Wherefore Art Thou Romeo?

Sunday was the fourth anniversary of my husband M’s passing.  It was a bright and sunny day. It was very cold outside. I put on my black fleece jacket and drove over to the cemetery. I brought a rock to place on my husband’s gravestone.  It was a special rock. It was the rock that I had brought back from the Miraval Spa in Tucson, where I had gone in 2009 after a year of grief.  It was time for me to release this precious rock and place it by M.

I drove into the cemetery as I normally do, around the bend, around one more bend, in front of the mausoleum. There were lots of cars around, others were visiting their loved ones too. I stopped the car in my usual spot, right in front of the bench which is home to another’s very large gravestone (you can actually sit on the gravestone while you pray.)

I walked through mounds of mud left from the rainy weather.  I navigated through the musty grass, some brown, some green. There were leaves over some of the gravestones and I brushed them aside, being careful not to step on anyone’s stone.

I bent over to put my rock down on my husband’s gravestone.  I closed my eyes to pray.  My hands felt the cold grass, my hands felt more cold grass, and more and more…but, but, but my hands did not feel any cold gravestone!  There was no gravestone at his site.

“How could this be?” I said to myself.  ”How is this possible?”  I know where M’s gravesite is located.  I’ve been visiting for the past four years.

I looked to the left. No M.  I looked to the right.  No M.  I walked further back.  No M.  I walked forward. No M.

“How could this be?” I said to myself, as I got in the car and drove to the cemetery office to check out the situation.

“Closed for the rest of December,” said the sign on the office door.

I drove back to the spot where I had just walked. I parked again and walked all around from end to end.  I looked and looked as the sun started to set, but there was no M gravestone to be found.

“Just go home,” said my daughter A on the phone.  ”Calm down mom, and I’ll help you find it next week when I am home.  I’m sure it is right there.  You are just missing it.”

“Wherefore art thou Romeo?” I wanted to cry, “Wherefore art thou?”  It was a sunny afternoon and the Giants were playing the Redskins.  My husband M was a big Giants fan.  Perhaps he left to watch the game and his stone will be back in place later this week.  Yes, that must be it.  My forgetfulness is abundant during my life after 50, especially after many sleepless nights.

I returned home and put my special Miraval rock back on its perch on my nightstand.  I’ll place it on my beloved’s gravestone another time whenever art thou returns.

Judi

The Beauty of Wisdom

As I get ready to honor the anniversary of my husband’s passing and light the yazheit candle this coming Sunday, as we do in the Jewish religion, I’ve been thinking about all the years gone by, yet also thinking about the exciting years to come.

It’s been four years since M departed and left me to fend for myself after almost 25 years of marriage.

It’s been exactly one year since I sold my house and moved into my new town home.  I have no regrets.  It was a difficult, but smart move – it definitely simplified my life after 50. I still have three or four more boxes that I haven’t unpacked. Since I haven’t looked inside these boxes after a year, I’m starting to wonder if I should just throw them out. Do I really need this stuff?

Next month I will turn 54.  I’m inching closer to my mid-fifties. What happened to the last four years? Didn’t I just turn 50? And what about the past 25?

I was reminded of some of my younger years when I read Frank Bruni’s Op Ed piece today in the New York Times.  It is titled “Time, Distance And Clarity.” Frank writes that “This is the stretch of the calendar from Thanksgiving through New Year’s when many of us revisit the places we’ve left behind.” He says, “The journeys can be difficult and I don’t mean the brawls over the overhead bin. Nor do I mean what Thomas Wolfe did when he contemplated the messiness of going home again, stirring up resentments and confronting how much – and it – have changed.”

Frank goes on to say, “What weighs on me is the opposite: how much everything has no doubt stayed the same, coupled with the recognition that I didn’t appreciate or really even examine it before. There lies the sorrow.”

Frank, you are right on the money with how I’ve been feeling this week. I too want to go back in time and really soak up all the blessings and experiences of my youth, like your friend J says, “we’re not only older and wiser when we circle back to our former homes but we’re also, even more crucially, unencumbered guests able to take their measure and siphon off their pleasures in a way we couldn’t before.”

So where should I start? I think I need to visit The New York Botanical Garden near where I grew up in the Bronx.  Oftentimes, my mom and dad would make me take walks through the gardens on sunny weekends.  I found our walks among the plants to be flat out boring.  In fact, when my mom would make me walk through the Conservatory, I would cry out ”please don’t make me go through that hot house with all those wet plants.”

Now that I am older and wiser I have a great fondness for plants and flowers and all things green. I can’t wait to go back and explore the Conservatory’s acre of plants and take an ecotour around the world of rainforests, deserts and aquatic and carnivorous plants.

I just love all this wisdom, it’s be-you-tee-full.

Judi

P.S. Thank you to all my readers who have filled out my survey. If you haven’t had a chance to do so, please take a few minutes to answer a few questions.  Your feedback is important to me as I evolve my blog to a more robust platform. Click here to take the survey. I’ll share the results in future blog posts.

Hearing Back From My Boomer Girl Readers

It will be almost five years next month since I started blogging.  Back in 2007, when I began my first blog to record my countdown to my 50th birthday, I never dreamed I’d be blogging five years later.  Blogging has helped me find my authentic voice.

One of the major reasons I have continued to blog is because of you, my readers.  You have kept me smiling during my low periods, during those dark days when my husband was ill.  You were my support during the months after my husband passed away and I wondered how I was going to manage as a widow.  You were there for me during the good times and continue to be there as I navigate through my empty nest and my new life after turning 50. Through you I have built a virtual community of boomer girls from around the world who I can converse with, laugh with and interact with on a weekly basis.

Over the years, I’ve shared my ups and downs, my happiness and my fears, my hopes and my dreams for my life after 50.  As I get ready to expand my blog and move to a new more robust blogging platform, I want to hear from you.  I hope you will take a few minutes this week to respond to my blog survey.  Your feedback will help me to create a better blog, with richer content that I hope you will continue to enjoy reading and sharing with your friends. The new “Judi Boomer Girl” blog is a work in progress that I plan to launch in the new year.  It’s exciting and I need your help to make it a success.

So, dear readers, now it is my turn to hear from you.  Click here to take the survey.

Thanks in advance for your feedback.  All responses are anonymous, unless you would like to add your name and location to any answer.  I’ll be sharing the feedback in an upcoming blog post.  I greatly appreciate your thoughts, ideas and suggestions.

Stay tuned for new news as I build the best ever “Judi Boomer Girl” blog.

Judi