Transforming Today's World Magazine Volume 2 Issue 6 | Page 46

The Gift By Freya Pruitt Most of us never stop to consider how we would be affected if we suddenly lost our spouse. We go through each day and usually get caught up in the hypnotic routine we call life. We fall in love, get married, and have children and careers. Some of us are fortunate enough to live charmed lives, and some have it tough, really tough. I guess I fall into the latter. But I am lucky; God blessed me with a strong spirit. I value loyalty and honor. Above all else, I value love. I am a person of great faith. I am passionate about life and the welfare of others. I consider myself a strong person. However, I was not prepared, or would have believed, that an emotion so strong could have controlled my entire life. It’s as if it had it’s own power source. It would materialize absolutely out of nowhere. Memories, thoughts and feelings could paralyze me in a split second. The closest experience I could compare it to would be falling in love. Do you remember the butterflies in your stomach? That glorious feeling when you would fall into each other’s arms? Do you remember the sensation of your heart pounding with pure, passionate joy? That feeling kept drawing you into one another. The two of you became the entire world. Everything around you seemed to vanish. There was this overwhelming desire to be together…always, then forever. I remember it well. It never occurred to me that such great love could 46 Woman The County Magazine wind up having such a tragic ending. After all, THOSE love stories only happened in the movies! Unfortunately, I learned the hard way that great love has a flip side: grief. And grief, most definitely, has it’s own agenda. Grief has it’s own method of operation. It materializes right out of our sub-conscious. Every second of every life experience that’s been locked up in our personal “safe,” is suddenly exposed. I learned quickly, that no person is immune to a thief in the night. I was caught completely off guard. I never had a chance. I have experienced three great loves in my life. I consider myself blessed. Many people never experience it at all. But in three loves and three marriages, I can assure you; I only had one true husband. He died on our anniversary, September 19, 2007. We were married 17 years. I don’t believe in coincidences. I have never been loved like that before. I never loved another human being so completely. It truly was like we were one person, one flesh, and one soul. No, we never lost our identities. Our identities just metamorphosed into the reflection of each other. My husband had been very ill and was in the throws of a full-blown mid-life crisis. He “hit the road” last December, in my opinion, to have some good old-fashioned fun. God only knows what he told his family; whatever it was, he had them convinced that he was no longer happy. Close relationships I had shared with his family went up in smoke in a blink of the eye. My husband had the gift of gab and he was VERY convincing. His family never spoke to me again. I have accepted the reality that only my husband, God, and myself, will ever know the real truth. I only wish someone would have listened to me. Maybe if they knew how ill he was, they could have held him accountable for his destructive behavior. Maybe he would be alive today. The facts speak for themselves. We were married for 17 years. Up until the time he left, we only spent three days apart. Eight months after his departure, he was dead. His family never even let me know about his funeral. He had a massive heart attack on September 19, on our anniversary. He was already dead when the paramedics took him to the hospital. He was put on life support, but the plug was pulled the next day, as there was no brain activity. No one even called me to let me know, or asked me what his personal wishes would have been. It was all over in a few days. About a month before Reggie died, he called me and said, ”Freya, I love you. I did you a favor.” Then, he hung up. I didn’t know what to think as he had spoken the most hateful and hurtful things to me, which, by the way, was totally out of character for him. My mother, who knew him really well,