Ep 18: Dead but not Forgotten - podcast episode cover

Ep 18: Dead but not Forgotten

Oct 16, 202327 minSeason 2Ep. 18
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Episode description

This episode was inspired by a listener with small children who worries about her children forgetting their dad. It can be tough to find ways to keep your loved one a part of your household and family. Holly, Keira, Lacey and Whitney all share what they do to keep their husbands' memory alive. Spoiler alert: Their husband's handwriting plays a big role!


Transcript

You found us. I'm so glad you did, but I'm sorry that you had to. So come on into our Widow circle, where trauma meets humor and we remind you that you can not only survive, but thrive. This is Every Widow thing. Welcome back to another episode of Every Widow Thing. Today's episode was inspired by one of our listeners, Jerry Ann wrote in to us under our Instagram account and sadly she lost her husband back in February of a heart attack.

She has three kids, 1412 and six, and she is concerned about the kids remembering and having memories of their dad. And it brought up the question of how do you keep their memory alive? Do you keep their memory alive? Do you think about it or does it just happen naturally? I have even heard some widows talk about how they don't want to find another partner for fear that new memories will cancel out old memories, which I thought was really interesting. So especially with the young kids.

And I know, Kara, you've talked about it a little bit, how Karas doesn't really have any. And Lacey too, and you have to manage that and figure out, am I gonna stress about it or am I gonna let it go? Yeah, I mean, I think with Karas, who was just under five, we just with the big kids and the older kids and me, we just talked about him whenever it came up. We would try to tell stories. Remember this, Remember that often in relation to.

Trips we were taking or like you'd mentioned Whitney. Music or restaurants that we liked or food that he liked. Just anything funny. I think with little kids, they like the funny stories. So if there was something goofy that he did or there was a funny moment that was even about the child. So my kids like to tell a lot of stories about Keras when she was little. And silly things that she did. And then he would just kind of naturally be a part of the story, I guess.

Sure. And so a lot of it was just talking about her because talking about him for her because she was younger. Now that she's older, actually. Really. Once she got an iPhone, I sometimes just send photos to my kids every now and again with them, them and him. You know, if it pops up on the memory or if something comes up, or if there's. An occasion birthday. I'll kind of pepper my kids with pictures, which, you know, the iPhone is really easy for that.

But yeah, I think just talking about it, storytelling kind of keeps memories alive. Photos, photo albums, little books of I used to make little photo books of like, vacations that we took. Or each child's birth has a little photo book that goes with it. I do know a lot of people, also their friends would reach out to the community of of your friends and family and say if you have a funny story or a memory, can you share it here?

And then they created a book for the kids, which I thought was, yeah, my. Inlaws did that. I don't mean to interrupt, but my inlaws put that together. I did not have the capacity to do that, but over a period of a couple of years. The company is called Weeva.

WEEVA and I know there's probably other companies that do it, but they reached out to childhood friends, high school friends, college friends, work colleagues, and they cousins, aunts, uncles, people that I didn't even know terribly well and put together a weave a book. And I have a copy I've never even heard. Of that I wanna see. Yeah, I have. I had asked. I guess a year after his death, I'd.

Reached out like on Facebook or wherever and asked for people to e-mail me. Memories and I just have them, but they're either in an e-mail or in an envelope somewhere. But I'd like to make a book like that I. Don't even have a baby book. I still have the baby book, but it's empty. Those kind of things. Isn't that weird? But those kind of things overwhelm me. Yeah, I've never done anything. Like that. Well, I did. It definitely overwhelmed me after Frank died.

I mean, I couldn't even go through photos. I even I call it the rabbit hole. If I have to find a photo or a memory and I start going through, I mean I'll just lose hours because you start to look and then you start grieving and then the whole day is kind of, I think I told you guys I was going through that for Thomas, the senior page. I was trying to find photos of him and Frank, and I mean, I just lost a whole afternoon kind

of crying and going over. So I was so grateful that his family did that for me. And it was mostly, you know, quotes and memories from people. That's really amazing that they shared someone. Can do for. Yeah, it was. Actually going our podcast. Pretty amazing and I probably I just wouldn't have had the capacity. I get overwhelmed by those things as well and photos are really hard for me too

sometimes. I've had intentions of and I am going to do this one day, but making like a box for each boy with the photos. Like, I mean, I have all these things, but they're not in a box, but like all the cards that they made him like a nice box and put like all the cards that they made him that he kept, which are in a box and then like photos of them. Great idea. I get. I did that. I each kid has a box and I asked them what what's a phrase or something their dad would say to them.

So like Hayden's box hit, the phrase says play fast cuz that's what Hunter would say to him. I guess it's a soccer reference or something. Is it engraved on? Yeah, I had it engraved. It's a wooden box. Cool. So I have that and like. Okay, you win. You win the prize I win I. Don't have an engraved book I. Knew I wasn't gonna win any of that. That's the But I do have like I gave each kid. This may sound weird, but a little bit of their dad's ashes and that's in the box, some

pictures of them with their dad. And then, you know, I go down the medium psychic route. So anytime I would have a session and he would come through about the kids, I wrote it out. And that's in their boxes. But I don't think, you know, in my mind, I was like, they're going to get in these boxes all the time and they're going to write their own memories. And none of that's really happened. They I gave them notebooks.

Having it, knowing that they can at some point, if they're if they want to, sure I do. I think one of the ways that we're constantly keeping Hunter's memory alive is we get with his parents. I have a good relationship with my inlaws. We'll go to lunch once a month, or, you know, or even if we just get together for a holiday or something and we're just sharing stories. And it's not like let's all share a story of Hunter. It just naturally happens. And because they want to talk

about their son. Sure. And it's just fun to to remember stories. And it'll happen even at home, you know, a song will come on the radio and I'll be like, oh, I remember when your dad and I were doing da da, da da. Or if something happens with one of the kids that jars a memory for me, I want to share it. And some of them they've heard many Times Now they're like, yeah, yeah, yeah, we know, we know. And then the ball. And then he did this and I'm

like, OK, well, good. I'm glad you remember. You're welcome. But in the box, in case you. That's right, isn't it? I've also written it all down in your box, but that's a way. Balls and boxes and the balls in boxes, boxing balls. Anyway. I think that's that works so cool that you're. In laws are nearby. You know my Frank's whole family is back east and but that is something that we would enjoy like at holidays if we're all together.

Talking about him telling stories now you know with COVID and everything it ended up being a little more of over zoom but I think yeah just finding any way to connect and talk about him especially with his family right, which was a big piece. Anytime he comes in in my head and the kids are around, I'll typically say something. Just right here. And I went through Oliver's tech box the other day.

This is so weird. We were like, did you all see that news article that talked about the original iPhone? It sold for $150,000. Because it had never been taken out-of-the-box. Oh, of course. So writer now we're like we didn't read that part we can write you're like. Oh my God. We have all this old tech we're gonna be rich. And then we laughed that no they have to not been used. So we went through Oliver's old stuff and it was like a BlackBerry flip phone. We have it all credit is this

stuff so flipping old. But it was really fun to see how technology had changed. But I could just see the lights coming on for him that yeah he was like this is so cool. And I showed him the fun that we would first started texting on. It was a. Phone, and he said, alive with a question mark. That was the first text I ever got from him, and I didn't know my phone texted. That's 2000. It was August of 2000, but it was kind of fun. That's cool.

Yeah, going through stuff like that and cuz I'm. Not a person who does the photo albums. I keep the tech, but I don't do the photo album. I would be overwhelmed with multiple computers and of course isn't that. I didn't tell you how to use them. I just said I have them. One way that I know Holly does this too, that I try to bring Hunter in, is with candles. I have various candles with H on it. Or early on it was like an Angel with, you know, whatever, some weird stupid quote.

But I light those when I want him around. And I always light one at Thanksgiving or family dinners or whatever. And I never really pointed out to the kids, but I'm hoping that they notice that dad's candle is lit and it's just, it just brings them in, you know? And that's something that I do all the time. Yeah, yeah, I do it when I'm doing the you guys. Are 5 1/2 years in right or six? There's just such a different. Like, I was trying to think back when you were talking about what

we were gonna talk about today. And I was like, wow, where was I? Did you think about that, Kira, that 5 1/2 years in, I was like, where was I? I'm not sure. I don't remember what I felt I have. No idea where I am right now. Same. In the studio. One thing that I have coming up next year, which I've been thinking about a lot and again I think for listeners who have kids of varying ages. We are.

I always thought of Karis being young, and so now that she's older and they're all older, I feel like I can do more of the things that you guys are talking about, more of the memory things, more of the talking about stories and photos. And I just think because she was so young, we just, I didn't really know how to bring her in with that. Next year, next June, will be 10 years for me and I'm thinking about. Something that I want to do to

honor the memorial. Yeah, because I didn't have a memorial because I was in the hospital. You have. So it's been at the front of my mind lately just thinking about, you know what that would look like, what we would do with maybe some of the ashes. Would we have people speak with the kids, want to speak music. Who would be there? Where would it be? How do we incorporate his family, my family? That's something that is would be really nice if I could pull

it off. I feel like I have to start organizing it now. I feel like life is so at such a fast breakneck speed these days, with kids all over in different directions. But. They make them two out of the house and only one at home. This year, maybe you'll have a little.

More I hope so. I hope I'll have a little more time just with one kid at home and then looking already looking at next summer and my rising junior and internships and traveling abroad and then my. Incoming freshman in college. Where is he gonna be next summer? And how do I? I feel like I already have to get it on the family calendar. Like right now, right? So wow in that big ass. Yeah, and talk to his family.

And so, yeah, but that's something that I've been thinking about a lot this summer, cuz it's just a year out, but I can't believe it's nine years. I mean, some days it feels like forever, and other days it feels like it was just yesterday. It's weird. Well, what about? And we kind of talked about this. We've talked about this before when we were talking about moving or or leaving your home

or whatever. And I know for me it was, it was sad because I wasn't going to have any memories at this new house. But what I've realized is the soul is portable. So they're not going to be hanging at the old house going, where'd everybody go, you know, they're going to come with us. And I have like his books. Hunter loved books. He read a ton. He was always ordering like old libraries and stuff. We would have all these books from libraries and things and

it's all on the bookshelf. So the kids know these are dad's books and look, I got myself help books there too. But it's a small corner of it. But most of the books are are their dads, so they know. And I'll see the boys especially. They'll go over and look and think about maybe picking one up, you know, and and reading it. So that's just something that's in the house that kind of triggers a memory or a thought about their dad and for me. Too Hunter's library?

Yes, exactly. What about Christmas ornaments? I thought we'd do German. Those little German candles. Cuz he's from Hamburg and I light him every Christmas. Very quickly and blow them out very quickly. Do you guys do ornaments or anything like that? Yeah, right. The first year that Hunter died, I got on Shutterfly and I made a bunch of ornaments of different photos so that every year when we are, you're so decorating the tree. Think about things like that. I just, yeah. I don't know.

I've always done like an picture ornament and I have them from when they. And I would give Toby like an ornament with a picture of them, so have those. But then I always do picture ornaments every year. Yeah. Yeah. And it's just you could still do it like that. Because I do. I know. It sounds I'll make I will do that for you. You send me the photos you want to use. It's stupid. There's the littlest thing I can deal with, a big, huge problem. But when it's little things like

that, I feel overwhelmed. I start going, Oh my God, I can't do that. Pictures is too much. I always did well, Toby and I always did for Christmas presents for his mom and my parents, the photo book of the year, and it would be like the year into the boys. So then I would have the pictures on there. So then I would just be like I'll make an ornament. Just throw it on an ornament. Yeah, yeah.

We have a few like we have one from the Willard, which is the hotel we stayed in on our wedding night. Oh, that's. And we would. I usually. I like to pick him up from trips. So we have a few from trips that we took as a family and we have pictures of the kids and things that the kids made, but nothing really Frank specific. I don't feel like not a big picture of him that you put on the top of the tree. I have. Oh my gosh, we could totally do that. He would. He just wouldn't like that.

Probably. He probably wouldn't have. He wouldn't be down with that, probably, because that was. It had his style, the letter like my have a very eclectic tree creative and we had like a lot of letters ATHAG&AZ made out of different things and so. I usually put the the sparkly tea at the top, like like under, you know, like not not as a tree Topper, but, you know, prominent to where the boys can see it, yeah. Well, would it better be dead

than be the center of attention? So I was Oh yeah, Hunter does not like that his mug is now all over the Christmas tree. But too bad he's dead, so he doesn't get to say. Our welcome. Matt says hello, HALLO cuz it's hello in German. Oh yeah, so I think he might like that, cuz it's subtle. And then I have a Vilkeman sign and candles cuz that's welcome in German. But anything where his picture would be. You know. Like the funeral. I even think of the funeral He would.

He was going to be dead if he wasn't dead. Just being the sitter of attention about everything being on him is just so not his diet. It's kind of comical to think about that one thing that Holly and I have. I don't. I don't think you guys have tattoos, do you? But. Ink free. They're ink free. You don't have any tats. I that was one thing that I thought of fairly quickly, because I would go and read 100 and I wrote each other letters in college because it was before

the Internet and all that. And we would be away from each other on this and the summertime. And so I had all of his letters and all of my lettering and all the cards and stuff and I just thought, oh, I want to get his handwriting. At the time I was like crazy. I was like thinking I was going to have his handwriting all over my body, luckily. I'm glad we stopped you. I did not do that. I just did it with one word. His nickname for me, sweetie. And I got his handwriting, and I

have that on my wrist. And that is one thing that I constantly see that's always reminding me of him. Holly, what's your tattoo? It's his writing. He again in college would always write me little love notes and like leave him on my car or leave him, you know? Somewhere I would find it and anyway he my tattoo is his, like how he would sign his cards to me and so describe it. It's a heart with a T&X&O's and it says all my love. Yeah, it's so sweet. He had great handwriting.

I. Saw it on our Instagram. I don't know that I'd ever seen it up close. Maybe that's it until I saw it on Instagram anyway. Well, any other thoughts about what about the the, the widows out there who feel like, I hate to say, desperate to hold on to the memories, but they're afraid to make new memories because they're they're afraid that the 11 widow said something like, I feel like his memory. I'm not thinking about him as much and that scares me. I I don't like that.

I'm not thinking of him as much, but that's really healing. It's also the amount of pain and suffering you go through. Is not is not equivalent to your love for them, correct? I think your love for them would be they would want you to live a fulfilling life and so honor our past. But he wouldn't want me to be sitting around crying all the time and wouldn't want my kid to be raised in a depressed home he

would want him to create. Memories, but also bringing, like, I think all of us have done this, brought a little piece of them with us, and I don't think any of us does it not talk about them. I think that most unhealthy thing you can do is not ever speak of them, right? I had a real hard time in the beginning, I'll be honest. Like in the beginning I was worried I was going to upset them bringing it up or I would get upset. But then over time, I've gotten much better.

And even like when we were on vacation a couple weeks ago, we went to some places that Toby and I had gone on our honeymoon. So I told I was with Zach. This part of the trip. I was 100% comfortable, like, oh, Dad and I came here. And so I feel like I feel like I made like a I don't. Know. He turned a corner.

Yeah, turned a corner for sure. And also what I really love is recently we were was Gabe's 21st birthday and we were with one of Toby's best friends and he was telling Gabe all these stories that were hilarious that he was waiting until Gabe turned 21 to tell him. I love that, Yeah, you really get to hear that. That's where the family and friends part comes in, telling those stories. They get to know who their dad was. In a way that they wouldn't have known even if he were still

alive. Probably some of those stories, I'm sure. Yeah, because maybe Tommy would be like, okay, okay, Let's not tell that one. Have y'all ever thought about it in the reverse? I thought, God, there's some things about me I don't want my son to know. Yeah, it was always kind of a strain era, so it wasn't anything. Nobody would ever say anything about him. That was like, my God. With me, maybe not. Oh yeah. I definitely have some skeletons in my closet. We're just.

Gonna keep them. All locked up for you, Whitney? Thank you. I think there's no right or wrong way. Everybody has their their own ways of handling grief or talking about their deceased loved ones, and it's whatever you feel comfortable with. You don't need to feel guilty because you're not doing it like somebody else. Your person knows that they are loved. I was gonna bring up the T-shirts again. Well, I had a couple of things I was gonna, but I don't know if we want.

To Yeah, no, do it. That my kids do wear his T-shirts. I think Holly brought that up in a. Previous episode that Karis really likes to wear this one. Soccer coach, it says coach on it. It's like a waya. Soccer. That's a funny. Shirt at Frank's when he coached soccer. Waya is the West Austin Youth Association. Here in Austin. It's like for kids sports. And then Aceland has one of my favorites, which I don't know if you guys have this, but sometimes there are things that

I want back. And she's gone off to college with this shirt of Frank's that has the dude on it. Oh, because he loved that movie and that's her favorite shirt. And then Thomas has a bunch because he's bigger and he wears more of his stuff. So that's kind of one thing that. Just makes me smile when I I think the kids, you know, they like having the shirts and then. You did remind me I was given a necklace, just said Hunter.

But it was in his signature and my daughter has it now, which makes sense because I think once you start dating and stuff you're wearing, if I have his handwriting all over my body and, you know, wearing his, his handwriting and necklaces and whatever, it's probably a little odd. But she did steal that and that's kind of cool for her, you know, cuz she's I have 2 watches that I'll give each of the boys and she's got that necklace that says Hunter. So that's kind of cool. Yeah, I like.

That when I got his handwriting on my as a tattoo, I think it kind of spurred other people to think of ways to get his handwriting on things. So my sister gave me a tshirt that says Hunter on it. I like the jewelry thing. I'd forgot, yeah. He gave me a necklace, love it together on it. Signature and then necklace. Yeah, or my girls. They did that with Frank's signature in his office. After he died. They blew up his signature and framed it. And then I thought about the other day.

I was like, I wonder if it's still there. I wonder if I could get it. But obviously it's something I could recreate on my own. I've been wanting to take it like some of Toby's designs and his handwriting, and he kept like this log on his desk of what he was working on, what client and how many hours. And it's just like his scribbled handwriting, but it's like pages and pages and pages and I'm like. You could make it into wallpaper

someday. I'm gonna make a collage with all of it. Yeah, I think that's cool. After I make your ornament, you. Know you'll laugh. Crafty side. Of me I know I was thinking of. The worst rather you. Know you're gonna laugh. I don't even know if I know what the the signature. Looks like I know. I'm not kidding. Everything was tight, right? We texted and emailed. He would always give me a card. I think they write you a card. Even do cards. But all right, I don't know that

he was sentimental about stuff. Yes, Toby was very sentimental, and I think my boys, they carried that with them. They still make me cards sometimes. They're not spending that much time on it, but it. It's a tradition that they're still keeping us.

I want to add one other thing that I was thinking of when we were talking about the books and the memories and something that one of my friends did at his memorial as they had like a jar and then little notes where people would write a memory or a note. To me, the coolest thing was I got one in the mail recently. Awesome to me. That's the best, yeah. So that I think like advice to people that have friends that have lost someone, write him a note and. Share a memory, yeah.

And it doesn't matter how many years later. It's not like you stopped thinking about him. Six years in you probably. That was probably. It's almost more meaningful. My favorite. I was like, oh, what's this? And. That's all people. Are afraid they're going to make you cry. You're going to remind us that they're dead? Yeah, exactly. On Frank's birthday this past year, his old soccer team. They get together every year on his birthday.

At Deep Betty Cabaret and they have drinks in his honor. I have a picture of the guys gathering and that's awesome. That's. So nice of them, these members laters, they're still. I know, I know. That reminded me, and again, it's handwriting. But at his memorial, his friend brought glasses. With his signature on him. So everyone that was at the memorial has two hunter glasses. Oh, I like and people will send me pictures of them drinking. Yep, bourbon.

Raising a glass. Like we have a whole podcast on what can you do with the signature Tramp stamp anymore. But if I just had Frank. Oh my gosh, that'd be hilarious. If you have other ways that you want to share, head on over to every widow thing on Instagram and shoot us a DM. Send us a picture. We'd love to share it and thanks for all your support.

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