widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 1
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widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 1
widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 1 SUBSCRIBE TO Just as no two people are alike, we recognize that no two marriages are alike. The only thing that binds us together is that we have all lost a spouse. We are otherwise a true cross section of America. We come from all backgrounds, and have unique dreams for our futures. By listening to each other, we find bits of inspiration to become creative as we forge our own new path. Pathfinder Magazine provides opportunities to learn from each other, to enable one another, and to share our experiences. To sign up for Pathfinder Magazine visit widowedpathfinder.com/subscribe or call 860-448-5149. $24 per year for the print edition and full access to the online edition SAVE $72 off the newsstand price! $12 per year for the online edition www.widowedpathfinder.com I Letter from the Editor consider marriage to be Act I of our lives. This marriage, which began with vows to “love until death do us part”, was the core of our life. It gave structure to our home, to our family, and to our relationships in the community. When a spouse dies, the very foundation upon which we built our lives is shaken. The ensuing time is one of intermission. This is a dark time, filled with a wide range of emotions. It may be shock when the death was unexpected. For others, after a prolonged illness, there may be some relief. For some, there might be anger, or guilt, or disappointment that dreams went unfulfilled. There may be anxiety about how to function independently. For most, there’s sadness. There is sadness that hopes and dreams won’t come true, and there is sadness for what has been lost. Each person grieves in a unique way, based on the quality and style of the relationship with their spouse, and based on their personality and culture. For those who are grieving, there are support groups available in local communities. But there comes a time in the grieving process, the “intermission”, when we perceive a light flickering in the darkness. We start to perceive a spring in our step again, and our energy level starts to return to normal. When you see that light flicker, you know it’s time to go back in for Act II. The problem is, we never planned for an Act II. In other aspects of our lives, such as parenting or career choice, we had years of joyful planning and the mentorship of so many. But there has been no joyful anticipation for this stage of life. We’ve done little to prepare ourselves for this major life change. In many ways, the loneliness of this stage compounds the problems. But you are not alone. There are 5 million Americans widowed every year. This magazine will be a way to connect with each other and to learn together how to live well despite disappointment. This magazine is about Act II. Act II honors and remembers the marriage, and many themes will continue. Each issue will spotlight a widow or widower who has in some way honored the memory of his or her late spouse. But Act II will also help readers explore the question of, “What next?” Each issue will highlight a person who has gone on to live a meaningful and joyful life after being widowed. Other regular features will address finances, family matters, nutrition. There will be articles on safety, housing, how to work with an appraiser/ auctioneer, practical concerns, book reviews, travel, return to work, friendship, emotional well being, health, and spirituality. There will be articles on decisions concerning return to dating. I invite your feedback, and your suggestions for topics. Please introduce me to someone you think is living well, so that he or she may be the subject of an article. I look forward to journeying with you, Dr. Joanne Z. Moore, Publisher widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 3 3 Letter from the Editor 16 Ask Jane... Family Matters By Jane Milardo, LMFT 18 Health & Wellness A Long Path To Fitness By Dr. Joanne Z. Moore 8 22 Finance Why You Need An Advisor Who Will Listen To You By Matthew A. Somberg 8 In His Honor By Dr. Joanne Z. Moore 12 Widow/ers From History Illustrator Norman Rockwell Finds Poetry – And A New Reason To Live By Lisa Saunders 24 Featured Widow Liliane Allegretti Embraces Life After Loss By Patricia Ann Chaffee 12 4 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com 24 28 Spiritual Direction Spiritual Direction Can Offer Guidance In The Storm By Patricia Ann Chaffee 30 Home Nelson Clayton On Your Household Treasures – Thoughts On Personal Property Appraisals By Patricia Ann Chaffee 35 Expressive Arts The Healing Power Of Expressive Arts By Patricia Ann Chaffee 39 Poetry For Lindsay By David Smith 40 Books & Movies Author Spotlight: Mary O’Connor Writes About The Sweet Spots By Patricia Ann Chaffee 44 Nutrition Recipe Ideas For Meals You Might Deliver To A Friend Who Is Sick By Rosemary Collins, RDN ADVERTISING Elaine Burns [email protected] We welcome readers to submit questions to Matt Somberg, msomberg@ widowedpathfinder.com (finance) and to Jane Milardo, [email protected] (family issues and mental health). We also welcome your poetry and photography (Patricia Ann Chaffee, pchaffee@widowedpathfinder. com) for possible publication. If you know someone who would be an inspiration for our Featured Widow/er article, or for our In His/ Her Honor sections, please give us (Joanne Moore, [email protected]) a brief story, and contact information. All content including but not limited to text, photos, graphics are the sole property and copyright of Act II Publications. Reproduction without permission from publisher is prohibited. We take no responsibility for images or content provided by our advertisers. Pathfinder: A Companion Guide for the Widow/er’s Journey is the property of Act II Publications, P.O Box 752, East Lyme, CT 06333. Pathfinder: A Companion Guide for the Widow/er’s Journey contains articles on many topics. Any information provided by Pathfinder, or any of its contributing authors, is general information only and should not be substituted for the advice of legal, financial, medical or other relevant professionals. You should never delay seeking professional advice or disregard professional advice because of information on this website. The information on this website is provided “as is” without any representations or warranties, express or implied. ACT II PUBLICATIONS, L.L.C. and its officers, employees, contractors or content providers shall not be liable for any loss or damage arising from or otherwise in connection with your use or misuse of any content, information, opinions, advice and materials provided on the website. By submitting user-generated content (including but not limited to any text, photographs, graphics, video, audio or any other type of media or content) (“Content”) to Pathfinder, you agree to grant to Pathfinder, its agents, affiliates and assigns, free of charge, the perpetual, worldwide, nonexclusive license to use, publish, distribute, reproduce, display, adapt, store delete, or create derivative works from the Content in any way, form or format that Pathfinder deems fit. By submitting the Content, you warrant and represent that (i) the Content does not infringe on the copyright, trademark or any other rights of any other third party (ii) you are the owner of the entire, right, title and interest in and to the Content, (iii) you have the sole right to grant the licenses thereunder, and (iv) you have not knowingly granted licenses to any other entity that would restrict rights granted to Pathfinder. widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 5 Pathfinder Staff PUBLISHER & FOUNDER Dr. Joanne Z. Moore, PT, DHSc, OCS [email protected] Dr. Joanne Z. Moore is a physical therapist who was widowed in 2009 at the age of 57. Her professional experience has taught her to value life at every stage, despite tragedy. She has observed people learning to adapt to a new paradigm of life after serious injury and degenerative diseases. She has learned that the people who are happiest are the people who can find the good in new situations. She drew upon this experience to develop a philosophy of life to guide this stage. She tries to live intentionally. She honors his memory by managing 260 acres of forestland that he intended to help with his grandchildren’s mortgages. She also is developing her own interests. During the “family stage”, she sewed many costumes for her children’s drama productions, but never was on stage herself. Now, she is a member of Laughworks, an improvisational group, where she finds laughter to be healing. She is also a member of Toastmasters International and has achieved the Distinguished Toastmaster level. She enjoys public speaking on end of life and survivor issues, and she has facilitated workshops on these topics. She is the author of soon-to-published, Common Sense for the Widow/er: Strategies for Living a Joyful and Meaningful Life after Loss. She is the publisher of this magazine, Pathfinder: A Companion Guide for the Widow/er’s Journey and is enjoying this opportunity to interview many widow/ers who have learned to live well after loss. Each person brings a unique philosophy to this chapter of life. She has been inspired by the creativity of artists, politicians, teachers, and by historical figures. She is excited about sharing their stories so that others might 6 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com find the courage to explore their possibilities. MANAGING EDITOR Daniel Webster [email protected] WRITERS Patricia Ann Chaffee [email protected] Patricia Ann Chaffee is a poet, photographer, freelance writer and former journalist. She facilitates Creating a Writing Life programs for emerging writers and designs workshops and retreats to nourish the soul, awaken the muse and celebrate the creative life. To learn more, visit www.PatriciaAnnChaffee.com. Rosemary Collins, RDN [email protected] Rosemary Collins is a Registered Dietitian Nutritionist with the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics since 2009. She works freelance and offers nutritional counseling to clients looking to improve both their health and fitness with easy and practical dietary changes. Before moving to the USA she worked in the UK, so you may notice that some of her recipes have a British influence! Jane Milardo, LMFT [email protected] Jane Milardo, LMFT is a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist who has been practicing for 24 years in a variety of treatment settings including inpatient and outpatient psychiatric, day treatment, residential treatment, and substance abuse rehabilitation. Most of her work is dual diagnosis, that is, she treats both psy- chiatric and substance problems in the same individual. She is currently the owner of Synergy Counseling Center, LLC, in Niantic, CT, where she sees adult individuals and couples. Her specialties include addictions, attention deficit disorder, womens empowerment, depression and anxiety, posttraumatic stress disorder, trauma issues, phase of life problems (such as midlife issues, widowhood and divorce). She has identified and treated many adults with previously undiagnosed attention deficit disorder. Many of her clients don’t have mental health problems, but struggle with life issues including marital problems, adjustment to divorce, remarriage and step-families, single parenting, grief and loss, and poor communication skills in a relationship. She especially enjoys working with those who are ready to recover from abuse of substances, and is highly motivated to help them if they are willing. She also loves to help couples learn to communicate in a healthy way, and family members learn to understand one another. She loves helping women who are insecure in who they are learn to stand up for themselves and get what they want out of life, and to assist anyone in personal growth. Jane is also an artist and an author, having published her first book, The Path to Real and Lasting Inner Peace in 2012. Her book is intended for those who are tired of carrying emotional burdens and want to let go and find real inner peace, and it received a five-star review from ForeWord Clarion Reviews. It is available in paperback from the publisher at https://www. createspace.com/title/3801758, and also on Amazon. com and on Kindle. Jane grew up in Durham, CT, and was received her B.A. at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva, NY, and her Masters in Marriage and Family Therapy at Southern CT State University in New Haven, CT. She was a single parent for over 20 years. She resides in Niantic, CT, and she and her husband (as a step-family) have four children, two wonderful sons-in-law, and five grandsons altogether. Jane is a person of faith, and is open to all belief systems. She likes to garden, draw, paint, meditate, walk on the Ni- antic boardwalk, and work out. Questions in regard to life and family issues may be submitted to Jane at Pathfinder Magazine, and she will make every attempt to respond to as many as possible in her column, Ask Jane. Matthew Somberg, AIF®, CLTC® [email protected] Matthew A. Somberg, AIF®, CLTC® is Principal and Founder of Gottfried & Somberg Wealth Management, LLC. He oversees over $225million dollars of total client assets and maintains offices at 340 Hebron Avenue, Glastonbury, CT and 15 Chesterfield Road, East Lyme, CT. Email Matthew at [email protected] or visit him at www.gottfriedsomberg.com. Securities and advisory services offered through Commonwealth Financial Network, member FINRA/SIPC, a registered investment adviser. This communication is strictly intended for individuals residing in the states of CA, CO, CT, FL, MA, MD, ME, MI, NC, NH, NJ, NM, NY, OH, RI, SC, TX, VA, VI, and WA. No offers may be made or accepted from any resident outside these states due to various state regulations and registration requirements regarding investment products and services. Lisa Saunders [email protected] Lisa Saunders is an award-winning writer and TV host living in Mystic, Connecticut, with her husband and hound. A graduate of Cornell University, she is author of several books and winner of the National Council for Marketing & Public Relations Gold Medallion. She works as a part-time history interpreter at Mystic Seaport, is an instructor at New London Adult and Continuing Education, and writes for several clients. As the parent representative of the Congenital CMV Foundation and member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, she has spoken on a variety of topics at venues including Cornell University, West Point Museum, The Washington Independent Writers Association, and USA 9 News. Visit Lisa at www.authorlisasaunders.com. widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 7 A wonderful way to prolong the influence of our late spouse’ life is to carry on with his or her unfinished work. Some people do this in grand scale. It’s common for a senator’s wife to be elected to fill his position, and even heads of state transfer power that way. Most of us don’t have such public positions, but can still act along that line. We simply need to understand his or her passion, and get involved on some level. My late husband, Joe, came from a farm family in North Carolina. Over the years, the family farm changed In His Honor... By Dr. Joanne Z. Moore hands, and he did not own any part of it. But his childhood memories of summers on the farm shaped his ideas of how life should be. There, he had time with his aunts and uncles, and many cousins. He worked hard, stringing tobacco. He’d also play baseball, and enjoy garden grown food. Whenever we would go out for a hike, he’d rue that his only regret in life was that he didn’t own any land. Before he became ill, we started taking trips to look for land. After looking for3 years, it was about two months before he died that we signed 8 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com the mortgage on 257 acres of young forest in of life. They are lifelong learners and are very New England. The down payment came from good company. Then, of course, there are lots an inheritance from his mother, who had died of books to read about trees. I rely heavily on about ten years before. She had worked as a a forester, Willum von Loon, for advice. All I nurse all her life, and lived very frugally. We felt really do is walk the land, looking for invasive awkward spendplants and insects. ing her money on Our bit of foranything frivolous. est is a good topic She was a firm beof conversation for liever in paying off my sons. It’s a projyour mortgage as ect we all enjoy. quickly as possiI watch the trees ble. So that mongrow, which they ey had sat, waiting do pretty much by for a worthy cause. themselves. But Joe’s intention it is a joy to feel for the land was Joe’s spirit in those that we’d cut for woods, and I feel lumber in a susgood that his detainable fashion sires are being carevery 30 years, so ried out. I also rethat each generaally like that my tion of his descenmother’s-in-law dants would have influence is also some help with being honored. As their mortgage. He with any family also liked the idea project, I anticipate of having land beproblems over the cause it offered opfuture generations, tions for lifestyle. and I have work to It might be that do in developing a someone will want management structo live on the land Forester Willum von Loon with son, ture that will keep someday. Perhaps Ned and granddaughter, Lucy. the land as intend(Joanne Moore) someone will want ed, or that it will be to farm part of it. sold without causI love the outdoors, and was quite happy ing conflict among our descendants. with the purchase. Since his death, I’ve joined There are lots of small, affordable things groups that provide education about forestry that we all can do. You can make a photo aland have attended seminars. The fellow forest bum, or transfer those old films to DVD. owners at these seminars come from all walks Sometimes, you can buy a brick at their high widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 9 school or a town memorial park with their name engraved on it. You could adopt a child through the Christian Children’s Fund, and send monthly payments. Maybe you could donate books on a topic (s)he loved to the public library. Plant a tree. Give a scholarship at her high school or college. Give his tools to a young worker just starting out. Think of one specific thing that you can do that would carry on the work or the passion of your late spouse. It’s really nice to have a concrete task that represents our respect for the memory. The fi- niteness of the task allows us, when it’s done, to feel a sense of completion. But even beyond a tangible act, it might be our best tribute to live in a way that would make him or her proud of us. I know that in life, he was happiest when I was happy. So I try to find joy in every day. Do you know someone who has honored their late spouse in a certain way? We would love to share their story. Contact us at [email protected]. Digital Pathfinder widowedpathfinder.com Read Pathfinder on the go... Our website widowedpathfinder.com u makes it possible to read Pathfinder Magazine on the go. Subscribers can choose between the affordable print & online subscription or simply the online option, with full access to all of the articles v through the website. Along with all the empowering articles, on widowedpathfinder.com you’ll find: u • The Pathfinder Forum for discussing issues that widow/ers face. • Calendar of upcoming Pathfinder events. • Submit your questions to experts in marriage & family therapy and finance. • Share your stories with Pathfinder. v 10 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com Advertising Rates Advertise In Pathfinder ADVERTISEMENT u 2-Page Spread v Full Page w 2/3 Page x 1/2 Page y 1/3 Page z 1/4 Page PREMIUM PLACEMENTS Back Cover Inside Back Cover Inside Front Cover 1/2 Page 1/3 Page ONLINE ADVERTISEMENTS u Homepage Banner Ad v Secondary Page Banner Ad Contact us at 860-448-5149 or widowedpathfinder.com/contacts/advertise-with-pathfinder widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 11 Widow/er of History Illustrator Norman Rockwell Finds Poetry — and a new reason to live By Lisa Saunders W hen Normal Rockwell entered his any proof of an overdose—no missing medibedroom to alert his wife, Mary, to cation or suicide note. The mother of Rocka phone call, he knew immediate- well’s three sons had appeared to be feeling ly something was wrong. She was lying ab- well and was looking forward to the arrival of normally still on their bed. The 65-year–old their first grandchild. The amount of drugs in painter lost his 51-year-old wife unexpectedly her system was never known as Rockwell did that day. Earlier in that afternoon of August not want an autopsy done. Mary was Rock25, 1959, Mary had told her daughter-in-law well’s second wife. His first wife had left him that she was going upstairs to take a nap. for another man in 1930 after 14 years of marIt was said that the famous Saturday Eve- riage (there were no children). ning Post illustraRegardless tor was unable to of the cause of discuss his loss— Mary’s death, or his spouse. Alafter nearly 30 though her death years of marriage, certificate said she Rockwell the widdied as a result of ower appeared heart failure, some ill and unfocused speculated she had when seen about taken an overdose Stockbridge, Masof her medication. sachusetts, where She had done so he had moved six at least twice beyears earlier from fore and had been Vermont. Rocksent to psychiatwell had moved ric hospitals. But to Stockbridge, there was never a small town set Rockwell headstone (Lisa Saunders) 12 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com among to the Berkshire Mountains, to be closer to a leading psychiatric hospital, the Austen Riggs Center, where Mary could receive treatment. Rockwell himself sought help there as he, too, suffered from depression and a feeling of inadequacy. Rockwell’s psychoanalyst, the famous Erik Erikson, became worried enough about the possibility of Rockwell committing suicide that he took away the gun the artist kept in his studio. In response to a condolence letter Rockwell received from a friend about Mary’s death, Rockwell wrote, “We all loved Mary so much…” Within a year of her passing, he donated $1,000 to buy children’s books for the Stockbridge Public Library. Mary had been a school teacher. Rockwell himself never graduated from a traditional high school, having left it early to study art. A year after Mary’s death, Rockwell began working on The Golden Rule, a composite of 28 faces of people from all walks of life and religions. In the top right corner, he painted the face of his Mary holding their grandson, born a few months after her death. Erikson, Rockwell’s psychoanalyst, in- sisted the artist get out of the house and get among people by joining a group. In October of 1960, he took a Monday night poetry class at a nearby library. While disrupting the class by voicing his amusement at the seriousness of the students when discussing the intention of famous poets, and his nonstop pipe smoking, he was falling in love. The object of his desire was his instructor, the never-before-married 64-year-old English teacher, Mary (Molly) Punderson. Upon her recent retirement form the Milton Academy, a prestigious prep school in Massachusetts, Molly returned to Stockbridge, where her father had managed the Red Lion Inn for six decades. Like his late wife Mary, Molly loved literature. Apparently, Rockwell admired women who could quote passages of it. For their first date, Rockwell asked her to join him at a play that just opened in nearby Pittsfield. As far as anyone knew, Rockwell was Molly’s first male suitor. Two years after Mary’s death, at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, where Mary’s funeral was held, Rockwell married Molly on October 25, 1961. When people commented to Molly that widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 13 she married late in life, she replied, “Norman was worth waiting 62 years for” (for some reason, she took three years off her age). The couple went to the Plaza Hotel in Manhattan, New York, to begin their honeymoon – and the next chapter of their lives, one that would last 17 years. Without children and grandchildren of her own to distract her, Molly set about taking over Rockwell’s care—especially his sched- enjoyed watching the musicians perform. Molly was willing to play the role of “bad guy” in the couple’s personal life by insisting his friends and family limit unscheduled interruptions so Rockwell could paint—which he did seven days a week in his studio. Molly insisted his daily schedule include a nap and their 4.7-mile bike ride together throughout Stockbridge. In the evenings, they relaxed in the gazebo they built in a private area of their ule and finances, which freed him to concentrate, paint, and meet his commissions on a timelier basis. Molly’s wise handling of their money helped them afford several major trips a year, which helped him find the rest and refreshment he needed to face his next assignments. Although Rockwell wasn’t one to sit around discussing literature with Molly, he did accompany her to classical concerts as he yard—away from the prying eyes of fans and friends who strolled by. In their gazebo, Norman enjoyed a hot toddy and Molly, a gin and tonic. She dressed every day for Norman as if they were going out to dinner. With Molly as Rockwell’s body model, Rockwell wrote and illustrated his only book specifically for children – Willie Was Different: A Children’s Story. Originally written in 14 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com 1967, it was about a wood thrush name Willie who was painfully different from the other wood thrushes because he wanted to create his own tunes. Willie could only find peace away from his father’s disappointment by going off to live in the woods by himself. One day, his life changed forever when he heard a flute being played at an open window by the elderly, spinster-looking town librarian. Filled with joy at her playing, he sang along with her, making up his own variations. The librarian, having never been accompanied by a bird before, was enchanted by Willie so they played duets together. News of Willie’s genius reached bird experts who insisted he be brought to the city where he could be celebrated by all. Though worried he would be unhappy, the librarian agreed and took him there by train. But Willie didn’t like his bustling new home – he was unable to eat, sleep or sing anymore. Many believe Rockwell’s children’s story is autobiographical—everything from the sketch of the skinny wood thrush to the elderly librarian whose name is Miss Polly (one letter different from Molly). At the end of the story about the gifted yet unhappy Willie in the big city, Miss Polly puts her foot down and brings Willie back to the quiet of their woods so he can find rest. The story concludes with, “Very softly, just for themselves, Willie and Miss Polly, his true old friend, brought to life the songs they had created together.” When Norman became too frail for the couple’s daily bike ride in his 80s, Molly took him for daily car rides. Near the end of his life, dementia gradually came to call and the past resurfaced. At times, he would be heard calling out for the long-gone mother of his children: “Mary, Mary…” he would repeatedly say. Except to attend her church activities on Sunday, Molly kept her husband company in his bedroom when he became too ill to leave it. He died of emphysema at the age of 84 on the evening of November 8, 1978. He was buried in Stockbridge Cemetery beside Mary. Molly, who died six years later in 1985, was buried on his other side. For a man celebrated for his ability to tell us stories with his paintings—some nostalgic, others with social impact—his simple headstone tells us very little. The front says merely “Rockwell.” The back states: NORMAN ROCKWELL FEBRUARY 3, 1894 – NOVEMBER 8, 1978 HIS WIFE MARY RHODES BARSTOW NOVEMBER 26, 1907 – AUGUST 25, 1959 HIS WIFE MARY PUNDERSON (MOLLY) SEPTEMBER 15, 1896 – JULY 20 1985 ________________________ BIBLIOGRAPHY About Norman Rockwell. (n.d.). Retrieved January 22, 2014, from Norman Rockwell Musuem: www.nrm.org/about-2/about-norman-rockwell/ Claridge, L. (2001). Norman Rockwell. New York: Random House. Norman Rockwell. Biography. (n.d.). Retrieved January 22, 2014, from Bio. True Story: www.biography.com/people/normanrockwell-37249 Rockwell, N. (1994). Willie Was Different: A Children’s Story Hardcover. Stockbridge, Massachusetts: Berkshire House Publishers. Solomon, D. (2013). American Mirror: The Life and Art of Normal Rockwell. New York: Farrar, Strauss and Giroux. widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 15 Ask Jane... Family Matters W hat is a family? If you ask yourself that question, what do you picture? Once upon a time, a family was a mother and father, son and daughter. There may have been a dog and a cat, and they all lived in a house with a white picket fence. That may be the fairy tale stereotype, but it is far from the whole picture of American families. Today’s family smashes every stereotype. Today, ethnicities blend. There may or may not be two parents, and they may be gay or straight; it could be headed by a single parent, male or female, by an aunt, uncle or grandparent, foster parents, or adoptive parents. The family may have lost a child, or it could be headed by someone who has been divorced or widowed, especially since over half of American marriages end in divorce. Only 49% of households today are headed by married couples. Not all families are biological. Sometimes a church group or other type of group can function as a family, giving its members support. The truth of the matter is that there is no real norm of what constitutes a family, if there ever was. The one common factor is that they are persons who have made a commitment to By Jane Milardo, LMFT care for each other emotionally and financially throughout life, as a unit. It is true that love makes a family. If you have been widowed or divorced, have you found yourself thinking sadly, “If only we were still a family”? Well, if you have children, siblings, parents, or other committed and loving persons in your life, you ARE a family. Families are not static units, always remaining the same over the years. Families are fluid, always changing and evolving over time. Children grow up, grandchildren are born, and members pass away. People marry and sometimes divorce; others move away or go off to college. In other words, the unit that constitutes the family is an ever-changing one, and it is meant to be that way over the years. If we are open to what our families now look like, and don’t forever hold onto how they used to be, we open ourselves up to the many wondrous possibilities that await us as we travel down new pathways. Questions in regard to life and family issues may be submitted to Jane at Pathfinder Magazine at widowedpathfinder.com/contacts/questions-to-jane-milardo, and she will make every attempt to respond to as many as possible in her column, Ask Jane. 16 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com SUBSCRIBE TO Just as no two people are alike, we recognize that no two marriages are alike. The only thing that binds us together is that we have all lost a spouse. We are otherwise a true cross section of America. We come from all backgrounds, and have unique dreams for our futures. By listening to each other, we find bits of inspiration to become creative as we forge our own new path. Pathfinder Magazine provides opportunities to learn from each other, to enable one another, and to share our experiences. To sign up for Pathfinder Magazine visit widowedpathfinder.com/subscribe or call 860-448-5149. $24 per year for the print edition and full access to the online edition SAVE $72 off the newsstand price! $12 per year for the online edition www.widowedpathfinder.com CULTURAL EMOTIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL INTELLECTUAL OCCUPATIONAL PHYSICAL SOCIAL SPIRITUAL CULTURAL EMOTIONAL Health & Wellness ENVIRONMENTAL INTELLECTUAL O C C U PAT I O N A L P H Y S I CA L S O C I A L S P I R I T UA L C U LT U R A L E M OT I O N A L A L o n g Pa t h To F i t n e s s By Dr. Joanne Z. Moore T here were years in my youth when I woke on a summer day, threw on a pair of shorts over a bathing suit and ate a quick breakfast of cereal and juice. I did my chores (this was back when kids did chores) as a matter of routine. As soon as possible, I rode my bike to the beach and swam out to the raft. I floated on my back and recited memorized poetry to the gulls. My friends soon came along, and we played cards and talked about who knows what. By the time I rode my bike the two miles back home, I was tired from the sun and activity. Mom cooked a dinner of meat, potatoes, and vegetables, with a home made dessert most days. Then, after helping with dishes, I would go outside, climb a tree, and read a good book. That routine lasted until I was 16, the magic age of needing a summer job and getting a drivers license. I wasn’t smart enough then to grieve the passing of that glorious summer lifestyle. What happened to that girl? How did she so willingly let go of the personal freedom of riding a bike around town, thinking that driving a car was a step up? Why can’t the woman she became remember how joyful movement is? Has she completely blocked out the memory of the wind in her hair as she rode downhill, and the feeling of power as she climbed up? How did she come to think that it was her job to work without play breaks? That girl was me, and by the time my husband died, I was 50 lb. overweight, and it was all I could do just to accomplish all the business of taking care of the estate and the house. My son and his wife announced that I would soon be a grandmother for the first time. I thought ahead to what kind of relation- 18 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com ship I wanted with my grandchild. I wanted to ride a bike with her, to ski with her, to swim with her, and even just get up and down off the floor with her. What I saw in this child was a playmate. Once again, it would be socially accepted to be silly and active. Now, one does not become so overweight in a straight line. There were lots of diets that failed along the way. So, initially, I intended simply to get stronger BEFORE, with my son Steve and AFTER, having and fit. I joined Anytime followed my exercise and nutrition plan. Fitness and worked with (Joanne Moore) Axel Mahlke, a personal trainer, twice, to get an ology, that after 12 weeks of exercise that raisexercise program going . I exercised faith- es my heart rate for at least 20 minutes, my fully 4 days a week for 60 minutes each time. muscle cells developed more capillaries and The work-out was 30 minutes on the elliptical machine for aerobics, then light weight lift- more mitochondria. The mitochondria are the ing, balance and stretching exercises. After 3 part of the cell that burn fat for energy. That months, I had not lost a pound. But I knew, chemical reaction requires oxygen, and the inbecause I have my masters in exercise physi- creased capillaries provide that oxygen. Now widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 19 that the physical changes had occurred in the muscle cells, I knew that I was more capable of burning fat. So I met with Rosemary Collins, a registered dietician, and she helped me develop a nutrition plan. Based on my sex, age, and activity level, she prescribed the number of calories that I could take in every day in order to lose one pound a week. She taught me how to use an “ap” on the computer to be sure that my proportion of fat, protein, and carbohydrate were appropriate. I will admit that it was hard, and I was hungry most of the time. But, science was right. I lost one pound a week until I lost all 50 pounds. I went from a size 16 to a size 4. That was 4 years ago, and I’ve kept it off. I have met my goal of skiing, swimming, and playing with now 2 granddaughters. I’ve yet to ride a bike with them, but I have started riding my bike to work in good weather. I’ve also been able to discontinue medications for blood pressure and cholesterol. My biggest reward is being able to play. I have a general sense of well being that is joyful, and peaceful, and positive. I encourage anyone who has a sense that there might be a better way to live, to explore a more active lifestyle. 20 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com Fitness For Caregivers This program is designed to help caregivers gain the strength and endurance to meet the demands of caregiving more easily. Just as flight attendants instruct us to don our own oxygen masks before helping others, caregivers must first see to their own physical fitness, to ensure they are strong enough to help others. The Fitness Guide ALL Caregivers Should Have! Call for the DVD and Fitness Guide Today! 860-448-5149 [email protected] FINANCE By Matthew A. Somberg Why You F Need an Advisor Who Will Listen To You amily finances can often be an uncomfortable subject. In many homes, it’s not uncommon for one spouse to be more responsible for handling the finances and financial planning, and the other takes no role. If your late spouse handled the finances, then you may be feeling completely overwhelmed with trying to understand, and become expert in, an area that you have no interest in. Let me reassure you—you are not alone. A qualified financial advisor can help, and here’s some guidance in helping you find the right one. First, you need someone who is willing to listen to you. If you already have a financial advisor, this is an opportunity to reevaluate if he or she is right for you – especially if it was your spouse that was the primary contact with the advisor. You are a unique individual with your own goals, dreams and fears. It is critical that your advisor be just as good as lis- 22 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com tening as they are talking. When meeting with potential candidates, keep track of how much talking do you get to do, and how much talking they do. It is important that the advisor be “interested,” not just “interesting.” Make sure they listen to you. Make sure you feel that you are important to them. If you aren’t getting this feeling, then you should interview other advisors. Your financial well being is too important to work with someone who doesn’t make you feel like less than a partner. Second, find out how your financial advisor earns a living. It’s one of two ways: 1. Commission-based advisers sell investments and earn a percentage of those sales from the corporation or company that offers them. This means their choices of investments for you could be more influenced by a third party than your needs or goals. 2. Fee-based advisers work with you on an an hourly basis as a consultant, giving you advice which is up to you to implement. Or they can manage your investments for a management fee, irrespective if your account balance goes up or down. Their motivation is to keep you happy by providing good service so you keep your account with them. And they’d also prefer to see your account balance grow so that they can earn a larger fee. Thus, generally speaking, the interests of a fee-based adviser are aligned with your own. Let me be very direct about the role of a financial adviser in your life. Your money is your money – not the adviser’s money. If you are not comfortable with your adviser for whatever reason, then you should end the re- lationship and switch to another one. Make sure they listen closely to you, communicate clearly with you, and make you feel like you are being well taken care of. As a financial adviser for the last 14 years, I have worked with clients at both ends of the spectrum. I’ve met clients who are really interested in their finances and those who have no interest at all. The moments that I have found most personally rewarding are those in which my team has been able to look a widow or widower in the eye and let them know that, financially, they are going to be okay – That financially we are going to take care of everything for them and that their job is to take care of themselves emotionally. I wish you the best of luck in finding that right adviser for you. Matthew A. Somberg, AIF®, CLTC® is Principal and Founder of Gottfried & Somberg Wealth Management, LLC. He oversees over $225million dollars of total client assets and maintains offices at 340 Hebron Avenue, Glastonbury, CT and 15 Chesterfield Road, East Lyme, CT. Email Matthew at somberg@ gottfriedsomberg.com or visit him at www. gottfriedsomberg.com. Securities and advisory services offered through Commonwealth Financial Network, member FINRA/SIPC, a registered investment adviser. This communication is strictly intended for individuals residing in the states of CA, CO, CT, FL, MA, MD, ME, MI, NC, NH, NJ, NM, NY, OH, RI, SC, TX, VA, VI, and WA. No offers may be made or accepted from any resident outside these states due to various state regulations and registration requirements regarding investment products and services. widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 23 Liliane Allegretti Featured Widow Embraces Life After Loss By Patricia Ann Chaffee L iliane Allegretti had a wonder- United Service Organizations (USO), ful life after she arrived in the to soldiers at Westover Air Reserve United States from Switzerland Base. They encouraged and sponsored in 1951. She got married and enjoyed 38 years of wedded bliss before her her move to New York City where husband passed away in 1994. Despite a brief career in the spotlight was launched. She this heartbreakcontinued singing ing loss, she conin French as well tinues to thrive, as some modeling throwing herself gigs, an occasionin to her art, her al off Broadway friends and her performance role, family. dancing at the Liliane grew Copacabana and up in Geneva, most notably, actSwitzerland and ing as a stand in moved to Holydouble for Marioke, Massachulyn Monroe. Her setts with her parstage name was ents when she was Lili Lisande. 18. She spoke no English and did a As exciting as variety of odd jobs that was, so was Frank & Liliane including housethe man she was Allegretti cleaning, pumpabout to meet. (Patricia Ann Chaffee) ing gas, and doWhile vacationing ing whatever she at Misquamicut could while learning the language. In Beach in Rhode Island in 1951, she Switzerland she had been a hairdresser met Frank Allegretti, bartending at the and so she cut hair in Holyoke, MA Andrea Hotel. She was 19 and he was until a couple of show business folks 30. spotted her singing in French with the “I couldn’t talk to him, I thought,” 24 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com said Liliane. “He was a bartender, had gray had their first child in 1957 and another in hair and was too old.” She got over it, learning 1958. They bought a house that year and evthat he was a school teacher at Waterford High erything was great. Jack and Michelle later School where he taught industrial arts, and gave them four grandchildren. “Frank was gentle and nice,” said Liliane. bartending was a short term summer gig. She returned to New York and during another visit “I loved him. Everybody did. I was very, very to Misquamicut in 1956, found him hanging much in love with him.” He proved his love for her when in 1971, out with his buddies on the beach. “There he was, lying on the beach. while skiing at Powder Ridge Ski Area in Middlefield, Conn., Ooooooh, the elecLiliane broke both her tricity,” remembers legs. It took two years Liliane. “That was for her to recover and the end of it, or the Frank did everything beginning. He was a that needed to be done nice fellow, kind of during that difficult quiet and very good time, including caring looking. He wanted for the kids who were nothing to do with me then 12 and 13 years when I was in show old. With a hospital business. ” bed stationed in their Three months latliving room and both er, on September 22 legs in casts, Liliane they were married at needed him for everythe Cathedral of St. thing. Her mom came Patrick in Norwich to help but Frank took and New York beover when he arrived came history. Frank home from teaching had a big Italian famby 3. He even conily that outnumbered structing a ramp for Liliane’s 300 to 11. her wheelchair so she “It was tough. could go out with her They didn’t accept me Liliane Allegretti (Patricia Ann Chaffee) friends who would right away. You know, load her into the back I was in show business and from Switzerland and didn’t have of a station wagon. “Frank was fantastic,” said much family here.” It took a few years for his Liliane. Frank continued teaching, and when she family to come around which left Frank devastated because his family was such a close was literally back on her feet, she opened Lilknit group. “On his mother’s dying bed she iane’s Salon De Coiffure in Niantic village finally said she loved me. We had a wonderful which she ran for 15 years, making use of her cosmetology skills. Frank handled all the marriage anyway.” The couple settled in Niantic, Conn. and books and financial matters. widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 25 In the late 1980’s Frank began having signs I love flowers, just love them. I’m in my own of prostate cancer that he was reluctant to ad- little world. I get a good feeling when I paint,” dress and in 1994 he lost the battle. During she says. “I’m just so fortunate.” She has exhibited her work over the years that time it was Liliane’s chance to take care in different venues but has no interest in doof him. “He used to do everything for me,” said ing that now, choosing to forgo the sometimes Liliane. “Then he got sick and I had to diaper competitive nature of the art world. Liliane him. One night I had to take him to the hospi- says she is the oldest in her class of about 15 tal at 3:00 a.m. He died 10 days later. We had students. Her days that begin at 5 a.m. are filled with a great, great marriage.” What she cherishes most about their mar- activity that always starts with walking 30 riage was the honesty they shared. “Real hon- minutes, followed by breakfast and tending esty. Lots of good love. He was a nice guy and to any appointments she may have. She often participates in senior I loved him dearly.” center trips, takes in Liliane still lives in a show at the Goodthe house they shared speed Opera House together and she has or visits with friends. long since sold her Liliane recognizes the hair salon. She conimportance of havtinues to “do hair” for ing a support network friends and family in of friends and famher home and Frank’s ily when dealing with passing opened up loss of a spouse. That new pathways in her was valuable to her life that she hadn’t when she needed it pursued previously. most. The years have “It wasn’t too great Liliane Allegretti passed and as fit as but I pulled through,” (Patricia Ann Chaffee) she is, she does admit says Liliane. “I’ve alto having to call on ways been a doer. I didn’t even know how to write checks to pay other help to tend to household maintenance the bills at first, but I took care of things. The and yard work. As helpful as sharing her life with someone might be these days, she chooskids guided me a bit.” Somehow Liliane found herself over at the es not to date and has no plan to sign up for Lyme Art Association taking classes in pastels membership on Match.com any time soon, with award winning pastel artists Joann Ball- quite comfortable being on her own. “I turned 80 last January and I feel pretty inger. Seventeen years later she is still there, painting every Friday morning. Landscapes, still good, I must say. I’m busy enough to be conlifes, mountain scenes, memories of Switzerland tent by myself. It’s not selfish; I just don’t feel I need someone to watch TV with“, says Liland especially flowers pique her interest. “I paint whatever catches my eye. That’s iane. When a little loneliness sets in, she can my therapy; in fact it’s cheaper than therapy. pick up the phone and call a friend. 26 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com Advertising Rates Advertise In Pathfinder ADVERTISEMENT u 2-Page Spread v Full Page w 2/3 Page x 1/2 Page y 1/3 Page z 1/4 Page PREMIUM PLACEMENTS Back Cover Inside Back Cover Inside Front Cover 1/2 Page 1/3 Page ONLINE ADVERTISEMENTS u Homepage Banner Ad v Secondary Page Banner Ad Contact us at 860-448-5149 or widowedpathfinder.com/contacts/advertise-with-pathfinder widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 27 Spiritual Direction... Spiritual Direction Can Offer Guidance In The Storm By Patricia Ann Chaffee S piritual Direction is a sacred companioning that can be helpful as we journey through this life, especially during life changing events that challenge us most. It is an ancient practice that originated in the Roman Catholic tradition and is now practiced widely across all faith traditions. Because of that, it is more spiritual than it is religious, requiring only openness to the belief in a holy something, greater than ourselves. It is an interfaith experience when the central belief is that there is one God whom we all choose to worship differently. “Finding a spiritual director who is trained and open to meeting a person where they are, and willing to set aside their own image and understanding of God, is important,” says executive director of the Spiritual Life Center, Melina Rudman. “There is one voice of God, spoken through many languages and traditions. No matter who or what we believe, as human beings we have a spirit. Especially in times of grief and challenge, our spirits need tending to.” It is different than therapy in that there is a spiritual focus as people grapple with unfathomable loss. Finding the right spiritual director can best be explored through recom- mendations from friends and even interviews to determine if you and the director are a good fit. Spiritual directors in your area can be found through Spiritual Directors International (www.SDIworld.org). They can also be located through retreat centers and places like the Spiritual Life Center in West Hartford, Connecticut. Rudman recommends inquiring about a director’s background, whether or not they are in ongoing formation, and sharing some of your story with them and watching for a reaction. “Your spiritual director can be with you throughout your journey, listening to the guidance of the voice of the Holy, and helping you tune the ears of your own heart toward that voice,” she says. “You should feel a connection with your director, a sense that your experience of God is respected, especially if you are someone familiar with having mystical experiences.” In a typical session the director should do far more listening than speaking, and you can expect to be asked guiding, open ended questions. If you want to begin or end your session with prayer a good director should be open to that. And if you find that it’s not working out, don’t hesitate to make a change. 28 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com During a time of grieving, we might wonder if that is the best time to begin or even to continue spiritual direction. We may feel mad at God for “taking” our loved one. “Everyone is mad at God at least once in their life. God can take it! Anger in the face of a huge loss is an appropriate response.” says Rudman. “When people are grieving there is often great loneliness and unresolved business. At times like that, God is a container that can hold our grief, loneliness, regrets, anger and pain. Being able to explore those things in the presence of the holy, with someone who holds our story as sacred, offers resolution, comfort, closure and life can be found.” She says spiritual direction honors grief and that it is part of the human and spiritual experience. “It’s handled tenderly and respectfully. It’s not rushed. Spiritual direction allows you to stay with the grief and move in and out of it. It is a place of acceptance.” Society doesn’t care much for the grieving process and encourages us to get on with Melina it. But spiritual direction is an invitation to take all the time you need. We all grieve differently and there is no right or wrong way. Spiritual direction invites us into relationship with the divine, to explore places we may have found too painful to go. And with the right spiritual director, the process provides a safe and sacred space to make that journey. Spiritual direction sessions typically last one hour and are scheduled once a month, but during particularly difficult times, sessions may be scheduled more often. Fees vary depending on the director or program and can run $50-70 per session, although many places, including the Spiritual life Center, have a flexible payment policy and do not turn anyone away due to inability to pay. Rudman arrived at spiritual direction after pursuing a degree in psychology from Baypath College. While attending the Women’s Leadership Institute at Hartford Seminary in 1999 she had a mystical experience of her own that prompted her to explore spiritual direction for the first time. “People were always telling me their stories and coming to me to share their joys and pains. I knew this was a gift for me.” She received her certificate in spiritual direction from Sacred Heart University in 2002 and later became involved with the Spiritual Life Center serving on its board of directors. She ran the Servant Leadership School at the Franciscan Center for Urban Ministry in Hartford, CT for nine years and joined the staff as executive director of the Spiritual Life Center in August of 2013. When asked why she chose Rudman to be involved with this sacred practice she responded, “I can’t imagine my life without it. I think that for me, it took me beyond religion into relationship. That has healed my life in so many ways.” The Spiritual Life Center is located at Holy Family Retreat Center, 303 Tunxis Road, West Hartford, CT (860)243-2374. Rudman is also the author of Reimagining the Gospels, Prayerful Wonderings On the Life of Jesus of Nazareth, published this past September. It is available at www.Amazon.com. widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 29 Digital Pathfinder widowedpathfinder.com Read Pathfinder on the go... Our website widowedpathfinder.com u makes it possible to read Pathfinder Magazine on the go. Subscribers can choose between the affordable print & online subscription or simply the online option, with full access to all of the articles v through the website. Along with all the empowering articles, on widowedpathfinder.com you’ll find: • The Pathfinder Forum for discussing issues that widow/ers face. • Calendar of upcoming Pathfinder events. • Submit your questions to experts in marriage & family therapy and finance. w • Share your stories with Pathfinder. u v w 30 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com www.widowedpathfinder.com SUBSCRIBE TO Just as no two people are alike, we recognize that no two marriages are alike. The only thing that binds us together is that we have all lost a spouse. We are otherwise a true cross section of America. We come from all backgrounds, and have unique dreams for our futures. By listening to each other, we find bits of inspiration to become creative as we forge our own new path. Pathfinder Magazine provides opportunities to learn from each other, to enable one another, and to share our experiences. To sign up for Pathfinder Magazine visit widowedpathfinder.com/subscribe or call 860-448-5149. $24 per year for the print edition and full access to the online edition SAVE $72 off the newsstand price! $12 per year for the online edition www.widowedpathfinder.com Home Nelson Clayton On Your Household Treasures Thoughts On Personal Property Appraisals D By Patricia Ann Chaffee uring many life transitions, the value of personal property can come into question. When you begin to wonder if the items that your family loves may have more than sentimental value, consider calling in a trained personal property appraiser. These highly skilled professionals can guide us not only in determining the value of our treasures, but can suggest how we might best liquidate when downsizing or just cleaning out is on our agenda. Nelson (Ned) Clayton is one such experienced appraiser, and his interest comes from his own family history. He has traced his family geneology back to the mid 1600’s. 800 related families gather in New Jersey annually to reunite, celebrating their family history, and Clayton was a part of it. His home has furniture laced with boyhood memories. Among an eclectic blend of contemporary pieces and antiques, a crazy quilt made by his family in the 1890’s adorns a wall, filled with symbols representing his family. History and family means a lot to this Old Lyme, CT resident so it makes sense that as he neared retirement in 1991, he decided to pursue an art and antiques appraisal certificate program at Long Island University. With lots of inherited items, and family dating back to the American Revolution, Ned and his wife Stephanie pursued training together and the pursuit of education in this field hasn’t stopped. Clayton is an Accredited Senior Appraiser with the American Society of Appraisers, Inc. and is a graduate of the Winterthur Institute at the Winterthur Museum in Delaware. Prior to retiring, he traveled the world as a banker for Citibank and brings his well- traveled experience to this second career. Despite his many years as a personal property appraiser, he continues to attend educational programs through professional appraisal organizations 32 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com and museums worldwide, but some of his best learning experiences come from a least likely source. “Every time I go into a house I learn something new,” he says. “If I don’t know or can’t figure out what something is worth, I’ll find someone who does.” Although he has encountered many unique items over the years, he recognizes his limits as well as the gifts of others, so he calls in specialists as needed, people who specialize in carpet, fine art and jewelry. He can handle everything else himself, including glass, furniture, decorative items, china, silver, collectibles, even vehicles, and he specializes in antiques and decorative arts, especially American antique furniture and silver. Sometimes he is called in to look at one item, a handful of cherished heirlooms or even a whole house, and he is called upon for a variety of reasons. “Everyone has something, but they may not know what to do with it,” says Clayton, who doesn’t deal in antiques himself but can advise his clients in liquidation. The majority of people who contact him have had some kind of loss in their life or want to protect against loss. Typical reasons to call on a personal property appraiser include estate planning or estate settlement; insurance pro- tection or claims; donations; and divorce. People may be surprised to hear that the value of an item varies depending on the reason for the valuation. For example if there is the loss of an item that needs to be replaced, and if it was a rare or one of a kind item, it will have a higher value. In an estate scenario where things are likely to be distributed among heirs, one person might want an item and a sibling might want the cash equivalent, so the value will determine the equal share. During divorce, the value is needed for equitable distribution requiring a value that is fair for both parties involved. The state of the economy factors into values. Since 2008, Clayton has seen significant changes, reducing values in the household marketplace. He also sees generational effects as younger family members have increasingly less interest in items that used to hold significance. “The younger generation doesn’t sit down for dinner anymore so there is no need for silver,” says Clayton. “They don’t want to wind clocks, so old grandfather clocks are no longer wanted or they replace the mechanism so they don’t have to wind it. They aren’t interested in carpets because they want to have hardwood floors. They want pretty, not history. For the first time ever, a new piece of furniture costs widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 33 more than antiques.” With estate planning or settlement, decisions need to be made about what do with the things you have. People may choose to keep it, give it to the kids, donate it, or sell the item. The emotional factor is the biggest issue according to Clayton, and one of the hardest things to get over. Clients often believe in the story of an item, and that story may not be more family lore than accurate. “George Washington could only have slept so many places,” he jokes. But once he helps clients to get past the emotional factor, he can assess a piece of furniture for example, by looking at its patina, period and construction. For folks looking to donate a piece, it is useful to find an institution such as a library, museum, or educational organization with a common purpose aligned with the object. For tax deductible donations, an item may have higher value, especially for items that are rare and will be on display in this setting. Another thing to consider in parting with an item is the location and whether it’s worth it to ship something, as that can sometimes be costly. It is important to call in an appraiser in several scenarios. For insurance purposes, a documented appraisal of value for expensive items can be crucial in the event of theft or fire. Or in the case of sibling disagreements during estate settlement, he becomes an arbi- ter. He advises parents to talk with the kids in advance to eliminate disagreements later. Or when folks are downsizing, sometimes preparing a move into extended care facilities, there is much to get rid of because where they are going doesn’t have room for all the things they cherished in their home. When considering calling in a professional, it’s important to consider credentials and how much experience they have. Typical scams that folks should be leery about are when an individual will come in, take a look around and throw a number out. “Their main purpose is to get it cheap,” he says. “They run tag sales.” Auction houses are a bit more selective and tend to give a range that they think an item will sell for. They tend to be fairly accurate. When Clayton goes out to a home he follows up with a thoroughly researched written report of appraised value. He charges by the hour, and what he charges is in no way affected by the value of an item, and if people don’t know where to begin he is happy to come out for a consultation. A consultation involves a walk through, discussion to make a plan as decisions are made about what has emotional or monetary value, and he offers suggestions on how to dispose of the items which may be needed to pay off bills in a situation such as estate liquidation. An appraisal follows. 34 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com The thing he likes best about this work is the people he meets and finding things he’s never seen before. His greatest discovery was a desk belonging to an early Connecticut family. He appreciated the value of it because of its history. Because he enjoyed this interaction with people so much, he has done presentations at Senior Centers where he would bring four items and ask the seniors to value them. The closest guess received a prized. He invited them to bring their own items to try to stump him. Only one audience member was successful, with a lighthouse light lighter that looked like a smudge pot. Clayton clearly enjoys the work he is doing in his retirement years, bringing insight, education and value to the people who call on him. He enjoys viewing interesting items that always have a story and helping folks determine value and sometimes direction in their lives. And every now and then he gets stumped and reaches into his cadre of research skills and relationships with colleagues to find the answers people need. With a great appreciation for the history of each heirloom, while understanding its sentimental value, he helps clients gain clarity about the true value of each treasured piece. For more information contact Nelson O. Clayton at (203) 561-8298 or visit www. AppraisalsOfDistinction.com. widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 35 Advertising Rates Advertise In Pathfinder ADVERTISEMENT u 2-Page Spread v Full Page w 2/3 Page x 1/2 Page y 1/3 Page z 1/4 Page PREMIUM PLACEMENTS Back Cover Inside Back Cover Inside Front Cover 1/2 Page 1/3 Page ONLINE ADVERTISEMENTS u Homepage Banner Ad v Secondary Page Banner Ad Contact us at 860-448-5149 or widowedpathfinder.com/contacts/advertise-with-pathfinder 36 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com M any people become familiar with hospice care as they watch their loved ones slip away, moving toward the end of life. And as they grieve that unimaginable loss, hospice might be the last thing they want to hear or read about. But for folks familiar with the Center for Hospice Care Southeast Connecticut, hospice can make a difference long after their loved one has moved on. The Center for Hospice Care has an Expressive Arts Program that offers opportunities for creative expression for children and adults. Those opportunities enable folks to deal with their grief through remembering, creating, and socializing in an atmosphere that is nonjudgmental, compassionate and supportive. Linda Bradley is the expressive arts therapist and coordinator of the program that has been growing since it began as a pilot in 2010 when she was on staff only 6-8 hours per week. Her hours have tripled, reflecting the success and demand for her program. “I always felt comfortable with art as a way of expressing the soul, using my art to work through my feelings about grief and death,” said Bradley. “When my Mom died in 1998 I found it therapeutic and very, very helpful to work through my feelings through journaling and art. It became a focus for me to help others in the same way. My dream was to facilitate an expressive arts program that supported individuals in expressing their grief The Healing Power of Expressive Arts By Patricia Ann Chaffee widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 37 through a variety of creative modalities.” two cents about what we’ve done wrong, how She was fascinated by expressive arts and inadequate we are, how we’ve hurt others and the way it can help people deal with what is im- so much more. But if we can move past the reportant in their lives. So with a Masters degree sounding epithets and accusations that go with in Fine Arts from the University of Connecti- them in order to get quiet and tap into our aucut under her belt, she pursued a Certificate thentic, beautiful and ultimately creative nain Advanced Graduate Study in Art Therapy ture, we can do something powerful. We can at Springfield College in Massachusetts. She use the process of creating to deal with our then became a Registered Art Therapist (ATR) grief. after completing her studies in Springfield. “Once they get involved, and overcome the Bradley brings that passion for helping people anxiety of being in a group, they find a welthrough the arts, to this program at hospice. come, supportive, environment,” said Bradley. No two ex“They can see the pressive arts therbenefits. Someapy programs are times they come the same. They once and that’s all all draw on medithey need. Othums that connect ers come for the with the senses whole six week including paintseries and some ing, crafts, music stay longer” and movement, Initially pardrawing, journticipants arrive aling, cooking, and their grief gardening. The is so raw they common theme can barely say is a creative flow. their loved one’s Linda Bradley And each particiname, she says. (Patricia Ann Chaffee) pant approaches Through the exit as they need perience they with no right or wrong way, making it ideal bond with others in the group, who although for everyone, even those who assert, “I can’t each experiences grief in their own way, they draw a straight line.” have empathy for one another. The program at “Everyone is creative,” says Bradley. Center for Hospice Care is somewhat unique “We experience creativity in so many differ- according to Bradley in that there are few exent ways. It’s not always studio art. It’s about pressive arts programs like it, that focus on taking what’s inside and articulating feelings supporting those who are grieving. in some tangible way.” Barry Rhodes heard about the program Children have an easier time accepting after his wife Diane of 18 years passed away their artist within. We adults allow that inner three years ago. His stepdaughter signed him critic to reside on our shoulders offering their up for a bereavement group, where he was in38 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com troduced to the expressive arts program. It was is making hand crafted greeting cards for the there that he painted a picture frame to display a social workers and staff to use as needed. This photo of Diane, but he received so much more. sharing with the program is as therapeutic as “Just being there was helpful,” said Rhodes. is the group dynamic and the creative process. “There were others there who knew what loss “The process of the group is amazing as they was like. I liked the people in the group. Per- moved from being barely able to contain their sonally I don’t get out a lot. Other people, they own grief, to wanting to reach out and help don’t want to hear about someone’s loss. But others,” said Bradley about the alumni group in this group, evthat has now been eryone has been meeting for over through similar diftwo years. “They ficulties.” He had have become close been working up friends.” until last year, as a Louisette (Lou) shipwright at MysWasilewski is part tic Seaport where of that group. She he worked on the lost her husband restoration of the Michael in 2010 Charles W. Morafter a three year gan, the last woodbattle with cancer. en whaling ship in She remembers the world. Since one of the first achis wife passed tivities she did away, he has been in Bradley’s prodiagnosed with gram was going cancer himself. through a maga“It’s not as hard zine to search for as dealing with images and words my wife’s cancer,” that resonated with said Rhodes who her and reminded continues to be a her of Michael. Linda Bradley part of an ExpresShe chose pictures (Patricia Ann Chaffee) sive Arts Alumni of a garden scene Group. They conbecause Michael tinue to meet weekly to support each other and loved flowers. Her collage ended up growing give back to the organization that has given into something like a scrapbook as one thing much to them. led to another. She has painted frames and The Expressive Arts Alumni Group is birdhouses, made holiday wreaths, and made made up of four individuals who had lost a chest for keepsakes. “A lot of things about loved ones and had gone through the expres- how we feel can come out of it from black sive art therapy program. Their latest project clouds to beautiful flowers,” said Wasilewski. widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 39 Expressive Arts Alumni Group (L-R): Lou Wasilewski, Barry Rhodes, Penny Gadbois, and Cheryl Thevenet Linda Bradley (Patricia Ann Chaffee) “It kind of helps to take some of the grieving away. And you are with people who are all going through the same thing. We all lost someone we love. Talking with other people puts things in perspective and eventually you can see some light at the end of the tunnel.” The expressive arts process is helpful because it makes feelings tangible, according to Bradley. Anger, sadness, confusion, anxiety, and indefinable emotions can be worked through by making these tangible things. It is about making memories and about finding comfort. The Memory Scrapbook is one activity that people have found helpful. Participants bring mementos and photos from home and work with a binder filled with pages. There is anintensity about them when they are sorting photos,” says Bradley. “It takes them back and triggers an opportunity to share treasured memories with others in the group. It is a way to reflect on things about the person they want to remember. And they can go back to it when they want. It is a way to celebrate their life together and the life of the person they’ve lost.” Using a Grief Inventory, they explore col- (Patricia Ann Chaffee) ors, shapes, temperatures, etc. and create an image that allows them to take something as huge and unmanageable as their grief and break it down, so that it is more contained, explains Bradley. In that container they can share with others. They gain self-awareness about what they are experiencing. Defining issues helps in developing coping skills. “Their whole life has changed because of this loss. They have to learn how to work with all these changes. They find comfort in knowing they are not alone. It is a solitary journey through personal grief but they know they are not alone. They’re not going crazy, they’re grieving; a normal natural process and response to the death of a loved one.” Expressive Arts Programs are free at the Center for Hospice Care Southeast Connecticut. They are located at 227 Dunham Street, Norwich, CT. Learn more at www.hospicesect.org or visit them at www.facebook.com/hospicesect or call (860)848-5699. 40 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com SUBSCRIBE TO Just as no two people are alike, we recognize that no two marriages are alike. The only thing that binds us together is that we have all lost a spouse. We are otherwise a true cross section of America. We come from all backgrounds, and have unique dreams for our futures. By listening to each other, we find bits of inspiration to become creative as we forge our own new path. Pathfinder Magazine provides opportunities to learn from each other, to enable one another, and to share our experiences. To sign up for Pathfinder Magazine visit widowedpathfinder.com/subscribe or call 860-448-5149. $24 per year for the print edition and full access to the online edition SAVE $72 off the newsstand price! $12 per year for the online edition www.widowedpathfinder.com Advertising Rates Advertise In Pathfinder ADVERTISEMENT u 2-Page Spread v Full Page w 2/3 Page x 1/2 Page y 1/3 Page z 1/4 Page PREMIUM PLACEMENTS Back Cover Inside Back Cover Inside Front Cover 1/2 Page 1/3 Page ONLINE ADVERTISEMENTS u Homepage Banner Ad v Secondary Page Banner Ad Contact us at 860-448-5149 or widowedpathfinder.com/contacts/advertise-with-pathfinder 42 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com Poetry... For Lindsay By David Smith This storm of emotions washes me clean till I sparkle with the promise of a sunrise. The water’s edge at peace in pure light, till the wind comes and carries me away. Promises, promises, promises. Life holds so many. How many sunrises are you willing to see knowing they are not limitless? Are you willing to open your eyes to the ugly in order to see wonder? Do you see the beauty in terror, and in beauty, the terror of losing it? Are you willing to share a love that is fluid; that ebbs and flows, awe inspiring and sometimes roiling and achy? We own all of our promises. Look for the sunrise and be cleansed. Fulfill yourself, and have faith. For in faith, there is truth and life. widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 43 Books & Movies Author Spotlight: Mary O'Connor Writes About the Sweet Spots By Patricia Ann Chaffee M ary O’Connor has been writ- travel guide for those searching for joy. She ing all her life and it wasn’t until transforms what she sees out her window in she retired about seven years ago, the earth, sea and sky, and the human experithat she decided she wanted to use her gifts ence, into an inspiring, practical, often heartto make some contribution to humanity. She warming path to finding joy in the sweet spots found a way to do that with her latest book, of life. Life is Full of Sweet Spots – An Exploration When O’Connor set out to write this book, of Joy. And it is just that became a four that. O’Connor pulls year project, she had Sweet spots are the extraordinary places together personal already published a and things in life that bring us joy and are stories, hers and book of poetry titled often found among the mediocre. others from around Dreams of a Wingthe country and beless Child. She had yond. Using art and just retired from a imagery, poems and long career that inpromise, quotes and volved great listenconcrete advice, ing skills and a variThis book is an invitation to the journey, an along with practical ety of writing skills. ongoing, life long journey of discovery of information, she deShe worked as a that which makes our hearts sing. scribes her book as a newspaper reporter So What Is A Sweet Spot? 44 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com and editor and in the field of communications, story. marketing and publicity as well as serving as “I met a lot of nice people doing this book,” the executive director for the Guilford Arts says O’Connor. “I really wanted to make a Center just before she retired. For the past contribution. My poetry book had triggered seven years she has been offering poetry writ- something in people. People said the poems ing workshops to were bringing them the inmates at York joy. They said, we Correctional Instidon’t see things the tute. way you do, lookThis optimistic ing out your winauthor questioned dow.” her own ability to She wanted her write about joy new book to show and soon realized them how to find joy that finding an “exin nature, through pert” on the subject their bodies, hearts would be difficult. and spirits. Life is After all, it’s not Full of Sweet Spots as if one can major is divided into three in joy at your losections: Drawing cal university. She on Nature, Tapping searched on line Into our Bodies seeking out people, and Stretching Our many of them blogMinds and Souls. It gers, who had overis much more than come challenges in just inspiration. It life (like so many offers practical sugof us) and found gestions on where joy despite their to go, what to do, Life Is Full of Sweet Spots hardships. She foland the resources – An Exploration of Joy lowed their blogs helpful in the proby Mary O’Connor to see if they had cess. It is an invita(Patricia Ann Chaffee) something worthtion to discover joy while to say and if in our everyday life what they had to share could be helpful to inspired by nature, people and their stories. others who were experiencing difficulties of In one account Barbara Parsons, a former their own. Most of her contacts were more inmate at York Correctional Institute shares than happy to be interviewed and share their her love of flowers and gardening that helped widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 45 Mary O’Connor (Patricia Ann Chaffee) get her through her sentence at York. When a local newspaper featured Barbara’s experience of joy in sunflowers, O’Connor was impressed. “Barbara said that growing flowers brought her peace and contentment, and that enabled her to experience joy in the unlikeliest of places. It opened her mind to allow other things in. She took writing courses to fill her mind and relieve tension. She tapped into the creative side of her life. There’s a therapeutic benefit to many things in the book,” says O’Connor. “For example if you are busy with something you like, time flies by. It can take a tragedy and offer some relief to an extent.” Tammy Hendricks was moved to create memorial teddy bears to honor a great nephew who lived only seven hours after birth. Now she makes them for other people who have lost a loved one, using their clothing or favorite blanket. With a background in counseling at a mental health center, she finds that her new avocation continues to help people in a similar way. They often write to her to share information about the person who passed away and she incorporates a sense of that person into the bear. The sense of touch experi- 46 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com enced through a teddy bear, is an important piece of experiencing joy despite the pain of grief. The book is full of people doing interesting things that elicits joy. The hardest part of the project for O’Connor was choosing what stories and how much information to include. It is the kind of book that you pick up and randomly open to see what you might see, rather to do with the skills I have. It gave me a challenge and a way to contribute to life.” As she began looking for people and places that led to joy, the possibilities were abundant. For that reason another book may be on the horizon. O’Connor lives along the Connecticut shoreline where she is inspired by her natural surroundings and incorporates that into her creative expression both as a writer and Mary O’Connor than sitting and reading it all at once. The nuggets of wisdom are meant to be nurtured and digested over time, then put to use. “I myself am a naturally optimistic person“, says O’Connor. “ I’m happy to have a talent for writing that I could share. I’m an active person and I was looking for something (Patricia Ann Chaffee) as an artist. For now, the author keeps painting, enjoying her own sweet spots and posting photography and thought provoking comments on her blog. Life is Full of Sweet Spots is available through Amazon.com or visit www.Lifeisfullofsweetspots.com. widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 47 Nutrition Recipe Ideas For Meals That You Might Deliver To A Friend Who Is Sick By Rosemary Collins, RDN T here is nothing nicer than having a neighbor or friend call round with a hot, delicious, ready prepared meal when you are unable to cook! Having a “friends roster” for meals with each person volunteering to prepare for one night during the week makes for good planning and helps to coordinate the week. Cooking for a friend and then eating together can also be a nice way to keep your friend company, especially if they if they are alone. There is nothing better than the taste of familiar or comfort foods when feeling out of sorts – so it’s a great idea to chat to you friend to check if they have any particular favorites. Also if they have any special dietary needs which might need a little adjustment to the menu. I have put together some of my favorite recipes for meals that are easy to prepare. They are also healthy, reheat if needed, travel well and taste good! Everyone loves a homemade “mac and cheese” this recipe adds the delicious taste of acorn squash…. 48 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com Grown Up Macaroni and Cheese with Acorn Squash SERVES 6 INGREDIENTS 4 cups acorn squash, about 1¼ pounds 2 cups macaroni (try using wholegrain for a healthier option) 1 tablespoon plus one teaspoon canola oil, divided 2 shallots, chopped 3 cups 2% milk, divided 1/3 cup all purpose flour 2 teaspoon dijon mustard 1 teaspoon fresh rosemary ¼ teaspoon salt, ¼ teaspoon ground white pepper 6 ounces white sharp cheddar shredded (about 2 cups) 3 tablespoons breadcrumbs (white or whole-wheat) ½ teaspoon paprika DIRECTIONS 1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Coat a 2-quart baking dish with cooking spray. 2. Meanwhile steam or microwave squash until tender, about 10 minutes. Mash half the squash in a small bowl and set aside. 3. Bring a large pot of water to the boil and cook macaroni 2 minutes less than package instructions. Drain and set aside. 4. Heat 1-tablespoon oil in a large saucepan over medium heat. Add shallot and cook, stirring often until softened and starting to brown 1-3 minutes. Add 2 cups of milk and bring to a simmer. Whisk the remaining 1-cup milk, mustard, rosemary, white pepper and salt in a small bowl until smooth. Whisk in the flour mixture into the simmering milk until it thickens. Remove from the heat. 5. Whisk the cheese into the thickened milk mixture until it is melted. Add the mashed squash and whisk until combined. Stir in the macaroni and the remaining squash. Transfer to the prepared casserole dish. 6. Mix the breadcrumbs with the remaining 1-teaspoon oil. Add the paprika and stir evenly until moist and bright orange. Sprinkle over the macaroni. Transfer to the oven and bake until bubbling and browned on top about 1015 minutes. Let cool at least 10 minutes before serving. Serve with green beans, or broccoli. Can be portioned up into entrée serving dishes if you wish, so there is an extra meal to go in the freezer as well as one for dinner! widowedpathfinder.com | July 2014 | PATHFINDER | 49 Carrot and Coriander Soup (Sainsbury's) SERVES 4 Soups are always good for light and quick meals – use your favorite recipe, bring out your best chicken noodle or for something a little different try this: INGREDIENTS 1 tablespoon olive oil 1 onion peeled and finely chopped Pinch of cumin Pinch of crushed red pepper flakes (optional) 2 pints vegetable or chicken stock 1 lb. carrots, peeled and finely chopped 1tablespoon fresh cilantro leaves, finely chopped plus a few sprigs to garnish Vegetable chips to garnish (optional) DIRECTIONS 1. Heat the oil in a large pan, add the onion and cook for 3-5 minutes until softened. 2. Add the cumin red pepper flakes if desired and cook stirring for a further 1 minute. 3. Add the vegetable stock and carrots and bring to the boil, then simmer for about 15 minutes, or until the carrots are cooked thoroughly. 4. Transfer the soup to a blender and blend until smooth. Stir in the chopped cilantro then ladle into serving container. Fresh Fruit Parfait Serve hot with warm whole wheat bread. ________________________ SERVES 1 Last but not least everyone likes something sweet to eat! This is a parfait that can be eaten any time of day, breakfast or dessert! It takes just a few minutes to prepare, looks wonderful served in a small glass and is packed full of good nutrition. INGREDIENTS Take 2 tablespoons of Greek yogurt (2% fat or fat free for lower calories) 2 tablespoons of fresh fruits, blueberries, raspberries, peach or drained tinned fruits in natural juice 1 tablespoons of granola DIRECTIONS Place Greek yogurt in glass or cup. Top with fruits of your choice and sprinkle with granola. Place in fridge. Tastes delicious for a dessert or snack! 50 | PATHFINDER | July 2014 | widowedpathfinder.com SUBSCRIBE TO Just as no two people are alike, we recognize that no two marriages are alike. The only thing that binds us together is that we have all lost a spouse. We are otherwise a true cross section of America. We come from all backgrounds, and have unique dreams for our futures. By listening to each other, we find bits of inspiration to become creative as we forge our own new path. Pathfinder Magazine provides opportunities to learn from each other, to enable one another, and to share our experiences. To sign up for Pathfinder Magazine visit widowedpathfinder.com/subscribe or call 860-448-5149. $24 per year for the print edition and full access to the online edition SAVE $72 off the newsstand price! $12 per year for the online edition www.widowedpathfinder.com Advertising Rates Advertise In Pathfinder ADVERTISEMENT u 2-Page Spread v Full Page w 2/3 Page x 1/2 Page y 1/3 Page z 1/4 Page PREMIUM PLACEMENTS Back Cover Inside Back Cover Inside Front Cover 1/2 Page 1/3 Page ONLINE ADVERTISEMENTS u Homepage Banner Ad v Secondary Page Banner Ad Contact us at 860-448-5149 or widowedpathfinder.com/contacts/advertise-with-pathfinder www.widowedpathfinder.com