that, tall tales. She would see right through them. Me, on the other hand, would be suckered into their stories, excuses, pleadings like a sucker fish. They quickly learned to call daddy with their excuses, not mom, hoping they could get off the phone with me before their mom's intuition knew that I was on the phone getting their excuse. Having hung up the phone, my dear wife would ask about the call. I would proudly relate how a daughter had called with a problem and how I had successfully handled it. She would then patiently, oh so patiently and with great sadness, look at me and tell me I had just been suckered, yet once AGAIN. Yes, that was her louder voice. So, after over 57 years with her and her passing last August, 2025, I did not give this any thought in my days after trying to survive my grief. Fast forward to pre-Christmas, 2025 when one of my daughters called wanting to know the authors of the various book series that I had read. Her story was that she had a colleague teacher at her school, recently joining their staff, who was looking for new book series to consider for his wife for Christmas. Yes ladies, that is the hook being set in my big mouth. Hook, line and sinker in place I proudly provided my extensive list with comments even to really impress her. And so, come Christmas, I am sure you ladies for sure know the rest of the story. Yes, men, the books were for me. There was no new teacher colleague.
The story just points out that what I lost with the loss of my dear wife was beyond what I ever considered. I lost my protection from my daughters and their well fabricated stories. I lost that magical intuition possessed only by women, and mothers for sure. I am sure as this story unfolded, my dear wife was looking down and once again saying, "Toughen up buttercup, before they eat you alive" :)
Comments
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What a beautiful story. It was a nice manipulation though to give you such a thoughtful gift. It sounds like the relationship my DH had with his 2 daughters. Of course I was the "wicked step mother" who saw right through their manipulation.
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Thank you and I hope it was a bit lighthearted to share the message in stead of so sad.
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Update: after I shared this with my daughters, I was concerned that they would miss the humor intended and I worried over that. I reached out and found that they did, in fact, see it as funny as it recalled some of their own experiences where they pulled the wool over dear old dad, only to be caught by their psychic, all seeing, all knowing mother. It was just another aspect of what we lose when we lose our spouse of many years and it had gone unseen by me until later. It prompted me to write a list of words that emerge in our grief and my list is shred here. Do you have others?
Words Of Grief
Afraid
Alone
Despair
Endless
Fear
Gasps
Highs
Human Voice
Hurt
Isolation
Lonely
Lows
Painful
Sadness
Shocking
Silence
Sobs
Surprising
Tears
Uncomfortable
Unexpected
Unknown
Unpredictable
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I enjoyed reading your story and had a good chuckle. I understand the point you were making. I’m only a month or so into stage 8 and I’m sure there will be many little things popping up that will remind me of what I’ve lost - like trying to figure out what size drill to use for a certain size screw. 🥴 Sometimes when I’m klutzy or do something rather dumb, I chuckle to myself thinking of what he would say to me. After 38 years, I know what he’d say. 😄
But as I begin to navigate through Stage 8, I’m trying not to dwell on the sad parts but rather on reconnecting with people and activities that I’ve had to put on the back burner for so long, and maybe even try something new. This is not always easy but for me, totally necessary if I’m to move on. We have to reinvent our lives now and I want to do it in a way that would make my husband happy and proud. So I would add these words to your list:Grateful (that I had that deep, special love to remember)
Uncertainty (can I learn to be happy being single)Opportunity (what can I try now that i hesitated to try before)
Unknown (what type of person will I be)
Attentive (to the joys of life, even in the midst of grief)
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Thanks for the additional words. I can relate to each also.
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Commonly Used Abbreviations
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ES = Early Stage
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AL = Assisted Living
POA = Power of Attorney
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