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Ziggysmom

(4,123 posts)
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 04:45 PM 2 hrs ago

I thought it would get better by now. Husband died 2-6 and I still can't sleep and must force

myself to eat and drink. Already receiving med treatment for depression and anxiety. This feels different than depression. It’s got guilt mixed in and feels 100 times worse.

I sympathize with everyone here and pray things get better. The entire process is made so much worse by the wars and economy. There’s no where to go where you feel safe and not fearful of the future.

46 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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I thought it would get better by now. Husband died 2-6 and I still can't sleep and must force (Original Post) Ziggysmom 2 hrs ago OP
(((((Hugs)))) applegrove 2 hrs ago #1
Hugs back at you! Ziggysmom 37 min ago #22
Wishing you peace for your broken heart 💔 Chat wit us..you may be by yourself but you're not alone 🌺 Deuxcents 2 hrs ago #2
Thank you, wishing for peace for the world. Ziggysmom 36 min ago #24
I hope it gets easier for you soon. There is no time frame for grief. LoisB 2 hrs ago #3
I am learning a lot from this forum. Was feeling really low today, but now I Ziggysmom 34 min ago #25
I am sorry. I am most certainly no expert and my professional training is not in that area but hlthe2b 1 hr ago #4
This sounds like it would be very helpful. Joinfortmill 1 hr ago #9
Thank you for sharing. I'm in Wisconsin waiting for the weather to cooperate so I can get out more. Ziggysmom 30 min ago #30
If you are physically up to it, cross country skiing on public golf courses in winter is another hlthe2b 27 min ago #32
Understandable blm 1 hr ago #5
Contact your local hospice for bereavement counseling SheltieLover 1 hr ago #6
I joined a hospice group when my dad died Tree Lady 30 min ago #28
Yes, groups are incredibly powerful! SheltieLover 19 min ago #39
It's still very, very early. And grief is very different than depression. I know it's really Scrivener7 1 hr ago #7
Prayed for you. Grief is painful. Joinfortmill 1 hr ago #8
Buy a marble cover composition book and journal it out bucolic_frolic 1 hr ago #10
Thank you. My daughter has polycystic kidney disease and Dr. Bergs keto diet really helps Ziggysmom 20 min ago #36
I lost my son a little over 4 years ago crimycarny 1 hr ago #11
Those two words said it all. GRIEF ILLITERATE. We get three whole days of bereavement leave Ziggysmom 14 min ago #41
Be kind to yourself and give yourself some slack. Grief never just goes away, it just Marie Marie 1 hr ago #12
I'm so sorry, Ziggysmom. Diamond_Dog 1 hr ago #13
It's too soon Lulu KC 1 hr ago #14
Ziggysmom... dlilafae 1 hr ago #15
When my fiance died suddenly in his early 30s, I walked the same trail every day for a year. femmedem 1 hr ago #16
Grieve is a journey. traveler50 1 hr ago #17
It is difficult to move on. A lttle over a month is pretty fast. Fla Dem 1 hr ago #18
I am so terribly sorry. Trueblue Texan 50 min ago #19
DU Hug!!! Ponietz 46 min ago #20
I can't even imagine how it feels Tesha 37 min ago #21
I almost completely stopped eating for 3 years cpamomfromtexas 36 min ago #23
Grief is a very personal process BigmanPigman 32 min ago #26
Good thoughts and advice. yellow dahlia 20 min ago #37
❤️ underpants 31 min ago #27
Its only been about 6 weeks BonnieJW 30 min ago #29
Sending a virtual hug Tree Lady 27 min ago #31
(((gentle hug))) 🫂 mwmisses4289 25 min ago #33
Everything's harder in this environment. yellow dahlia 21 min ago #34
Hey Ziggysmom! Once again I realize just how VALUABLE this place is. calimary 20 min ago #35
I'd so sorry for your loss kimbutgar 19 min ago #38
"" AllaN01Bear 16 min ago #40
THANK YOU EVERYONE! Everyone will experience grief in their lifetime. It should not be Ziggysmom 10 min ago #42
hitthe2b is right, go outside Figarosmom 8 min ago #43
I'm so sorry, Ziggysmom. HeartsCanHope 3 min ago #44
Huggggggs, my friend and please be kind and gentle and loving niyad 1 min ago #45
Oh my dear Ziggysmom, My heart hurts for you as you are inching your way through this journey that was suddenly thrust KitFox 38 sec ago #46

Deuxcents

(26,657 posts)
2. Wishing you peace for your broken heart 💔 Chat wit us..you may be by yourself but you're not alone 🌺
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 04:50 PM
2 hrs ago

Ziggysmom

(4,123 posts)
25. I am learning a lot from this forum. Was feeling really low today, but now I
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:19 PM
34 min ago

don’t feel so alone.

hlthe2b

(113,771 posts)
4. I am sorry. I am most certainly no expert and my professional training is not in that area but
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 04:53 PM
1 hr ago

I've certainly had my own share of grief over the years--experiencing the crash after the initial numbness (which is apparently quite common) wears off. The latter gets you through whatever horrible period of illness, death, funeral, notifications, people wanting to talk to you, post-financial issues and dealing with belongings-- all of that, but once it wears off. Wow.

I can only tell you what has helped me in every instance, albeit over many months or more. And that is getting outside--by myself and walking, walking, walking, walking--often with beautifully sad music and letting it all out where no one can hear me cry, scream, wail. Even if one is not physically able to do that, being out in nature really helped me and I know some others as well. But, the movement--whatever movement that might be is part of it. Finding purpose helps too--especially if it might directly or indirectly honor the memory of the one lost.

That sounds simplistic and i am sorry if so. But, it has helped me with three wrenching deaths--including the death of a beloved dog who helped get me through the first two human deaths on those long wrenching walks. So, I feel I should suggest it.

Best wishes.

Ziggysmom

(4,123 posts)
30. Thank you for sharing. I'm in Wisconsin waiting for the weather to cooperate so I can get out more.
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:23 PM
30 min ago

I have two cats that are helping keep me sane.


hlthe2b

(113,771 posts)
32. If you are physically up to it, cross country skiing on public golf courses in winter is another
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:26 PM
27 min ago

ideal way to get outside (and boy will it warm you up quickly)... You might be surprised at others doing it or go through your local parks department to see if they have groups or classes or some way to meet up with others to do it. Teach you how, if you haven't done it before. Colorado has had a miserably warm, minimal snow winter, but I hear Wisconsin has had more than its share. Just a thought.

blm

(114,625 posts)
5. Understandable
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 04:53 PM
1 hr ago

and reasonable given the global trauma that is being inflicted at the same time you are dealing with such a deep loss. 🤔

SheltieLover

(80,004 posts)
6. Contact your local hospice for bereavement counseling
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 04:56 PM
1 hr ago

They are specially trained to help people resolve their grief.

Healing vibes on the way to you.

SheltieLover

(80,004 posts)
39. Yes, groups are incredibly powerful!
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:33 PM
19 min ago

Glad you joined & found peace through the process.

Scrivener7

(59,381 posts)
7. It's still very, very early. And grief is very different than depression. I know it's really
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 04:57 PM
1 hr ago

hard to believe this, but grief is a productive process. It will eventually pull you through this. But it does take time and there is no way to get around it.

I'm so sorry for your hard time.

Joinfortmill

(21,032 posts)
8. Prayed for you. Grief is painful.
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 04:58 PM
1 hr ago

When you're ready a grief group of some sort might help a bit.

bucolic_frolic

(54,943 posts)
10. Buy a marble cover composition book and journal it out
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 05:02 PM
1 hr ago

The act of putting fingers to pen to paper helps the mind work things out. Over time you'll see patterns, you see how some thoughts repeat, and therefore something that needs attention or a different perspective.

Can't sleep? Get to sleep, or stay asleep? I take 1mg melatonin and a folate tablet about 9pm, 50mg magnesium and a mega dose of vitamin D after dinner. This per some ideas from YouTube's Dr. Berg. At least I sleep well, and that was not always the case.

We all don't feel safe. I see erratic things in the stores. Gasoline stations were usually within 10 cents of each other. Now some are 35 cents higher than the others. Don't know if the difference reflects old contracts, storage, or price gouging. Food prices are up and up. The same products can vary by $2 or more store to store. Some stores are sparsely stocked. Some products I can't find. WalMart had no cranberry sauce.

People are jolted. I encountered two drivers on the same back road barreling down the middle. I would have been run into a ditch if I hadn't blown my horn early and loud. And they look at me like I've got no right to be there. Who are you to toot at me before I run you over?

Hope this helps, hang in there, take an hour to put it out of your mind, talk to family or friend weekly.

Ziggysmom

(4,123 posts)
36. Thank you. My daughter has polycystic kidney disease and Dr. Bergs keto diet really helps
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:33 PM
20 min ago

decrease the size and number of cysts in the kidneys. Your driving experience sounds horrific. I find people today just don’t value life and it’s deeply distressing.

Take care ❤️

crimycarny

(2,079 posts)
11. I lost my son a little over 4 years ago
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 05:18 PM
1 hr ago

I lost my son to suicide at age 25, just a little over 4 years ago. One thing I learned very quickly about our society is how grief-illiterate we are. It is a pain that can't be described, as there are no human words for the devastation, the complete implosion of your entire belief system and reason for existence.

I got so much "advice" from people who had no clue. Megan Devine's book, "It's Ok You're Not Ok: Meeting Grief and Loss in a Culture That Doesn't Understand," was a lifesaver. Megan Devine talks about this same sort of "advice" she got, as well as the judgment (she lost her fiancé, who drowned in a river as they were walking together).

My advice would be to find a support group of people with similar loss, and I highly recommend Megan Devine's book.

David Kessler has a website, "grief.com". He was a grief counselor who worked with Elisabeth Kubler-Ross. Then he lost his son, he said that after losing his son (overdose), he wanted to go to every patient he'd counseled and apologize. What he thought he knew about grief, he realized he'd gotten all wrong. I just visited his site, and he has a free live event coming up on 3/24: "When a Spouse Dies: Support for the Loneliness No One Talks About." If you register for the event, you will get a link to a video of it in case you can't attend live.

I'm so sorry for your devastating loss.

Ziggysmom

(4,123 posts)
41. Those two words said it all. GRIEF ILLITERATE. We get three whole days of bereavement leave
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:39 PM
14 min ago

from work. People expect you to just flip a switch and go on with your life. What has happened to caring and empathy?

My condolences for your son. Thank you for the info about Kessler; I have read Kubler-Ross. I will tune in to the event 3/24.

Hugs.

Marie Marie

(11,228 posts)
12. Be kind to yourself and give yourself some slack. Grief never just goes away, it just
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 05:19 PM
1 hr ago

begins to lessen over time. But that happens after the initial shock of grief and depression and you are probably solidly in that phase. Counseling might help and you are always welcome to come share with us. We care,,,

Diamond_Dog

(40,441 posts)
13. I'm so sorry, Ziggysmom.
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 05:20 PM
1 hr ago

What you’re feeling is totally understandable. Please know that so many of us here are wishing you love, strength, and hope.

Lulu KC

(8,853 posts)
14. It's too soon
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 05:37 PM
1 hr ago

One year to step one of feeling better is what I generally observe. Give yourself time and whatever else you need.

femmedem

(8,559 posts)
16. When my fiance died suddenly in his early 30s, I walked the same trail every day for a year.
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 05:41 PM
1 hr ago

In the best of weather, it was calming. In the worst, it reminded me how hard survival is for most living things, that most living things don't die of old age, and that my fiance dying wasn't unfair or uniquely tragic, just a hard fact of the world. I'm not religious, but it helped to think that molecules that he breathed were all around me, that even molecules that had passed through his porous skin were here, too.

I also couldn't sleep, and didn't eat for several weeks. I couldn't focus enough to read anything except writings about death and bereavement; everything else was just letters swirling around a page.

But one day, as I drifted asleep, I realized that for the first time, I'd made it through an entire day without crying. Of course, that made me sob. But then there were other days, and others, until it became the norm.

For a while, time was my enemy, for it seemed that every day pushed me further away from him. But time then became my friend, for it eventually allowed me to remember the love more than the grief.

This was decades ago, and I didn't have friends my own age who had been through it. I hope that you know some people who understand from experience, or that people who know you a little bit will step forward and offer support. People who did that for me got me through it.

My writing will never be the same as talking to people in person, but feel free to message me if you ever want. I probably won't answer right away--I don't spend a lot of time on DU--but I'll probably answer within 24 hours.

traveler50

(21 posts)
17. Grieve is a journey.
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 05:50 PM
1 hr ago

As a widow may I express my deepest sympathy. Every day it may hurt a little less but the missing never ends. Praying you find the strength to overcome the pain.

Fla Dem

(27,598 posts)
18. It is difficult to move on. A lttle over a month is pretty fast.
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 05:51 PM
1 hr ago

But hopefully at some point when you think of your husband it will be with love and happiness in your heart as you remember the happy times you had together. Peace be with you.

Trueblue Texan

(4,416 posts)
19. I am so terribly sorry.
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:03 PM
50 min ago

I cannot imagine what you are going through. I am sending you a warm hug and healing thoughts. Pretty useless I know, but it's all I got. Peace and healing, Ziggysmom.

Tesha

(21,135 posts)
21. I can't even imagine how it feels
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:15 PM
37 min ago

But it’s a fear of mine, to lose my husband, so much of us is… us.

I hope you find a connection, somewhere - someone - some space - soon.

cpamomfromtexas

(1,488 posts)
23. I almost completely stopped eating for 3 years
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:16 PM
36 min ago

I had to literally teach myself to eat again.

My condolences. Sleep as much as you can. You’ve been through a lot.

Decide you want to live again. And do it!

BigmanPigman

(55,073 posts)
26. Grief is a very personal process
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:21 PM
32 min ago

Don't force yourself to "get over it" and anyone who tells you that is clueless. Ignore them!

Everyone grieves in a different way. Sometimes it lasts a lifetime and that is OK. Do not force yourself to "be normal". Do not be hard on yourself either. The process is sort of like "2 steps forward, one step back". Over time it will lessen but it may not seem like it. You will not be functioning normally and you shouldn't be. Don't expect too much from yourself. You'll forget common stuff, you'll be easily distracted, unable to focus, have small accidents, etc. That is normal. Eating, sleeping, everything will be different and this is expected. No matter what you lost (a friendship, a pet, a job, a home, etc) you will be experiencing physical and mental changes. It IS different from depression. Be kind to yourself and do not take on more than you can handle. Perhaps start keeping a journal of what you feel, what you miss, what you enjoy, how you have changed from one hour to the next, .....let it all out, it's good for you!



Grief can last a lifetime and everyone is different. Meryl Streep lost John Cazale in the 1970s and she said she does not want to forget the pain since it is a part of her and her life. She wants to keep the love as well as the pain. It is a part of her.

BonnieJW

(3,119 posts)
29. Its only been about 6 weeks
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:22 PM
30 min ago

Give yourself a big break

My husband and I were married for 48 years when he suddenly died at 70. No sickness or medical problems, he was just gone when I came home from work one day. We had known each other since I was 17 and he was 19. He took me to my prom.

Lean on your friends. Accept the hugs and concern from your family, especially your kids. Grieve together. Let your neighbors help you. You will be surprised and moved to find how many people want to be there for you.

yellow dahlia

(5,734 posts)
34. Everything's harder in this environment.
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:32 PM
21 min ago

Give yourself permission to cut yourself some slack. Take your time processing.

I never like to tell people what to do, or what works for me...but. I find that doing something productive to help others has rewards for my own psyche. But if that doesn't work for you, find whatever does.

I think there is balance to be found. If wallowing for a day or two is cathartic - go with it. Don't chastise yourself.

Do you have friends who listen? Who listen without trying to be the answers?

And most of all - take care of yourself.

calimary

(89,866 posts)
35. Hey Ziggysmom! Once again I realize just how VALUABLE this place is.
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:32 PM
20 min ago

We’re here for each other, to assert AND protect our rights. And best of all, it’s round-the-clock, with very few exceptions.

Here’s a hug:
(((((((((( * ))))))))))

kimbutgar

(27,203 posts)
38. I'd so sorry for your loss
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:33 PM
19 min ago

Big hugs to you.

That said, he is still with you in heart and spirit ! And sometimes when you least expect it he’ll pay you a visit! I believe the body dies but the spirit hangs around and shows up when you least expect it!

Ziggysmom

(4,123 posts)
42. THANK YOU EVERYONE! Everyone will experience grief in their lifetime. It should not be
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:43 PM
10 min ago

something we hide or ignore.

Praying for peace and love to you all!

Figarosmom

(11,674 posts)
43. hitthe2b is right, go outside
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:45 PM
8 min ago

There are negative ions in the air that will calm you, that's science. Even if it's just to sit on the porch.

Other than that pick up a hobby that will make you get absorbed in something else and take those moments of peace.

HeartsCanHope

(1,657 posts)
44. I'm so sorry, Ziggysmom.
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:50 PM
3 min ago

Sending you lots of love, and hoping you can get some rest. Will be thinking of you.

niyad

(132,004 posts)
45. Huggggggs, my friend and please be kind and gentle and loving
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:52 PM
1 min ago

with yourself. Your loss is barely a month old, the shock has barely had time to register, let alone wear off. It is extremely important to remember that each person grieves in their own way, there is no right or wrong, only what is yours. It is also important to remember that grieving is not a linear process, done stage by stage and done. You can circle and cycle through them at different times. For some reason, the funeral scene in "Steel Magnolias" helps some people.

Please also remember that your DU family is here for you. Lean as hard as you need. There is always someone here.

KitFox

(550 posts)
46. Oh my dear Ziggysmom, My heart hurts for you as you are inching your way through this journey that was suddenly thrust
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 06:53 PM
39 sec ago

upon you. How I remember wanting to scream, “ If there is a light at the end of the tunnel, will someone please turn it on!” These first stretches of grief are double whammies taking both physical and mental tolls on your fragile self. Don’t look for something big; just get through the day; get through the night. Don’t hold back on those waves of ugly crying and sobbing. Your body needs that release. Eventually you will be able to expand your boundaries and little by little find your way forward. I lost my dear husband nine years ago and would be more than willing to be your sounding board and support. You can message me anytime. Sending you the gentlest of hugs dear heart. 🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷

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