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Moved husband to memory care and he just wants me

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I brought my husband, who is in stage 6, to a memory care facility yesterday and today the director called me. I wasn't really surprised because my main concern was how dependent he is on me and how much he loves being home. Today, there was a woman who looked like me visiting another resident and he thought she was me and that I ignored him. He couldn't settle so the director called so he could speak with me. I confirmed that I was not there, but he wanted me to pick him up and to come home . When I left him yesterday afternoon I told him I was going to a retreat and would see him soon. He asked, how soon, two days? So I said yes. So today, early afternoon, he said I had been gone for so long and he wanted to come home. I said I would see him soon but not today, that I was still at the retreat. It took a long time to calm him down.

Any advice? I don't plan to go for another two days and I will check in with the director before I go. In the meantime I have a fitness trainer visiting him for a session and one of his friends will drop by. Thanks for any help!

Comments

  • terei
    terei Member Posts: 703
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    You may want to tell the staff to tell him you are at a retreat and there are no phones, repeat, repeat, repeat. He needs to get involved at the facility + that may take some weeks of no or minimal contact. If you do visit, have excuses ready. That may mean telling him you have to have a ‘procedure’ yourself or some other excuse…just use one that prevents you from picking him up.

  • harshedbuzz
    harshedbuzz Member Posts: 5,430
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    @Shorething

    It would be better if the narrative took the decision for him to come home out of your hands. We told dad he was in rehab on his doctor's orders which meant we couldn't take him home as it was up to someone else. This also allowed us to validate his feelings by saying we wished he could come home, too.

    HB

  • Shorething
    Shorething Member Posts: 6
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    Thank you so much. This is really helpful. I appreciate you responding.

  • l7pla1w2
    l7pla1w2 Member Posts: 287
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    It's possible the desire to go home may never completely disappear. DW has been in MC for 3 months now, and she says she wants to go home every time I visit. She also frequently collects her things on her bed, preparing to leave. That behavior is gradually fading.

    Painful as it is, prepare to stick with it, have a story, enlist the staff to reinforce the story.

  • Shorething
    Shorething Member Posts: 6
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    Thanks so much for taking the taking the time to respond. I can try something like this. Very helpful.

  • Shorething
    Shorething Member Posts: 6
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    That must be so hard. It is good to know to expect that. Thank you for sharing your experience. This is one hard road.

  • SDianeL
    SDianeL Member Posts: 1,827
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    it takes weeks sometimes for them to settle in. Many with dementia who live at home say they want to go home due to their anxiety. Home is not a place it’s a feeling. He may never stop wanting to go home. Make up fibs and keep repeating them. When you do visit, visit at mealtime for distraction for him. When you leave don’t say goodbye, just quietly leave and let the nurse know you’re leaving so they can distract him. What HB said about blaming the doctor usually works. Or try there is no AC at home or the roof is being repaired and he can’t come home yet.

  • Shorething
    Shorething Member Posts: 6
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    Thanks so much for your perspective and advice. I haven't visited yet though a friend has and says he likes it there. Your fiblets are great examples for me to follow.

  • l7pla1w2
    l7pla1w2 Member Posts: 287
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    I think the guilt will fade once you come to terms with the fact that your DH will be safe and attended by people who know how to work with PWD. So it will be a better situation for him and for you. What you will almost certainly feel is sad, sad for what you've lost, sad about your DH's condition.

  • lenbury
    lenbury Member Posts: 38
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    The concept of 'home' is very abstract for my wife. Even though I am caring for her at home she often says that she wants to go home. When I ask her where 'home' is she changes the subject -- just another strange manifest of the disease.

  • weareallunique
    weareallunique Member Posts: 85
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    Home can be the feeling it gives - safe - that their brain's decay keeps them from feeling. Also, their minds can be back where they lived as a young adult, child…. One of my PWDs thinks "home" is their childhood city and that I live there - I've never visited , indeed was born after they moved from there . Kind of a Billy Joel song ….New York State of Mind ….

    ℗ 1976 Columbia Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment

    "It comes down to reality
    And it's fine with me 'cause I've let it slide
    Don't care if it's Chinatown or on Riverside
    I don't have any reasons
    I've left them all behind
    I'm in a New York state of mind"

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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