Anonymous wrote:Oh FFS at 81, who cares. I thought you were writing this about your cousin who was 46 or something.
I’m very sorry for your loss, but if you don’t get that 80something companionship is not some disrespectful mid-life-crisis boinkfest, I don’t know what to tell you.
A lonely 81yo who just lost his wife has found someone to hang out with and make life a little easier. That is not a scandal.
And while it is very sad that your cousin died, at the age of 73 after an illness she had been battling for 1.5 years. That is very sad, but it is not a tragedy. An old person died, and an older person is living as best he can. Let it go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the illness was that long, some mourn along the way and when death finally comes, it is a relief and release. It happens as people process loss differently.
Yes, it's anticipatory grieving and the surviving spouse is further along in the process than if the death happened suddenly.
Anonymous wrote:If the illness was that long, some mourn along the way and when death finally comes, it is a relief and release. It happens as people process loss differently.
Anonymous wrote:yes, it's very common for men to move on quickly b/c they do not want to be alone. They also like having someone to share the chores of house and companionship, etc. Less about love and more about practicality.[/quote]
This. A lot of older men who have been partnered are completely uncomfortable being on their own, to the point that they find someone else to take that partner role relatively quickly.
It's not about the man not loving his deceased partner, but IMO it isn't about him loving someone else either. Love has nothing to do with it after a certain age.