Stay in Touch
Get sneak previews of special offers & upcoming events delivered to your inbox.
Sign in
12-03-2025 11:47 AM
These statistics highlight the significant emotional, social, and financial challenges faced by widows, emphasizing the need for support and resources.
Please take care everyone. ![]()
12-03-2025 12:18 PM
To add insult to emotional injury was my new tax filing category. After 30 years filing married jointly, I am now in the higher Single category.
Yet in my head...in my mind, I am still married.
I will never date. I will never kiss another. Not interested and I find it revolting thinking about it.
My penalty drum roll.....is paying higher taxes.
12-03-2025 12:26 PM - edited 12-03-2025 12:26 PM
@willowbark , thank you for the information. I became a widow this year at age 66 - hubby was 69. Life is very different and often very difficult. I've been so thankful I have been able to "talk" to so many of you on this forum as it has helped me so greatly when I'm feeling so alone.
When I cry I have no one here to hug, hold me, or comfort me. I'm sure many of you feel the same. Sending a hug to each of you.
12-03-2025 12:36 PM
@BunSnoop I understand you completely. Your emotions are still raw, it's been 3-1/2 years since I became a widow and while it's a little bit easier I still cry everyday. I still second guess every decision we made about the doctors and all the what if's, that continue to swirl in my head. It's very hard and everytime I read some article about new cures for various maladies that perhaps could have benefited my husband, I just want to scream.
12-03-2025 12:50 PM
I totally get it. I became a widow 2 years ago and have found that the 2 things most troublesome for me is the change in my tax status and the change in my marital status.
Not only did I go from Married Filing Jointly to Single but I had a small business that I had to close during the last stages of my husband's illness. I no longer have the deductions that afforded me. And the double whammy was going to Single too.
Also, I am now single, certainly not wanting to date or anything of the sort but all my friends are still couples and I find I am not included anymore. It's like both of us died. I will readily admit I was blissfully unaware of this fact while I was married and probably guilty of not including others but I really had no idea how it would impact me socially after he died. I am now much more aware of those left out.
12-03-2025 12:51 PM
@BunSnoop get this. I have an out of state cousin and because I am not on board with her ideology she sent me no condolence card, no flowers and never came over to hug me. A cousin who I have known all of my life who showered my mother with flowers and condolences when my dad got sick and passed yet my parents had (they're both gone now) the same ideology as me. Makes me so mad it consumes the hurt.
12-03-2025 12:58 PM
I wonder if alot of these statistics don't apply also to a divorced female who is in a similar loss predicament? Socializing is changed as no longer a couple.
I've been alone 23 years. My husband was never really happy and had an affair. I went into a deep depression. I was married 20 years. I raised his two daughters full time. No children. I lost my job in 2008 a year after the divorce and barely paid my bills, working minimum wage jobs and substitute teaching. He is on his fourth marriage.
I have a acquaintance who after 32 years of marriage. divorced her husband. She was a retired .P. Assistant. I knew her husband and he told me she pushed him away and he couldn't make her happy?
Over the ages in history widows have struggled and carried on, sometimes with many children to raise. Women tend to outlive men, so not surprising. So glad there were loving memorable years for those of you widows and widowers to cherish. It breaks the heart ❤️ and never heals.
12-03-2025 01:00 PM
Everyone "thinks" I got a HUGE BUNDLE OF DOUGH from "life insuranace". There wasn't any...
12-03-2025 01:01 PM
@UpNorthGorgy yes, your situation is similar and I've been told that divorce can feel like a death. ![]()
12-03-2025 01:05 PM
If it helps at all, I have gone through the same thing. I have no extended family. My Mom, Dad and brother have long since died. We did have family though for all the years I was married (58) through my husband. A large extended family that I thought was mine too. When my husband died I got...wait for it...crickets. Nothing, nada, nicht. No cards, flowers, visits, phone calls. Total silence. Since then I have been invited to a couple of very large gatherings where I suspect it was necessary to include me. Other than that I could have fallen off the earth and they wouldn't know or care. Who does that?? How can you just dismiss someone you've known for all those years as if they never existed?
Get sneak previews of special offers & upcoming events delivered to your inbox.
*You're signing up to receive QVC promotional email.
Find recent orders, do a return or exchange, create a Wish List & more.
Privacy StatementGeneral Terms of Use
QVC is not responsible for the availability, content, security, policies, or practices of the above referenced third-party linked sites nor liable for statements, claims, opinions, or representations contained therein. QVC's Privacy Statement does not apply to these third-party web sites.
© 1995-2025 QVC, Inc. All rights reserved. | QVC, Q and the Q logo are registered service marks of ER Marks, Inc. 888-345-5788