KNOW A WIDOWER - YOU BETTER KEEP AN EYE ON HIM

By: Herb Knoll

Author: The Widower’s Journey

Founder: The WidowersSupportNetwork.com

 

Widowers are vulnerable.  Very vulnerable!  In fact, according to research performed by Dr. Justin Denney of Washington State University, widowed men have a 1.6 to 2.0 times the risk of death by suicide, compared to otherwise similar married men, and they’ll do so within two years of their wife’s death. Still, other research suggests the rate may be even higher. And that’s just the beginning. Widowers have an increased rate of cancer, diabetes, hypertension and more.  Widowers are at risk of being diagnosed with depression, which can negatively impact virtually every aspect of their lives. From raising children to maintaining their career, handling personal finances to on-going relationships with others, and yes, dating, the challenges are many.  Sadly, few men are equipped to handle any of these.

“If we’re all going to die, why is it that we are so ill-prepared to deal with it?” said John Von Der Haar (68) who lost his wife Mary Jane in 2013.  Good question. 

While there is no cut and dry answer, there are clues we can point to which have contributed to the problems widowers face. From the time little boys are learning to walk, they are repeatedly told how “boys don’t cry” or “Be a man!”  Much like our fathers and grandfathers who came back from wars, and rarely spoke of their days in uniform, many widowed men don’t believe they are allowed to cry or grieve outside of the shadows of our society. It is as though they are seeking permission to grieve.  Until they feel they can, they hold their feelings mostly to themselves, offering common phrases such as “I’m OK, just leave me alone with my thoughts.” When family, friends, and collogues leave a widower alone, they are contributing to the creation of an environment that is likely to make the widower’s grief more challenging to navigate.   Frankly, it is the worst thing that can happen. 

Master Sergeant Chris Sweet - USAF (ret) has worked with military personnel who have been diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), the mental health condition that’s triggered by a terrifying event.  When asked if he thought widowers are at risk of a PTSD diagnoses following the loss of their spouse, Sweet said, “Absolutely.”  Sweet should know, he lost his wife Danielle (30) who contracted Leukemia in 2009, after the U.S. Air Force deployed her to Afghanistan.  According to Sweet, “All of the symptoms PTSD sufferers experience are exactly what I went through following the passing of Danielle. It’s no different.”

Men need a purpose.  To provide, protect and love their mate.  When a wife dies, many men seem to lose their reason for living, providing the basis from which other problems can grow.   

With so many problems facing widowers, you would think there would be a host of self-help materials available for them.  I felt so too when in 2008, I visited a large box bookstore retailer following the death of my wife, Michelle to pancreatic cancer.  “Mister, we don’t have a damn thing for you.”  These were the words spoken to me by the clerk after he had searched his store’s database for available titles.  The fact is, the publishing industry has abandoned men by their refusal to publish books which address the needs of men.  Men don’t buy books,” multiple publishers have told me.  My response: “Men certainly can’t buy what isn’t on the shelf.”

SOLUTION:  For all of the reasons cited and more, I elected to leave my 38-year career in banking and dedicated my life to the comfort and support of widowers.  After nine years of research and writing, I published The Widower’s Journey in 2017.  The Widower’s Journey is a self-help book for widowers and those who love them, featuring the candid advice and best practices as expressed by over forty contributing widowers from across America and representing a cross-section of social, economic and geographic backgrounds, as well as a variety of circumstances surrounding the passing of their wives.  Supporting the contributing widowers is a team of experts from the fields of law, phycology, sociology, financial planning, religion and more.

If you are a widower, or should you know a widower that you want to comfort or assist, The Widower’s Journey is the perfect guide to give them.  The Grief Toolbox is proud to make this breakout book available to you on this website in both paperback and in an e-book format.

 

You will also find additional support available at Widowers Support Network, (WSN). There are three ways to access all of the resources WSN makes available, all of which are free.

1.  “Register” on the WSN website at www.WidowersSupportNetwork.com. Loaded with helpful information, and a BLOG on its homepage where you are invited to present your personal questions or share one or more of your best practices with our community of widowers and their supporters.  

2.  “Like” The Widower’s Journey on Facebook.  Registered members on our website (#1 above) are invited to have their deceased spouse “Remembered” during the anniversary month of their passing on this Facebook page complete with your spouse's photograph.

3.  “Follow” us on Twitter @WidowersJourney - An excellent source for more healing resources.  

By completing all three steps, you will receive numerous comfort suggestions and time-sensitive grief recovery tips and best practices from previously widowed men and various experts.

You are encouraged to write me at [email protected] or by contacting my office at 615.579.8136.

About the Author

Herb Knoll lost his wife, Michelle, to pancreatic cancer on March 7, 2008. Knoll is a retired bank executive, marketer, and professional speaker turned widower advocate. He founded the Michelle’s Angels Foundation, Inc., a not-for-profit organization with a mission to “provide love, hope, compassion, and comforting music to those who quietly suffer” (MichellesAngel. com). Knoll also founded the Widowers Support Network in 2014 (WidowersSupportNetwork.com), so he could better serve, comfort, and assist widowers.

Knoll has previously served as a weekly columnist for the Rochester Democrat & Chronicle, a contributing writer for Sales & Marketing Management and Marketing Times magazines, and as an on-air talent for television commercials. As the former director of public and media relations for KeyBank (NY) and later as president of Marketplace Bank (FL), Knoll frequently appeared as his bank’s spokesperson on radio and television. PBS affiliate WNED produced and aired three-part series Today’s Executive, featuring Herb’s business insights, which were featured in his 1985 book, The Total Executive.

An inductee of the Buffalo/Niagara Sales & Marketing Executive’s Hall of Fame, Knoll went on to serve as the Executive Director of the 10,000+ member Sales & Marketing Executives International and was a charter member of the board of directors for Nap Ford Community School in Orlando. A former U.S. Army Reserve Drill Sergeant (E-7), Knoll is a proud member of the Knights of Columbus. Knoll lives in Lake Mary, Florida, with his wife, Maria.

As a bank executive, Herb Knoll was known as a man who could get the job done. But when Knoll lost his wife to cancer he found few resources that could help him recover. And the more he learned about the plight of widowers, from high suicide rates to physical and emotional problems, the more he became motivated to write a book with fellow widowers, for fellow widowers.

Knoll’s The Widower’s Journey tackles tough questions and provides advice on many topics, including:

how men can process grief keeping healthy during stressful times managing a career while coping with loss drawing strength from your faith reentering the dating world dealing with the issues that sex, dating, and marriage create parenting as a widower solving financial and legal problems preserving your late partner’s memory for yourself and for family and friends

Knoll breaks down barriers that block men in their journeys to recovery. He encourages men to seek out the fellowship of other widowers, and he provides resources that men need to move forward.

He also identifies how society fails widowers, and spells out how institutions need to change so widowers can receive the support they deserve.

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I'm Grieving, Now What?