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Anyone With Resentment?

Cat K
Cat K Member Posts: 4
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I'm going to post this before I chicken out. I have been married to my husband for 42 years. Now he has Alzheimer's/vascular dementia. Even in good times he could be difficult to live with, very controlling. Now I am bitterly resentful because I have to take care of him. Has anyone experienced this. I feel guilty and people here may think I'm a horrible person. How do I deal with the bitterness and resentment?

Comments

  • SDianeL
    SDianeL Member Posts: 1,385
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    welcome. No judgment here. Your feelings are understandable and common. Even some caregivers who had wonderful marriages have bitterness and resentment that this terrible disease robbed them of their dreams and plans. It robbed you both. I had a good marriage of almost 39 years. It helped me to look at him as my patient and me his nurse. He was no longer a loving companion. Caring for someone with dementia is mentally and physically exhausting. Maybe you should consider placement in a memory care facility? Or at least respite care so you can take a break. You could also ask for a referral to a Psychologist experienced with dementia for counseling. Please come here often for info, support and to vent.

  • Biggles
    Biggles Member Posts: 360
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    I agree with the above and retired teacher. Don’t feel guilty. The amount of work a caregiver does is enormous and exhausting. I had a great marriage of 50 years before this rotten disease took over. It’s when I hear my ‘friends’ who have abandoned me due to feeling uncomfortable, going off on a cruise, or dinner with friends or a trip that encompasses France, UK, a yacht charter in Turkey then home. That does my head in and I feel so rotten. I figure it’s no good dwelling on what might have been so I just get on with it! Whatever that is planting a tree, baking a cake, dancing in the kitchen to some favourite music. It doesn’t change things but it helps you cope. Vent here we are all in the same boat.

  • marier
    marier Member Posts: 84
    Sixth Anniversary 25 Likes 25 Care Reactions 10 Comments
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    Oh yes restments! I feel so resentful at times and then the guilt sets in! My marriage has had its ups and downs. I never image this would happen to my DH. 13 plus years of caring. I am tired. No end in sight. I do take advantage of respite care and as often as I able. It helps. I am a caregiver now not a wife.

    I hope when DH dies I can cope with the sorrow of his passing and try to find me again!

  • cat911
    cat911 Member Posts: 4
    Fifth Anniversary First Comment
    Member

    Long marriage here, but not soulmates. DH is usually easy to get along with in his VD but when he refuses to take his meds, it sends me over the edge. These comments and postings are good reminders that I’m not the only one who has resentments and anger. I’m 80 and wondering if I should sign up for AL for myself as well as DH. Has anyone done that? Very expensive, but I can afford it for the next 2 years.

  • debriesea
    debriesea Member Posts: 32
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    All of the above. But I would like to strongly recommend to pre-warn all younger couples to “Do it now!”

    Just before we were married in 1972, My husband’s grandfather gave us the best advice. He and his wife had worked all their lives, into their 70’s, with plans to travel when they retired. Then she got Alz and his hips and knees gave out, leaving him in a wheelchair. They never got to travel. He told us “Do it now! Don’t wait until you retire.” We took that advice to heart and have had a very busy, active and traveling lifestyle, dragging our 2 kids along with us. I have no regrets in that aspect. Plus, Alz was very prominent in his family so I wasn't taken by surprise. But THIS IS STILL NOT EASY! And yes, there are still regrets and frustrations and wanting to continue traveling. My heart does have more peace knowing we’ve already had a full life.

    My advice is to let others know as they are starting out, to not wait, but go for life now, everyday.

    I also learned from my Mom to not harbor bitterness. My Dad got Parkinson’s in the mid years of their retirement traveling and she became a very bitter woman. That was something I sure didn’t want to become.

    This is an ugly road we are on but it is comforting to know that we support each other with love and compassion.

  • Dio
    Dio Member Posts: 777
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    Amen to everything you said. I tell my friends and family the same message. "Save some, but spend some, too! Don't wait."

  • Timmyd
    Timmyd Member Posts: 45
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    edited April 15

    There is a Buddhist expression: "You will not be punished for your anger, you will be punished by your anger". I think the same applies to resentment. I have lived long enough to see people who have lived with resentment for large parts of their lives. It do not want to end up like that.

    We were married later in life and had several good years up front. However it seems clear now that the majority of our marriage will be spent managing this disease. Having married later in life, I had seen enough to understand what the vows meant. I took them very seriously, and here we are.

  • White Crane
    White Crane Member Posts: 987
    Eighth Anniversary 500 Care Reactions 250 Likes 500 Comments
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    My DH is in MC. We have been married 57 years. When I think about our life together, sometimes the rough times flood my memory and I start to feel resentful. Then I remember all the good times. Our golden years are definitely not what I imagined they would be. I have had to learn to accept that. I hate the disease but I still love my husband. Resentments are too costly on me emotionally an physically though so I try to let go of them. I hope you can find some help so you can be more at peace. Sending hugs.

  •  Bridge4
    Bridge4 Member Posts: 27
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    Resentment is very understandable, especially when many years of caregiver sacrifice are stacked upon years of a less-than-loving marriage. But we must all try to dig deep and not give in to the temptation. It’s like the “sirens song” that draws the sailors in, only to kill them on the rocks. Resentment can lead to a fatal, downward spiral with what’s left of our lives. Despite the immense sadness, frustration, and anger that can come from caregiving for a dementia spouse, I feel the best hope for a brighter future is if we accept the past as part of our life’s journey- good and bad. By taking some responsibility for our destiny we can remind ourselves that it is up to us to make decisions now and going forward (despite protests from our LO) that give us some control over the outcomes, and a hope for better days ahead.

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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