Family member's death
Comments
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Her belief is a very difficultt perception to have out there. However, it is likely similar to bad people coming and stealing things in the middle of the night or feeling like a stranger is living on another floor of the house. I would offer to listen. Listen, and then distract and by distract, I mean try really hard. Try sweets, a visitor, a baby doll, a dog, an old family album, putting your arm in a sling—something very obvious that could move her thoughts in a different direction. Please hang in there.
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Hello,
How is her memory? Does she know he’s passed, or ask about him without being aware? Is there something that reminds her to ask if he’s passed? A lot of times it will help to remove or avoid whatever’s triggering the discussions.
You may find it hard to correct her ideation about his suicide, as the disease will make her very sure that she knows what she knows.At the end of the day there’s no point in having her grieve over and over. It may feel odd at first, but the gentlest way can be to deflect discussions and/or to tell her a believable fib about why he’s absent rather than the truth. I told my mom for several months that her good friend was 'in rehab after she tripped and fell'.
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She wants to go to the funeral. I wonder if having this new memory with positive associations - closure, close relationships with surviving family members - can help replace this disturbing false memory.
Thoughts?
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She may be working from a memory from years ago or be confusing his death with someone else's, and that certainty can be hard to dislodge.
If her dementia is primarily Alzheimer's then she'll be losing her ability to store much new information about what she sees or hears daily. Even If she's able to remember the positive emotions of seeing the family, that probably won't reset the default information her brain is telling her. But, this disease is unique to each person, so…
She'll be working hard to handle the interactions and keep up with conversations at the funeral. It never hurts to have a plan B if she starts to seem too overwhelmed.
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Commonly Used Abbreviations
DH = Dear Husband
DW= Dear Wife, Darling Wife
LO = Loved One
ES = Early Stage
EO = Early Onset
FTD = Frontotemporal Dementia
VD = Vascular Dementia
MC = Memory Care
AL = Assisted Living
POA = Power of Attorney
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