I am a 69yearold man still very active lost my wife of 39 years because of cancer. I think back when she was alive it been two years. This is probably the question every widower will hear some variati

Coolrc69: hey lady thats down to earth...
求める: 女性 年齢 45 〜 80
状態: 76 シングル まっすぐ 男性
ロケーション:
への関心: カジュアルデート
人種: ブラック/アフリカ
生活: 自分でライブ
アイキャッチャー:
高さ: 5'11 インチ
体: アスレチックとトーン
髪/目: 無回答, 褐色
煙: とんでもない
ドリンク: 唯一の社会的
運動 週に4回
政治: リベラル
教育: 学士号
宗教: 他の非キリスト教徒
所得: $45,001〜$65,000
職業: Retired
子孫: 子供2名
人: 無回答
国: United States
マイストーリー

I am a 69yearold man still very active lost my wife of 39 years because of cancer. I think back when she was alive it been two years. This is probably the question every widower will hear some variation of at some point or another. Either that or “don’t you think it’s about time you started to date?” The point here is that everyone out there, especially those who don’t know what they are talking about, has an opinion on this. Ultimately, every widower is different and the only person whose opinion matters is their own. Some widower is comfortable dating as early as a month or two out, others wait years, and some never date again at all. This is a personal choice that each widow must make for themselves. I did sweat a little over starting to date after only a two years months. Not because I didn’t feel ready, but because I was sick with worry over what others might think. In the end, it was the right choice for me. A very wise widow once told me, “I fulfilled every marriage vow right until death do us part – can others say the same?” Whenever I got flack from outsiders, I would silently chant this to myself. Mostly to keep from yelling it at them.

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