Our modern lives are managed for us by experts in birthing, in exercise, in nutrition, in education, in choosing a mate, in distribution of news, entertainment, government and groceries. An army of experts is ready to advise us how to eat, how much to sleep, what car to buy, how to simplify our lives and lower our blood pressure.
Nancy and I were not experts on any of these things, much less on facing life’s most difficult passage, death. This book is our experience, two innocent novices, in dying, death and rebuilding one life where once there had been two. It offers no advice, but simply a window into this most personal, and at the same time universal, of human experiences.
Nancy and I were not experts on any of these things, much less on facing life’s most difficult passage, death. This book is our experience, two innocent novices, in dying, death and rebuilding one life where once there had been two. It offers no advice, but simply a window into this most personal, and at the same time universal, of human experiences.