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A year and 10 months ago, my husband died while white water kayaking. In an instant, I became a 34-year-old widow.
Grief has been a crazy journey full of so many twists and turns that I have no idea what to expect next.
Here I would like to share part of my journey as I write a letter to my husband about part of the process—opening his box of ashes.
It’s been a year and a half, my love, since you kissed my lips and walked out our front door to go paddle down the beautiful river.
Even though you never walked back through our front door, your heart is still so much a part of mine, I’m not sure where yours ends and mine begins. So, I write to you now to share my thoughts on another piece of our story.
I often speak of strength. The strength I speak of was much needed today as I opened the box that your ashes have rested in quietly over the last year and a half. The box that has sat silently for so long was ringing in my ears as if encouraging me to sit down and face another piece of the process. Over the last year and a half I have longed to open it, yet fiercely hated the idea. I have wanted nothing to do with the box, yet find comfort in its presence. Conflicting emotions intricately dancing together but earnestly attempting to not step on one another’s feet.
I know, my love, that you are not in that box. You are so far up ahead that I can consciously express that I know this box doesn’t matter. But, as I already know this, it doesn’t change the current reality of my pain.
My love, this is our story, and today was another chapter. I want to share it with you now.