Showing posts with label Valentine's Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Valentine's Day. Show all posts

Saturday, February 14, 2015

Reflections on Valentines' Day

This is my first Valentines Day in 15 years without my husband. About half of our over 14 years of marriage to my Sweetheart, was involved with Mixed Dementia. He knew me to the end, although he didn't recognize those who did not see him often. 

The first Valentines Day before I moved to the Tampa area to marry him, I was the envy of teachers at my school in Miami. He sent me a dozen roses to the school. Then we married and moved to our home in Plant City within the first year of our marriage. That first Valentines Day in our home he had an automatic garage door opener installed so I could park my car in the garage while he parked his outside. That garage is now ready for a garage sale today, Valentines Day 2015. Another widow from Grief & Share is helping me and we will go to dinner after the sale.

I did write an Eulogy for him on this blog HERE. I was thinking this week about other praise for him. Despite his handicap he exhibited great contentment. He loved me, our life, our home, his car, and our dog Ziggy who was always by his side when he was home which was most of the time. 


Now godliness with contentment
is great gain.   1 Timothy 6:6

When I first married him, he had such ambition. He had one and a half jobs and I would miss him. Then when he needed to retire and I had retired, but needed to bring in more income, he accepted my leaving the house to substitute teach or to teach an occasional class for DUI offenders.  Always it was great to get back together, and he never wandered as many Alzheimer's patients do. 

As he went downhill, his daughter thought of a nursing home I could bring him to and his doctor faxed the application to that nursing home. My heart was broken; fortunately our insurance did not take that nursing home and he never was put in a nursing home.  So glad I could have him home all his days. Hospice came in and helped me with his last days as I chronicled HERE

One of the last things I said to him was, "I will be okay." It was the second time I became a widow, and at 70 I feel "okay" but I miss him. The LORD has been so gracious to me and I have wonderful memories. 


Valentines Day in 2013

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Valentine's Day Cards

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Tuesday was Plant City Senior Center day as usual for our husbands. Hubby and I picked up Sally and Jake in our gas guzzler and drove them to the center. Then Sally and I had errands. We ate lunch (a quiche and salad) at Fresco in downtown Lakeland. We headed for our monthly Alzheimer's Association support group in Plant City.

Jake called Sally on her cell phone and we left the meeting to pick up our husband's at the Senior Center. We are always so surprised what they do there that we might not have thought of. Jake enjoyed a jigsaw puzzle and I think Sally may get him some from a dollar store.

The next stop was the Hallmark store and two husbands went inside to buy their cards while Sally and I went in other stores. I bet their conversation in that store was hilarious.

My card to hubby says:
Making good memories in every simple moment,
Laughing at life and at ourselves,
Taking care of each other's heart
I love the years we've shared and I love you.

My photo album is not done, but hubby was very pleased I am making it. There just doesn't seem to be enough hours in the day.

Hubby's card is so sweet!

For my wife with love
Though sometimes we may fuss a bit,
I know darned well it's true--
I got the world's best "BETTER HALF"
The day I married you!

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Saga Twenty-Two

Sally and I have been to two Alzheimer workshops in February--both held at her church. Our husbands hang out at our home while we attend such events. We made mistakes for the first workshop as I reported in the February 13th blog below; my husband didn't have paper on his clipboard reminding him of where we were and so both Sally and I got phone calls during the workshop from our husbands. My husband didn't understand about lunch. I had instructed him to cook pizza for the husbands, but that lunch never happened.

The morning of Valentine's Day the husbands again hung out at our home. Sally and I attended a lady's group that morning where I spoke briefly (one of my raps).  One of Sally's friends was there and reported some adorable gossip about Jake and DH. It seems a husband without Alzheimer's had sat between both of our husbands at the picnic for Sally's January birthday party. Both of our husbands went on and on about what great wives we are but both husbands couldn't remember our names! We chuckled at this story we received quite by accident on Valentine's Day. Then we went to our monthly Alzheimer's support group in Plant City. Jake knows it is at First Baptist, but my husband knows it is an Alzheimer's meeting. In the evening we celebrated Valentine's Day together by going out to the Olive Garden. We wives are in the habit now of ordering for our husbands and the men seem so happy to be friends.

So when the second workshop happened on Tuesday, both husbands had lunches we made for them by us wives. The day's happenings were on my husband's clipboard. It worked out so much better. Jake didn't know what the event was, but DH did know it was an Alzheimer's event.

At the workshop this week we received a fresh approach. The church's parish nurse contacted Annetta Delinger (http://www.karenboerger.com/) and Karen Boerger (http://www.annettadelinger.com/), speakers and Caregivers Advocates from Ohio, and authors of Joyspiration for Caregivers, Blessings and Prayers for Those with Cancer, Blessings and Prayers for Caregivers, several related products. I won Blessings and Prayers for Caregivers as pictured here. Sally bought all the books with several for gifts for relatives with cancer. I went to the first web site above (Karen's) and subscribed to their Nuggets of Hope newsletter. They can be reached at Caring Hearts Ministry, 800 Rosedale Road, Irwin, Ohio 43029.

The first session led by Karen started with emotions of a caregiver such as anger, guilt, and loneliness. Karen has been a caregiver six times over and knew what she was talking about. At our round table we were able to discuss some of these emotions as well as peace and joy.

Annette followed up with clever packages of ways to help the caregiver.
  • Gifts of Encouragement. Leave messages on their answering machine or cell phone. Have matching prayer mugs.
  • Gifts to De-stress. CD, tea, bubble wrap to pop, a journal to give the caregiver, stress ball, clay, lavender, and something for exercise. Respite time.
  • Gifts of Food. I didn't write these down but they included nuts, frozen grapes, and dark chocolate I believe.
  • Gifts of Words. How are you really? How can I support you the best? Do you want company today?
  • Gifts of Organization. Create a coping journal that includes questions for the doctor, medications. Have a "love shower" for a caregiver--maybe change air filters and fire alarm batteries for them, or work in their yard. 
  • Gifts for Long Distance Caregiving.  Have frozen dinners delivered. Cards that say things like I will be handling all your problems. Signed, God.
This workshop involved the participants in very creative ways. The two speakers have other workshops they put on. Ours was only three hours which included lunch by the church.

About Sally and Jake's church. Both times volunteers provided delicious lunches for the participants. We also attend a senior's group there about once a month. We are starting to get acquainted.

I must mention that our own church is very supportive of my husband and myself. This week we went to dinner with an elder and his wife. DH was so funny in our conversation and this couple didn't seem to mind it when he kept repeating himself.

These are good days to enjoy and the clipboard is working well for when I am gone from the house. How fortunate we are!

Thank you, LORD, for Sally and Jake and for others who share our life.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Valentine's Day

Sickness for both of us may mean signs of stress. Finally after my coaxing him all week, February 13th my husband went to the doctor. He has Shingles. This morning, Valentine's Day, I woke up with a runny cold.

This evening we were expecting to go to a church Valentine's party--I had been looking forward to this all week. Yet I knew that my husband might expose children to Chicken Pox if we were with others and we were both miserable--he with Shingles and me with my new cold. No one needs Chicken Pox and no one needs a cold.

Every morning I listen on my iPod to The Daily Audio Bible, going through the whole Bible for my second year. This morning Byron read from Psalm 34:17-19 , 22.

When the righteous cry for help, the LORD hears,
and delivers them out of all their troubles.
The LORD is near to the brokenhearted,
and saves the crushed in spirit.
Many are the afflictions of the righteous;
but the LORD delivers him out of them all . . .
The LORD redeems the life of his servants;
none of those who take refuge in Him with be condemned.

This Scripture has been with me all day.

Since I was too miserable with the cold I didn't run around doing things-- I just watched DVDs with my husband. Togetherness. We all need that. The DVD "Fireproof" came in the mail today. "Fireproof" made us both cry. What a great date movie!

His Valentine Card to me says:

I am truly a lucky man
to have your trust,
your friendship, and your love.
I know it takes some work
and compromise
to make a marriage last,
and yet I still feel incredibly lucky
to have found someone
who I can love more each day,
who I keep falling in love with
over and over
as our partnership deepens
through the years.
The world may change around us,
but that doesn't worry me,
because I married
the love of my life--
and that makes me
the luckiest man alive.
And how lucky I am! In "Fireproof" the wife doesn't trust her husband or even love him at the beginning. The husband wins her back with the LORD's love for her. I am so blessed to have the refuge of the Lord and the love of my husband.
He went to bed early now and I am waiting up to give him his Shingles pill at the appropriate hour. I just thought I would post and talk about this special day that turned out differently but perfectly.
I cherish these moments. Thank you, Lord!