Last night I returned to what is now the Park East Restaurant for a dinner with six of my new found friends. This is a very select group of women, but we all have one thing in common. We have all lost our husbands and we all collaborated on a book put together by Beth Bricker Davis. We each wrote our story of losing our husbands and moving forward alone. We are an elite group only in that we are part of the book. Each of our stories is unique, but each has the same beginning and ending. There is no living happily in the real world. Every day and every memory is ours, but they are all the same and the endings are the same. We all go home alone to our respective homes with whatever life we live, but we all have our own memories of what was and will never be again.
I sat across from a lady named Marla Carleo. Beside her was Shirley Higgins, who sometimes plays her Bass at our church. Next was Joyce Turbyfill and then Cathy Trujillo was on the end. On my side was me (Lou Mercer) followed by Beth Bricker Davis and then Alicia Bourdon-Goure. Of the group, Alicia is the only one who has remarried. I have tripped the light fantastic down the proverbial aisle 6 times, so I guess that is about it for me!
A toast to the success of our venture and then time to reminisce and catch up on each others lives. Before last night, they were all just pages in the book. Now we are forever held together by a bond forged by Beth Bricker Davis and a book that seems to be doing fairly well. I am proud of Beth for coming up with this idea and then having the tenacity to bring out the best in all of us. You do know that organizing a bunch of old widow women is akin to herding cats!
And we all have our own copy of the book. It is available on Amazon at click here. Or you can buy it locally at Montgomery Steward on the end of Main Street right here in beautiful Pueblo, Colorado.
I do hope to maintain a friendship with these wonderful ladies. We are now forever held together by a silvery cord that slips the bonds of earth. I do hope you can pick up a copy of this because each experience is unique and while it can never make the death of a spouse easier, it can show that you are not alone.
So, off to church I go this morning and I am going to thank that big ole' God up there for leading me out all alone last night, because that is something that I just do not do. And while I hope you are never in my shoes, odds are you will be. Just remember that out there in that big old world there are other people who have been there, done that.
May your path be sprinkled with sunshine and your nights filled with moonbeams!
Buy book here! (back row) Beth, Alicia, Marla, Shirley, (front row)Lou, Cathy, Joyce
1 comment:
THanks Lou. It's a wonderful book that I believe is fitting for any human who has lost another human (not just husband), or will lose another human. That's pretty much all of us. I treasure the uniqueness of each of the stories. They share common threads, but the journey we each travel is unique.
Thanks for participating in this venture!
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