I saw a grown man cry this morning. An 85 year old man. I hugged his neck and his sobs broke the sound of silence. His shoulders hunched over- a look of numb and deep sadness on his face. That sound of an old man crying has echoed in my heart all day. Our neighbor, the one who grew up in the house we renovated and became part of our New England family 9 years ago died in the middle of the night. She who had every essence of feisty and fierce-and she who was an in your face let’s get on with it kind of woman. She who had just one beer a day to make the day better-she who became part of our lives, she who knitted, sewed, babysat, baked and told it like it was. She who had just turned 82 died after a week of complications due to a ruptured spleen that none of us knew about until it was too late to do anything about it.
She who said to the nurse,” Well I am shitt’in blood, how doya think I am doin?” ,when the nurse entered the beige colored room and asked in the third person, “How are we doing today?”
Only two days ago.
They waited to tell the old man until the morning-since he had already left the hospital for the night. Why wake him in the middle of the night?
We were there shortly after for support. For comfort. For a while.
He sat there in the chair-in the kitchen but facing the small living room. I walked over to him, hugged him and he cried. He let lose and cried.
The sound of an old man crying.
Hello Sweet Glo’,
Your story so personal abd new… a tenderly-crafted reminder of the gut pageant surrounding us. You have such a beautiful way of ~telling it like it is~ that the facts are minimaly charged, save for the cool light of a lucid glance inwards– and out again. Thanks. Yours, Erin
Kindness… In his mind he sees his wife as he did with the eyes of a young smitten man… The eyes don’t change. Yes, perhaps not as clear…
How wonderful to love so deeply. How lucky to have them in your life – sorry for your loss sweet one! Hugs…
Yes dear one, grown men do cry . It is usually deep from within one’s soul as I am sure this man’s tears were. Take care and I know you will be there for him. As you know the hardest time is when everyone has been surrounding you with love and support in the first week after a loss and then you find yourself alone to really face what life is going to be like without your loved one. Those times when you call out or reach for the phone to call and then realize there is no one to answer you. Be there for him at these times. Take good care of yourself. I am proud of you and know you always do the right thing.