Postby HikingGirl » Mon Oct 30, 2017 9:08 am
All great suggestions. My life partner died years ago, and the things I remember most are:
- regular postcards from people to say they were still thinking of me
- a friend who phoned me every single month. Initially it was a bit overkill but over time it was really, really nice
- practical support: 'I will come and clean for you for the next year, once a week'
- the people who said 'You can call anytime. Really. Even if it is in the middle of the night and you can't sleep. Just knock on my door or pick up the phone.'
When you do offer support phrase it specific 'I would like to take your daughter out' rather than 'Can I do anything?'.
Or opt for a couple of suggestions. Do leave a space for them to say no as well. The first year it was really nice for me to stay in touch with some of his friends, but actually later that sort of faded, and that was fine.
What really helped was actually when his friends kept his memory alive. After a while it seemed that if I didn't organise something on an annual date, nothing happened. His sister and best friend organised something after 5 years, and that was just so lovely. They did ask me who I would like to be there as well, which was great too!
As you are of course not his friend, be prepared to find that you may not be able to give much emotional support. But perhaps you can, so give it a go. Make sure he does take time to grieve rather than bury himself in work, make sure he has enough support around him, make sure he does keep to some sort of routine (minimum 1 daily social activity, minimum 1 thing daily to get him out of the house, get up at a reasonable time). If not he may need more help.
Then, in case you are close and know more of her friends well, you may consider organising a support network. E.g. help with cooking, cleaning, shopping, babysitting and holidays and girl-stuff like shopping for clothes, day trips, etc. Set it up for 3 months, then a year. Then ask what he likes keeping.
I am afraid I was too far away for the first year to properly thank everyone around me for their help. At the time I just let it happen. Looking back now I think I could have been much more grateful. But I am now! I will always remember those people that send cards, cleaned for me, allowed me to call in the middle of the night, or persistently kept in touch, asked 'how are you today?', wrote down their memories of my partner, or listened to an hour of me talking about how I really felt.