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Understanding Your Partner's Past: Navigating Conversations About a Late Spouse

EMBRACING THE LATE WIFE

In the beginning of our relationship, my husband actually felt
comfortable

telling me about his late wife. There was an aura of mystery
about her,

mostly because I had not known her prior to her death. To sate
my curiosity,

I just wanted to know the answers to a few basic questions, and
my husband

was more than willing to oblige me. We were still in that
“getting to know

you” stage of newfound love, so he had nothing to lose by
sharing some basic

background information with me about her – the “non-intimate
details” of his

late wife, such as where she attended school, what job she held
prior to her

death, the cause of her death, etc.

So, for that time being, I was satisfied with just knowing the
basics.

Soon after marrying him, however, knowing more about her became
an

addiction that needed satisfying and a hunger to be sated.

The Obsession to Know Her

I remember exactly when the obsession took shape. During the
first

week of our marriage, I found a folder in his old filing
cabinet, and in it

were signed papers for an adoption process. Apparently,
unbeknownst to

me, he and his late wife had actually attempted to become the
adoptive

parents of a child. I looked at the date, and was saddened to
see that the

papers were filed in between the time she discovered she had
cancer and her

actual death.

Perhaps this meant that she regretted not having any biological
children

of her own with him, and now wanted to share parenthood with him
before

she passed away, leaving a legacy of herself behind.

Whatever her reasons, I was taken aback. Previously, my
husband’s late

wife had been, in my naïve mind, just another woman from his
past. Prior

to this discovery, I had only received a simple biography or
factual resume of

her life – nothing to substantiate anything more meaningful or
intimate. But

now, with this new information, she became much more than that.

It was as if I had been in denial – an “ignorance is bliss”
sort of

reasoning – since the beginning. But now, all at once, I looked
upon her with

my heart instead of only my mind. And the realization hit me
like a ton of

bricks – she was, at one time, a living, breathing, valuable
human being. She

was a woman, with emotions, needs, and desires, just like me.
And this real

person was one flesh with my husband! In one split second, she
went from a

sheet of useless data to a real person, and I wanted to know
her…intimately.

It’s been said that the best way to defeat an enemy is to know
him, or in

this case, her. And at that time, I suddenly felt more
threatened by her than I

had ever felt by anyone else in my life. She became, in my mind,
“the other

woman”. She had not only shared a past with my husband, but a
bed, a

home, a life, her dreams, her body, and eventually, her illness
and death.

That made her special, beloved, and unique…especially to him.

Ugh! I had never really thought about it that way before! She
was so

much easier for me to deal with when I thought of her as a
one-dimensional

non-entity with non-specific details to describe her non-life!
Sure, there were

enough pictures of her to validate that she did at one time walk
this earth and

fill space…but now, I had to swallow the painful truth that she
did more than

that.

So, with my obsession pumping me with energy, I went straight
to the

source – my husband – armed with enough intimate questions as my
arsenal to

slay the beast that threatened the security and priority I had
always thought I

held in my husband’s heart. It must have been the fire in my
eyes as I

pummeled him with my ammo – questions – that made him put up his
shield,

but he closed up tight, built a wall, and refused to play my
game.

He would not share with me her faults! He would not paint a
picture for

me of their day to day life as man and wife! He would not regale
me with

amusing anecdotes of her personality! He refused to succumb to
my ploy to

bleed him dry of information pertaining to what made her
special, what made

her real, what made her…loved by him.

Oh my God, I anguished…it’s worse than I thought! This evasion
was

proof – he loved her more than he loved me! He thinks she was
perfect! And

he’s holding her up on some unattainable pedestal, where she
will forever sit,

canonized and sainted by him, every day of his life! I will
never be Number

One in his heart!

Fighting A Losing Battle With Fear

I thought my marriage was doomed. How could I share his heart
with

another woman? And how could he want to marry me in the first
place if I

meant less than she did to him?

For a year, I managed to depressingly drag my way through my
marriage,

day to day, while still holding onto the anger, and hating his
late wife more

and more. I used up so much energy doing this that I was
exhausted all the

time. My self-esteem plummeted. I dreaded his touch, for fear he
would

think comparisons…”My late wife was much softer”…”My late wife
was a

much better lover”…”My late wife….” etc., ad nauseum.

I just couldn’t take it any more, and seriously considered
divorce as the

only alternative, since there was no way I was going to spend
the rest of my

life with a man who split his love between me and a ghost. But
leaving him

would mean she had WON, and I wasn’t about to let her take him
from me

completely! There had to be a better way! I wanted validation of
my fears

and feelings.

Finally, I arranged for a session with a psychologist who was
also a grief

counselor. After sobbing my story to him, he asked me if I would
do a

simple exercise…write a letter to the late wife as if she could
read it herself.

I came very close to quitting therapy before I finally gave this
idea a chance.

“Dear Late Wife…”

But a week later, with pen and paper in hand, I drove to the
cemetery and

sat by the late wife’s marker while I poured out my heart.
Amazingly,

though, once I started writing to her as if she were sitting
right next to me, a

funny thing happened. My anger faded away, and was replaced by
sorrowful

compassion. This is what I wrote:

“….I wish I could meet you. I would have liked to have known

the kind of woman my husband chose the first time around. I’d
like to think

that because of our mutual love for him, we might have been good
friends.

And oh, I would have had so many questions to ask you! What
strengths

do we have in common? What fears do we share? What was it about
our

husband that first attracted you? What was it about him that you
loved so

much? How did he propose to you? How was your sex life? Too
personal?

OK, sorry….but it DOES cross my mind from time to time!

Do you know how guilty I feel sometimes, just knowing that I

am here only because you are not – that I am living the life
that you could

have, had you not died? Your death also left so many fears for
me…will I

ever be #1 in my husband’s heart? Will I always live in your
shadow? Will

your memory and the ghost of you always be in the back of his
heart,

overshadowing anything good he may feel for me? Will he always
hold you

up so high on that damned pedestal that I can’t get near it? Do
you know

how much I envy you? You were the “first”, and nothing will ever
change

that. I will always be just the “second”.

I know it all sounds selfish. You didn’t ASK to die, and you

didn’t want to, either. I know our husband wishes he could have
spared you

the excruciating pain you endured with cancer. I’m so sorry that
you were

too young to die. You had so much more life ahead of you, so
much more

love to share. He loved you so. But since you did die, he had to
move on. I

hope you don’t hold that against him. I’m sure that if you loved
him as you

did, you would want him to be happy.

And he is happy, really. We have a baby now. Did you get to

hold her in Heaven before she was born? Did you feel a part of
our husband

when you kissed her sweet face? I want that to be a nice memory
for you. I’m

sorry you didn’t have children. Our husband is such a great
daddy, and

for him, the sun rises and sets on his daughter. I know you
would want that

for him.

Thank you for helping to make him who he is today, the man I

love and adore. I know you had something to do with that in the
short time

you had together.”

Cleansing My Soul

When I had finished, I felt relieved. The burden of all the
rage I had felt

was instantaneously lifted from my shoulders. I cried for hours.
It was as if I

had been grieving her loss myself. I felt almost a sisterhood
with her, and

started to feel guilty about having hated her. I didn’t hate
her. I hated me.

But now, I loved us both.

When my next session with the psychologist came, I gave the
letter to

him to read. This wise, wonderful advisor looked at me with
sympathetic

eyes, and asked, “So, how does it feel to have
forgiven…yourself?”

Myself? Hmm…I hadn’t thought of it that way. But he was right.

Instead of forgiving the late wife for all the things I had
accused her of and

all the things I had conjured up in my insecure mind, I came to
accept that

since she was the innocent party, it was me who needed
forgiveness, and

only me who could grant it.

Consciously, I knew that the insecurities I had plagued myself
with were

based on hypothetical and illogical reasoning. But
subconsciously, I couldn’t

help it. I wanted someone to blame for making me feel so
insecure. I blamed

her, when I really should have taken more responsibility for my
negative

feelings in the first place.

I suppose I will always wonder about the life my husband shared
with his

late wife, and I’m sure I will always be curious about the
person she was.

It’s no longer an obsession that lives to spite her, but more of
a quiet

reflection of a woman who shares my husband’s heart. It has
taken time, but

since I have become the master of my own feelings about the past
and made

my peace with it (AND with the late wife), my life with and
marriage to a

widower has become much easier. Embracing the late wife is
relatively easy if you can humbly give credit

where credit is due, since the late wife was a perfectly
valuable person,

worthy of love and compassion. Forgiving yourself is the first
step in healing

the guilt you may bear for having blamed her for feeling rage or
hatred. The

next step is to remember that, even if you never hear a
disparaging word

about her, the late wife was not a saint. The seemingly flawless
windmills

you tilt at are only those in your mind. Embracing her only
means accepting

her for who and what she was, faults and all, including what she
gave to your

husband. But most of all, embracing the late wife means
accepting that you

two will be forever linked not by jealousy or a sense of
competition but by

the love you both share(d) with your husband.