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RoseMary131
Guest
This again goes to what individual people have as their own preference, their experiences, and their family of origins. How they feel, how they handle losing a spouse, etc.Plus remember we had a widow living in our home for many years. That “upped” the general PDAs and lowered the PDAs that wouldn’t be extended to her, because while she liked that we were happily married, she didn’t need a reminder that she was not and never would be again. That really raised my awareness of how marital PDAs can affect someone who has no one and has no prospects of having that change.
My father died at a young age. My mom was in her late 30s when she became a widow. She never expressed that our other relatives needed to stop showing affection with their spouses when she was around. As we (her children and now her grandchildren) grew up and married, we do not need to stop holding hands or kissing our spouses when she is with us.
Mom’s family of origin probably helped shape that she did not need us to hide our affection with our spouses even though she is a widow. Growing up, Mom lived across the street from her own grandmother and spent much time with her. Her grandmother (my great-grandmother) had been a single mom since my grandmother (Mom’s mom) was little. My great-grandmother had no need to have spouses not holding hands, etc. around her.
My father’s father died early and his widowed mom (my grandma) did not need her children (and later us, her grandchildren) to refrain from holding hands with spouses, nor having arms around each other, etc.
**If **my husband dies before me, I do not want my children to stop expressing their love with their spouse when they come to visit or if I lived with them. By expressing their love, I mean to hold hands, wrap their arms around each other while standing or sitting, placing their hand on their spouse’s leg while sitting next to each other, and sharing a kiss. My children and their spouses should feel free to be who they are - a husband and wife - who hold hands and share a kiss. Just because they lost their father - they shouldn’t have to lose what feels natural to them when I am with them. To me that would be a very, very sad request to make of them.
Family of origin plays a very big role throughout generations in how we respond in most areas throughout our lives. The topic expressed by the OP on this thread is highly influenced by personality, culture, and family of origin. Not right or wrong - not judging one person’s idea better than the other - accepting some families express kisses between spouses at Thanksgiving dinner and others don’t want spouses to share hand holding.