Oh my gosh-how scary! I am so glad you are ok!!!Circe said:A year or so ago, I was in my elevator and it dropped two stories unexpectedly.
The only thing I remember thinking was my son's name and, "not ready." I'm going to go out on a limb and say that's probably going to be the case for a while.
madelise|1395250160|3637377 said:missy|1395220456|3637140 said:Not having enough time with my loved ones especially my husband. I met my dh in my early 30's and I want to grow old with him and recently it has been on my mind that this might not be possible. Life has a way of happening in ways we don't always expect or want.
This is my biggest desire. The main thing that I hope for-that my dh and I can grow old together in relative health and happiness. I love him with all my heart and never thought I would be so crazy in love with someone but there you have it.
But with great love come greater risks and that is the risk of losing your great love. So what I would regret most would be not getting to spend enough time with my dh. Life happens so fast.
Sorry to be so morbid so early in the morning but you asked DF.
Dancing Fire- answer your own question now. We want to know what would your greatest regret be? Though I think I can guess...and it has something to do with not seeing your darling daughters get married and have children of their own. Am I right?
Jesus, missy. I love every word of your post. It got me teary-eyed. It's thoughts of this type of love, at this type of magnitude, that I need and want in my life. Money can't buy it.
siamese3 said:I would have to echo Missy's post. I would miss not having more time with my DH. We didn't get married until we were both 40 and we celebrated our 10 year last year.He has changed my life is so many amazingly positive ways. I never knew what it was to be truly loved and accepted by another until I met him. To this day, I don't really like being away from him for even a day. He really grounds me and it makes me happy just to be with him. He has chronic pain issues and other chronic health problems and as we age, I constantly think about & fear one of us without the other.
aljdewey said:I'm right there with Missy and Siamese - I didn't meet DH until shortly before I turned 37, and I'd long retired any thoughts of marriage.
He totally took me by surprise, and he is *that* person who actually admires and appreciates the very things about me that others criticize or find intimidating.
I had imagined what it would feel like to be married to the right person and loved, but the reality of being loved like that way eclipses what I'd imagined. It's so much more encompassing and powerful than I'd even imagined.
Having waited so long to find that, though, has made me acutely aware (almost like a nagging dread) that it could be gone in an instant if something happens to one of us, and the thought of that sometimes makes it hard to breathe. I'm pushing 49, and hub just turned 45, and I'm so conscious of how quickly time is FLYING by. In what feels like the blink of an eye, we're already approaching our 10th wedding anniversary. 20 or 30 more years with him just doesn't feel like enough, and those are far from guaranteed either.
It's even more than just an abstract concept to me; my friend's 45-year old husband died when she was just 37. They'd just celebrated their 10th anniversary a month before learning his cancer had metastasized, and he died within months. Witnessing her profound sadness is like having a foreboding, front row preview seat of the thing I most fear.
It creeps up on me in little moments -- things like concentrating on how it feels when he's hugging me so I can recall the feeling if he's not here to hug me at some point. It's taken conscious effort to push these thoughts to the background so I don't let them become more important than the present moment. It's a regular self-calibration to remind myself that right now, everything is fine and the more important thing is to stay in the now.