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Consequences
and Adjustments
Not only do
men and women have different chances of being widowed, some studies
suggest they also experience bereavement and adjust to widow(er)hood
differently. The stereotypical view is that women have to shoulder
new obligations for managing money and maintaining house, yard
and car, while men have to learn how to boil an egg and maintain
social contact with family and friends.
"She cries,
he sighs" is how one counsellor sums up differences in male and
female grieving patterns.5 British researchers suggest
that disparities arise from social expectations: it is acceptable
for women, but not for men, to cry and express grief openly, which
helps them work through and get beyond grief.6 But
in another study of bereaved people, both men and women said missing
their spouse was their biggest problem; at the same time, both
women and men thought that the biggest problem for the opposite
sex would be learning to cope with practical matters formerly
handled by the spouse who had died.7
As if grief
is not enough to deal with, death precipitates dozens of chores
-- settling the estate, applying for death benefits, filing insurance
claims and tax returns, notifying various authorities. Then there
are decisions about where to live and with whom, how to handle
new responsibilities and, for many women, how to live on a lower
income.8
Planning and
information gathering can ease the adjustment process for the
surviving spouse, at least as far as practical matters are concerned.
Planning
may not allay the emotional impact, but it can help avoid compounding
grief by reducing the number of decisions needed at a time when
decision-making is hard.
Spouses can
also plan financially to enable the surviving spouse to afford
the preferred living arrangement. Keep the house or move to an
apartment? Move closer to family or friends? Or stay close to
familiar shops and transportation routes, a church or synagogue,
a social club or seniors' centre?
5 The TLC
Group, "She cries-he sighs, gender differences and grieving patterns"
(Dallas: The TLC Group, 1995). Available at www.metronet.com/tlc.
6 Bierhals,
A. J. et al., "Gender differences in complicated grief among the
elderly", Omega 32/4 (1995-96).
7 Davidson,
K. "How older men and women reconstitute their lives after widowhood",
Third European Congress of Gerontology, Ageing in a changing Europe:
Choices and limitations (1995).
8 Martin Matthews
states that older women, especially widows, are the poorest of
all groups in the older population, and increasing age increases
the risk of poverty for unattached elderly women.
 

A special thank
you to the people of:
Division
of Aging and Seniors,
Health Canada
Address locator: 1908A1 Ottawa, ON K1A 1B4
Tel.: 613-952-7606 Fax : 613-957-7627
E-mail: seniors@hc-sc.gc.ca
for
permission to reprint this article on www.thefuneraldirectory.com.
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