Stephen “tWitch” Boss’ widow Allison Holker made her first Instagram post on Wednesday following his tragic suicide.
Holker, 34, posted a selfie of the couple smiling, and wrote, “My ONE and ONLY Oh how my heart aches. We miss you so much.”
Prior to Wednesday’s post, Holker’s last post was a video of her and Boss dancing together in front of their Christmas tree just three days before his death on Dec. 13.
“HOLIDAY SUNDAY FUNDAY DANCE !!! With my lover @sir_twitch_alot,” she captioned the video, which is now flooded with comments from celebrities and fans sending their condolences.
Boss’ mother, Connie Boss Alexander, also posted a heartbreaking tribute to her late son Tuesday on her Instagram Story.
“Oh if only I could FT to heaven…” she wrote atop a screenshot of them FaceTiming.
Officials said Holker was adamant about how strange it was that Boss had left their Los Angeles home without any notice before his death. A housekeeper at the Oak Tree Inn — a hotel located less than a mile from his residence — would later find him dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head in one of the rooms.
Holker and Boss met on Fox’s “So You Think You Can Dance.” They married on Dec. 10, 2013, and had celebrated their ninth anniversary just before his death.
The spouses also co-hosted “Disney’s Fairy Tale Weddings” on Disney+ since 2018. They share three children: Weslie, 14, Maddox, 6, and Zaia, 3.
In a statement to The Post confirming her husband’s death, Holker wrote: “It is with the heaviest of hearts that I have to share my husband Stephen has left us.”
“Stephen lit up every room he stepped into. He valued family, friends and community above all else and leading with love and light was everything to him. He was the backbone of our family, the best husband and father, and an inspiration to his fans,” she added.
Boss was a DJ on Ellen DeGeneres’ eponymous daytime series, a gig he started in 2014, and he was elevated to executive producer in 2020. He stayed with her until the finale of the embattled show in the spring of 2022.
Boss left a suicide note that alluded to prior challenges he faced before his death, according to a report last week.
If you or someone you know is affected by any of the issues raised in this story, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-TALK (8255) or text Crisis Text Line at 741741.