Hilda Duddridge made a promise to her husband of nearly 75 years and she won鈥檛 let the COVID-19 pandemic get in the way.
鈥淚 said I鈥檇 look after him until the day he died,鈥 said Hilda, 95.
When Lew Duddridge moved into a care home two years ago after turning 100, Hilda kept her promise with daily visits. After she tucks him in at night, she tells Lew she鈥檒l be back to see him the next day.
On March 16, the care home banned all visitors in an attempt to protect vulnerable residents from COVID-19.
That鈥檚 not stopping Hilda from making the trip from their Langford condo to the care home in Victoria to see Lew.
She climbs 18 steps to a second-floor balcony, where Lew meets her at the window.
With Lew on the phone inside and Hilda on the other end outside, it鈥檚 just like having a visit together, Hilda said.
His face lights up when she shows him his favourite chocolates, which she puts by the door for staff to collect when she leaves.
鈥淗e was smiling and blew kisses,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 imagine how in the world I could not see him.鈥
To Hilda, their new routine shows that everyone is adaptable and that attitude 鈥 and love 鈥 is everything.
鈥淚t just proves that we can get through anything, if you have patience and look on the bright side,鈥 she said, adding, 鈥淟ove is the answer to everything. Love makes the world go 鈥檙ound.鈥
As a war bride from Wales who moved to Lew鈥檚 small Prairie town, far from her family and the ocean she loved, Hilda knows something about adapting.
The two met on a train platform in October 1944 in England during an air raid and a blackout.
Lew asked to carry Hilda鈥檚 suitcase. She was impressed by his uniform. The next day he showed up for a date, and a week later he proposed.
They married a few months later, before Lew was redeployed to Japan. When the war ended, Hilda boarded a boat with their baby daughter and sailed to sa国际传媒 to reunite with her husband.
She arrived at her new home in Hanley, Sask., where they had an outdoor toilet, dirt roads and no running water.
鈥淚t was a bit of a shock, but you adapt. You make the best of it,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e made life exciting.鈥
The couple raised four children, and when their nest emptied, they went on adventures around the world. Lew was a pilot and flew the two of them around the continent, from Victoria to Central America and back, on an eight-month adventure.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e a team,鈥 said daughter Glenys Berry. She鈥檚 proud of her mother鈥檚 attitude that 鈥渓ove will keep us all going,鈥 and of her father for being the kind of person who gets things done.
Like his wife, Lew, had to adapt to difficult situations during his long life. A year after he was born, both of his parents caught the Spanish Flu and Lew was sent to live with an uncle until they recovered. When his family lost their house during the Depression, he hopped a train to find work and send money home to his parents. Then he enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air Force and went to war.
The family had planned a party to celebrate Hilda and Lew鈥檚 75th wedding anniversary next week, but they鈥檝e had to adapt to the times.
When April 2 rolls around, Hilda will climb the steps outside and go to the window to see Lew, separated by glass.
She knows it鈥檚 only temporary.
鈥淭hings will get better, if we鈥檙e patient,鈥 Hilda said. 鈥淚t will be lovely again to go and see him.鈥