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The Children of COVID
Updated on Mar 12, 2021;
Published on Mar 09, 2021
Pamela Addison kisses her son Graeme, 14 months, as her daughter Elsie, 2, looks up to the heavens while they play in their Waldwick backyard. Pamela Addison s husband, Martin, 44, died in April from COVID-19. Aristide Economopoulos | NJ Advance Media
Little Elsie Addison watched through the window as the ambulance took her daddy away.
The 2-year-old with bright blue eyes and her father’s electric smile had been blissfully unaware of the coronavirus pandemic. She just knew her daddy was sick.
“Papa coughing,” Elsie would say in her sweet toddler voice as her father isolated in his bedroom.
These young widows who lost their spouses to COVID-19 are grieving through a Facebook group Share Updated: 6:51 PM EST Jan 29, 2021 By Nora Neus, CNN Share Updated: 6:51 PM EST Jan 29, 2021
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Show Transcript He just always carried on this, like light into a room. Frank was like a huge teddy bear. He was going to take me Teoh a lighthouse on our sixth anniversary. But it was a total surprise and I didn t even find out about it until he passed away. He just he made me a better person. Whitney, Pamela, Christina and Diana have never met, but they have had toe welcome each other to a club none want to be a part of. He called me and he was like, sobbing. And I ve never heard my husband cry And he just said He s so scared. Their husbands, all young Onley in their thirties or forties, are all now dead. I just remember going I just got a call two days ago. Oh, he was doing better. Like what? It all happened so fast. These air, the Wome
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January 29, 2021 1:47 PM By Nora Neus, CNN
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Updated:
February 4, 2021 8:53 AM
When Pamela Addison’s husband died from Covid-19 last April at age 44, she felt completely alone. She didn’t know anyone her age who’d lost someone to Covid, and she hadn’t seen stories about people as young as her husband, Martin, dying from the virus.
That was, at least, until she opened a sympathy card from a woman she had never met.
“You are not alone,” the card began.
“And at that moment, the weight of feeling alone was lifted, because now there was someone else who understood,” Addison told CNN’s Poppy Harlow.