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Dream New Dreams: Reimagining My Life After Loss

Dream New Dreams: Reimagining My Life After Loss

Author: Jai Pausch
Website: http://www.tworoadsbooks.com/index.php/books/dream-on-jai-pausch/
Reviewed By: Anne Holmes for the NABBW

Dream New Dreams: Reimagining My Life After Loss Reviewed By:  Anne Holmes For The Nabbw

Jai Pausch, the widow of Randy Pausch -the Carnegie Mellon professor best known for authoring THE LAST LECTURE after his diagnosis of pancreatic Cancer – gives us a remarkably frank, deeply Moving and thematically rich memoir about death, dying and the grieving process.

In Dream New Dreams, we hear her story for the first time: her emotional journey from wife and mother to full-time Caregiver, shuttling between her three young children and Randy’s bedside as he sought treatment far from home; and then to widow and single parent, fighting to preserve a sense of stability for her family, while coping with her own Grief and the challenges of running a household without a partner.

I had a personal interest in this story since my first husband died of cancer while our two children were pre-teens. While I also experienced the pain of helping young children learn to grieve a parental death, I was never technically a grieving wife, nor a widow, as we had divorced about a year prior to his initial diagnosis, and I remarried before his death.

Regardless, I discovered that the loving ties which had initially bound us were never totally severed. I don’t think they ever can be whenever any couple shares custody of their children. But let’s get back to the book:

Jai paints a vivid, honest portrait of a vital, challenging relationship between two strong people facing a grim prognosis and the self-sacrificing decisions it required them to make. This was a challenge, for her. As Randy Pausch had written of her: “Jai is such a giver that she often forgets to take care of herself. She’ll have to give herself permission to make herself a priority.”

As the book progresses, we see Jai start to face life without the husband she called her “magic man.” We see her start to create a new life of hope and happiness, and as she puts it, to begin to “feel a spark of my own magic beginning to flicker.”

I loved this quote towards the end of the book:

“Life is a precious gift and I don’t intend to waste a day of it. Have I experienced tragedy? Yes, I have. But it would be another real tragedy if I didn’t recover from the sadness I felt and thus missed the many happy moments along the way. Was my dream crushed? Yes, it was. And that will happen again. But when it does, I will pick up those pieces and create something new. I will always dream new dreams.”

Wise words for all of us.

Originally Published on NABBW.com

Anne Holmes Boomer-in-Chief of NABBW

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