There are dreams that begin with excitement. And there are dreams that begin because there is simply no other choice.

Six years ago, I quietly started something that would become one of the hardest journeys of my life. It didn’t begin with a publishing contract or a marketing plan. It began with calendars spread across the table, journals filled with hurried notes, photographs, old emails, and memories that refused to fade.
For six years, I organized.
I dreamed.
I started.
I stopped.
I walked away.
Then I came back.
Again and again.
Some days I couldn’t bear to open the manuscript. Other days I wrote until the tears finally gave way to peace. There were paragraphs that cost me more than words can measure. There were also moments when I found myself laughing out loud at memories I hadn’t visited in years. Grief is strange that way. It never asks permission to make you cry. It also has a surprising habit of handing you joy when you least expect it.
Writing this book has required something I didn’t know I still possessed—the willingness to remember the smallest details of some really dark days.
Every chapter carried me back into another month of widowhood. I revisited the places, the conversations, the balloon releases, the small victories, and the heartbreaks that seemed impossible at the time. I met that frightened woman again, and with each page, I wanted to tell her what she could not yet know.
You are going to make it.
Just keep walking.
One foot in front of the other.
What did I see when the last word was written? A steady progression finding life again.

Today, I can finally say something I’ve been hoping to write for a very long time. The first draft is finished. Not perfect. Not polished beyond recognition. Just honest.
The manuscript is now ready for my wonderful beta readers, who will help me see what I can no longer see after living with these pages for so many years. After that, it will make its way to the publisher. And if all goes according to plan, on November 11, 2026, Widow: A Journey Toward Life will be available for purchase on Amazon (Hardback, Paperback, e-book). That sentence feels almost unbelievable to type.
This isn’t a book filled with easy answers or five simple steps to healing. It is raw. It is real. It tells the truth about losing my husband to cancer and discovering, one day at a time, that my own life was not over.
If you have ever buried someone you loved, I think you’ll recognize pieces of yourself in these pages.
If you are walking beside someone who is grieving, perhaps you’ll understand them a little better.
And if you’re simply wondering whether it’s too late to begin again, I hope this story reminds you that it isn’t.

Dreams don’t always arrive on our schedule.
Sometimes they need years.
Sometimes they need tears.
Sometimes they simply need us to keep showing up until one day we discover we’ve crossed the finish line we could barely imagine when we started.
Because it’s never too late to keep walking, even at 70.
Just put one foot in front of the other and off you go.
Thank you for walking this journey with me. Your encouragement, your prayers, your emails, your comments, and your friendship have carried me farther than you probably realize.
November 11, 2026, is on the horizon, and I can’t wait to place Widow: A Journey Toward Life into your hands.



































