Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not your business. Everyone grieves differently.
So flying off to romantic getaways while you leave your kids at home with family members is ok two months after your wife's funeral? Sorry, I don't think that is ok.
You're an asshole. How dare you judge someone and how they process grief?! I cannot believe how judgemental and unsympathetic people are. By your reasoning when my daughter died, I should not have rushed and gotten pregnant two months later with the next one. Or is it a different grief process for different loved ones?
I rarely get angry at the opinions here but this is just hurtful and selfish thinking . For once, it's.not.about.YOU. And what you think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not your business. Everyone grieves differently.
So flying off to romantic getaways while you leave your kids at home with family members is ok two months after your wife's funeral? Sorry, I don't think that is ok.
You're an asshole. How dare you judge someone and how they process grief?! I cannot believe how judgemental and unsympathetic people are. By your reasoning when my daughter died, I should not have rushed and gotten pregnant two months later with the next one. Or is it a different grief process for different loved ones?
I rarely get angry at the opinions here but this is just hurtful and selfish thinking . For once, it's.not.about.YOU. And what you think.
Anonymous wrote:The issue is not the length of time but the quality of the relationship. If this man is using new romance to meet his own need only, and not because he wants to meet her needs too, that is exploitation. It is worse if he is sleeping with her, because sex outside of marriage is wrong and destructive. I know some widowers who remarried quickly and are still happy years later. I know others who jumped into a new marriage and ended up divorced. The question is does he truly love the new woman for herself, and not just what she can give him? If not, he will hurt her, his children and himself. There isn't much an outsider can do except gently and kindly suggest more time, and pray for him. If he's still grieving, a support group called griefshare could help. Find a group near you at griefshare.com.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not your business. Everyone grieves differently.
So flying off to romantic getaways while you leave your kids at home with family members is ok two months after your wife's funeral? Sorry, I don't think that is ok.
Anonymous wrote:Does it matter to others if there was an illness beforehand? In my family the person moved on months after the unexpected death of the spouse. There was definitely chatter in our small town over that one.