Al Roker’s wife Deborah can’t hold back her tears

Deborah Roberts, Al Roker’s wife, isn’t in such a good mood despite the fact that Al made his long-awaited comeback to the Today show the previous week following his difficult struggle with his health. This has put Him in a better mood.

Only a few days after her husband made his triumphant comeback to television, the ABC journalist came to Instagram and said that she was feeling “sad” and “let down” since she had to put away her festive decorations. She claimed that her “Christmas cheer” is now in the past for her.

Deborah uploaded three pictures to her website, one of which showed her and her boyfriend Al grinning broadly in front of their Christmas tree. The second picture featured a close-up of the tree, illuminating its many lights in brilliant detail.

In the third picture, there was an empty space in the corner of their living room that had previously been occupied by the tree. “Well, I guess that’s all. ” She captioned the photographs with the phrase, “Christmas happiness from 2022 in the rear-view mirror coupled with so much more.”

“Yet, I never fail to experience a pang of melancholy whenever I remove the shine. Anybody else? Deborah added.

Following her appearance with Al on Friday’s episode of Today, where she discussed his “life-threatening” sickness and revealed that he had undergone a seven-hour operation and lost half of his blood due to an internal hemorrhage, the TV star has now posted about the experience online.

It was discovered that Al’s problems began “as a few stomach pains” before worsening to the point where he had blood clots in his lungs. The blood clots in his lungs are thought by the medical staff to have been caused by his having COVID-19 in September.

In addition, he suffered from internal bleeding, which led to an operation that uncovered two ulcers that were bleeding. “I’ve lost more than half of my blood. “They were trying to figure out where it was,” he said of his medical team at the NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center. “They were trying to figure out where it was.”

In addition to resecting Al’s colon and removing his gallbladder, the surgeons also performed surgery on Al’s duodenum, which is a portion of the small intestine. This caused the procedure to last for a total of seven hours.

Al made light of the situation by joking, “I went in for one operation, and I got four free.”