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Talking and doing things together

My DH with Alz often says he misses me . Even though we've been tosh all day. Especially if we've had a particularly quiet day without too much communication between us.

I try to think of things to do together, but not every day. We live by the beach and do take walks together most days.

He has given up most of his hobbies. Now it's mostly playing a game on his phone or scrolling on FB and commenting on political posts.

I do schedule activities for us a few times a month outside of the home.

I find that having a "normal" conversation with him has become draining for me. If I don't talk slow enough or directly to his face he often responds angrily "I can't hear you if your looking away" or "All I heard was blah, blah, blah" or " I have no idea what your talking about" is exhausting and often is easier to just not talk.

But I feel guilty so I at least try to be in the same room. Yet I'm thinking of things I'd like to be doing like working on memory books on the computer, making counseling appointments for myself etc. I've started using him as my excuse as to why I'm not doing these things and then of course become resentful and angry. But of course try to hide those feelings, but don't want to talk about it with him as he wouldn't understand anyway. A vicious circle.

All normal? Ughhh i hate this so.

Sorry this rant got so long. Appreciate all of you here.

Comments

  • Sunfish47
    Sunfish47 Member Posts: 24
    25 Likes 10 Comments 5 Care Reactions
    Member

    My DH is also at this stage of not being able to hold a conversation with me about anything. So sad … previously he was a highly intelligent person with a quick witty sense of humor that always made me laugh. ☹️ Yes this is what it has come to now.
    I do try to face him as I speak slowly, cuz he does have hearing issues (83 yrs old) and it helps. As people start to experience hearing loss they develop the ability to lip read (my mom’s Dr told me this many years ago).

  • Cathy coconis
    Cathy coconis Member Posts: 43
    Fourth Anniversary 10 Comments 5 Likes 5 Care Reactions
    Member

    this sounds so much like my DH with Alz. I miss the communication but you’re right, sometimes it’s just easier to not talk. It’s difficult to repeat over & over & still know he doesn’t get it. He looks like he used to- maybe I should have him wear a sign saying, “Remember I’m the one with Alzheimer’s!”

    Sounds funny but really I expect him to be as he was sometimes- I have to adjust!

    But for all of you here, I get it. How we used to have a life, be active, & now my DH just liked it at home, doing nothing. If we go somewhere he wants to go home right away. He was reading, then stopped; started again when I brought home books he’d like. Read for a while then stopped again.

    Hobbies- gone. At least he likes to ride his lawn mower for now!

    this does all suck, for everyone😕

  • tmmcwilly
    tmmcwilly Member Posts: 9
    First Comment
    Member

    It know it is harder living with your LO with dementia/ALZ. I struggle with both of my parents with mild-moderate Alzheimer’s and they don’t live with me! Here are some ideas for some together time. My mother is an endless question loop, so I find looking at family photographs incl her childhood and my travel pictures on my iPad (so I can expand the faces) helps keep lfamily fresh in her mind. Doing easy puzzles or an ice cream treat are enjoyable for her and don’t drive me to frustration. They can’t talk or listen & eat. Why not include him in your scrapbooking to some extent, show him prize photos and reminisce - he may even surprise you with his recollections — I found that photos are a great memory jog - and perhaps give him two (only) choices on color or design elements.

    Dad can’t enjoy his hobbies or reading any longer and never learned any card or board games. He just wants to have a purpose, a mission, so yard work (not ground weeding of course) like trimming and clearing debris, and herb gardening using raised garden beds (Wayfair has easy to assemble small plastic ones or wood) (and Gardener’s Choice for serious business). Getting another with good drainage, so he can make a butterfly garden. Could also use same for carrots and tomatoes. Etc. I will ask him to help me put Christmas lights on the bushes and mailbox. I may see if he can do writing prompts about his life: see storyworth.com or https://www.getmemowrite.com/ . You can use or tweak their prompts or add your own, one prompt a day.

    He really lives to walk among the trees/park to feed the ducks cheerios. Some elder people at ALFs have small tortoise huts. My mom had cats all her life, so I applied for a grant for a robotic cat she can pet even though she still knows he isn’t real, it is made for the elderly and that purrs, meows and moves it’s head and paws, but you can also turn it off. Good luck.

  • tmmcwilly
    tmmcwilly Member Posts: 9
    First Comment
    Member

    Don’t forget how good playing their kind of music is for their spirits. Create a playlist for hospitalizations. Maybe you can find an old boombox at a thrift shop you can play old CDs or tapes on that could be left playing in the hospital past visiting hours, sweet talk the nurse into playing it.

  • tmmcwilly
    tmmcwilly Member Posts: 9
    First Comment
    Member

    I am glad you are finding some balance RetiredTeacher. It’s better for you, which is also better for him. So many people fall into the rabbit hole forsaking their own identity. And of all people who deserve some me-time, teachers definitely do! ( nurses and first responders, also). 💙

  • sherryandwilliam
    sherryandwilliam Member Posts: 54
    25 Likes 25 Care Reactions 10 Comments First Anniversary
    Member

    That was the hardest for me losing the ablility to have a conversation with my husband that was in his earlier stages of alzheimer, I was used to having him as a sounding board and when I lost that It was a major loss losing his support, Now he can not even get out a coherent few words. I just look at him and smile and say OH yeah, being agreeable seems to work. I feel for you going though this

  • Biggles
    Biggles Member Posts: 566
    500 Likes 500 Care Reactions 500 Comments 100 Insightfuls Reactions
    Member

    We are all in this strange little world of our own together on this wonderful forum, sounds odd but there it is. My DH is the same not interested in anything anymore, can’t do anything, can’t talk, yet here we are, caring doing what we can to make life as comfortable as possible. We must never doubt how important we are, for me this is the most difficult and challenging thing I have ever been faced with and it’s awful. Think I’m tired must go to bed.

  • trottingalong
    trottingalong Member Posts: 815
    Ninth Anniversary 500 Care Reactions 500 Likes 500 Comments
    Member

    Difficult and challenging sure sums it up perfectly. I hope you got some rest.

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