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Just Sad

Biggles
Biggles Member Posts: 519
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I think this is the saddest and lowest I have felt for a while. It has just struck me how quiet it is in the house if I’m not talking or prattling on or the radio isn’t turned on. My darling DH with Aphasia, VD, now bent over most of the time and creeping silently around the house, it’s quite awful. I’m getting tired, the weather is getting hot, 35c tomorrow; if I can’t think of anything to do or anywhere to go I feel trapped in the house. It will change I know and I have so much to be thankful for but I’m tired of the silence and no meaningful conversation. We should have been at Sailability today but it was cancelled due to technical problems. We are going sailing tomorrow on a friends Elliott 40’. Her husband is non verbal, quadriplegic in a wheelchair. She has been working for weeks to prepare for this I have been trying to help. She is out of her comfort zone skippering but knows it’s up to her. I am looking forward to this but my DH is kind of unaware and it’s hard work. I want to take him just hope I don’t get too much pushback. I just want to cry does that sound indulgently pathetic, that’s how I feel. Please don’t tell me what to do I am so glad I have somewhere I can let it all out.

Comments

  • Metta
    Metta Member Posts: 67
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    We all need to let it out. Then we come about and push off to set sail again. Hugs and love to you.

  • howhale
    howhale Member Posts: 95
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    You are safe here to share your feelings and frustrations. What you feel is "What You Feel". It can be unlike what anyone else feels so it may be unique, but that is true for each of us. And yet, we are all part of the same "family" each feeling their own way. You established your position when you refer to your spouse as "your darling DH". Let that feeling guide each step forward together, only your heart knows the truth for you and your spouse.

  • Biggles
    Biggles Member Posts: 519
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    Thank you for your kind and understanding words. It’s awful when you feel so low.

  • WIGO23
    WIGO23 Member Posts: 217
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    I hear you. My deep sadness never goes away. I have moments of feeling maybe a quarter normal (not half) or maybe even a few hours on a good day. But every single day I wake up I think, “Oh no, another day to get through”. The silence in our house is deafening. The emptiness is profound. The struggle to do anything other than what is absolutely necessary is challenging. I hear you.

  • trottingalong
    trottingalong Member Posts: 772
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    You always manage to put into words how I often feel. I hope you are out sailing today and enjoying the feel of the water under your feet. There’s nothing like it.

  • CindyBum
    CindyBum Member Posts: 530
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    Big, big hug.

  • tonyac2
    tonyac2 Member Posts: 99
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    Same here, waves of gloom and profoundly sad. I have this sadness that always seems to be on the back burner as I put on my happy face for my DH. I don’t want him to see me sad so I hide it from him as I try to make each day the best day ever. I dearly miss our conversations together. Getting his opinion on things and experience. I miss my DH and hate what this disease has done to him and our marriage.

  • ronda b
    ronda b Member Posts: 284
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    So glad to here I'm not the only one that feels that way. No more pleasant chats over coffee in the morning . Just quiet or him telling me something I did wrong or I need to do.

  • annie51
    annie51 Member Posts: 432
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    This was one of my down days, so I guess misery loves company - and you all are the best company to have because you understand completely. You also express your thoughts and feelings so well that I could just copy/paste. 😁

  • SDianeL
    SDianeL Member Posts: 2,295
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    yes we understand. Love & hugs. 💜

  • Karen711
    Karen711 Member Posts: 173
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    I hear you Biggles! Hope you guys were able to get out for the sail! Sending a big hug! ❤️‍🩹

  • Maru
    Maru Member Posts: 195
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    sending hugs.

  • Grandot
    Grandot Member Posts: 21
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    it is so helpful to know others feel the way I do. Some days are okay to good but others I can hardly put one foot in front of the other. My LO was told this week he can’t drive. He is furious at everyone! We are entering a very difficult phase! Prayers keep me going. God is faithful!

  • RetiredTeacher
    RetiredTeacher Member Posts: 209
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    What an incredible poem filled with brutally raw emotions. I could feel the heartache and anguish you describe. The love you feel for your wife is palpable and permeates every line. I felt guilty as I was reading it and reflecting on my own situation. I do long for some time alone but as you poignantly explained, I need to rethink that. Our time on earth is fleeting and I will be devastated when DH is gone. I do my best to make every day good for him but I need to have more patience and remind myself these are the best of the days we have left. Ty for posting your beautiful poem and giving all of us a reality check. I know your wife is in a better place and you will be with her again one day. Healing 🙏

  • CindyBum
    CindyBum Member Posts: 530
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    edited October 5

    While I absolutely appreciate the reminders that frustration, reasoning or sadness can be unhelpful in caring with people with dementia, I finally let go of the idea that it's reasonable to expect that of a 24/7 caregiver. If you think about a 100% rate, it's simply ludicrous to imagine for most of us. I'm sure there are saints among us, but most of us are not. I am in the not category. I do my best and have decided it's absolutely ok to forgive myself immediately for having any of those reactions occasionally. Heck, my DW probably forgets about it before I do. When she doesn't, I just apologize again and off we go.

    Case in point — I'm on hour 38 of hardly any sleep, constant jabbering and wandering and I'm about to lose my damn mind. You think I'm going to beat myself if I get a little frustrated after washing and changing the bed sheets twice in less that 24 hours, cooking all the meals, cleaning up after all of them but for breakfast this morning and having my wife trying to force me to do the dishes with her right now? I haven't shown her the frustration, but I can feel it poking at me right now as I just watched her put a carton of 1/2 & 1/2 in a drawer.

    Please shoot for your best and forgive yourself as quickly as you can when you haven't reached sainthood today.

  • howhale
    howhale Member Posts: 95
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    You are quite correct that our loved one forgets our slippage much more quickly and easily than we do but in those moments of solitude, rare they may be, it is not easy for one who truly loves to forget. The demands of being the 24/7 caregiver, even when you might have assistance for short periods, never ease up in our minds. Love trumps our ability to easily forget our transgression. Even now, approaching two months after her passing, those innocent and understandable failures in my behavior haunt me. In our home there was but one saint and she has now departed leaving me with my memories and regrets to cloud the happy ones. Understanding that our loved one moves past our failings quickly is what enables us to forge ahead in providing care until the time our care is no longer required. In my case, it is then that every weakness, every failure, every slippage pushes to the forefront of my memories. It is that which drives my, never to be fulfilled, prayer for just one more day to tell her I tried, I tried so hard, but I failed too often and I just want that second to know in my mind that she hears my apology one last time. I guess that would help my closure and, absent that, I will have to work harder to forgive myself and move forward. I thought the caregiving demands were the hardest thing I would ever have to experience but, again, I was wrong about this disease. It is what comes after, the grief, the silence, the loneliness, the pain in my heart, the tears that flow all too often, the missing her that overshadows the caregiving demands.

  • NLS2012
    NLS2012 Member Posts: 2
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    Wow, this is so powerful. I grieve for my DH of old, and most days angry about the DH who is still here. I shamefully admit that there are moments while he is sleeping, that I listen for his breathing and am disappointed when I hear it. I dream and dread what life would be without him, yet I do know how to dream or plan for the present. I can’t make plans to go to a football game or a class or even a gathering without first securing care for my DH. My options are slim to none despite him having a large family. I’m trying hard to find the joyful moments and have no regrets. I am so glad you shared your poem.

  • Bailey's Mom
    Bailey's Mom Member Posts: 164
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    CindyBum, thank for your very honest comments. I am not in the saint category either. My HWD takes every moment of every day and is mean and nasty most of the time plus he has zero empathy left. Like everyone else here I have had to give up my friends and all of the activities that I love and enjoy. I have learned to just sit and endure his hours of verbal abuse each day even though I think "how dare you say those things to me". I have no help and am stuck with him 24/7 and am exhausted, depressed and over it. By the end of the day I can hardly bear it and sometimes lose it, which i instantly regret because it starts a lecture that could last for hours. Anyway…I don't feel as bad knowing that there are other 'non-saints' out there!

  • howhale
    howhale Member Posts: 95
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    Reading so many of these threads and how so many of us struggle and often have feelings of regret or sorrow in our behavior makes me think that I am among angels and saints on the forum. Anyone who sacrifices all of their life to care for a loved one with this horrible disease in all it's ugly forms has to be among the angels and saints walking on this earth. Maybe saints and angels do make mistakes, never met one outside this life so I don't really know. Maybe I will get to find out someday if I behave myself but I will not be surprised to learn then that those angels and saints also make mistakes. For now, I believe that I live and walk among the closest thing on this earth ever to saints and angels within this forum.

  • ronda b
    ronda b Member Posts: 284
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    Isn't it strange that for a caregiver the first thought in the morning is our LO. And the last thought at night. Not what you are going to do.

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
Read more