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On the Eve of My Wedding, I Visited My Late Wife’s Grave — But What Happened Next Made Me Question Everything I Thought I Knew About Love

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They say time heals everything. But four years after my wife Anna died, I was still sleeping on her side of the bed.

My name is Daniel Whitmore, and once upon a time, I believed in forever. Anna and I were married for nine years before a drunk driver ended it all on a rainy November night. Since then, my life has been a series of empty days.

I clung to her memory—the way she’d hum while stirring pasta sauce, the freckles on her nose that only showed under sunlight, the smell of her perfume lingering on the pillows. Remembering felt like the only way to keep her alive. Forgetting felt like betrayal.

For nearly three years, I lived like a ghost. Friends invited me out, my sister begged me to see a therapist, and my boss worried about my slipping performance. None of it mattered. I wasn’t interested in being “healed.” I thought healing meant letting her go.

And then I met Claire Donovan.

We met at a charity dinner my company sponsored. She was covering the event as a freelance writer. I noticed her because she didn’t ask shallow questions. Instead of “What do you do?” she asked, “Why do you care about this cause?” Her voice was calm, her presence steady. It felt like standing beside someone who wasn’t afraid of silence.

Coffee meetings turned into dinners, and dinners turned into long walks by the river. She never pressed me about Anna. But one night, she caught me off guard.

“You talk about her in the present tense,” she said softly.

I froze. No one had ever noticed.

“It’s okay,” Claire added gently. “It means she’s still part of you.”

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