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Just venting

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  • Debra Lesperance
    Debra Lesperance Member Posts: 1
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    Same things here I am a caregiver of parent and I understand completely thank you for posting
  • dkratochvil
    dkratochvil Member Posts: 2
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    My first time on this site and wish I would have looked sooner. Mixing me up with my DW father has happened several times as has thinking other family members are in the house staying with us. Asking where her family members are is a daily occurrence and I wrongly tell her they are gone to which she replies "I guess you are gone to tell me they are dead again". I am still learning (slowly) on this awful but mostly loving journey. I am the fulltime caretaker (as much as she will allow me) now but we have been married 68 years and have shared our total life together. I dread the future and am still searching for hope to extend our time. These comments are so helpful.

  • dkratochvil
    dkratochvil Member Posts: 2
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    Member

    My first time on this site and wish I would have looked sooner. Mixing me up with my DW father has happened several times as has thinking other family members are in the house staying with us. Asking where her family members are is a daily occurrence and I wrongly tell her they are gone to which she replies "I guess you are gone to tell me they are dead again". I am still learning (slowly) on this awful but mostly loving journey. I am the fulltime caretaker (as much as she will allow me) now but we have been married 68 years and have shared our total life together. I dread the future and am still searching for hope to extend our time. These comments are so helpful.

  • Geot
    Geot Member Posts: 58
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    Hi dkratochvil 

    My DW and I have been married 65 years and what you are experiencing is almost identical to what I experience every day. I am also new to this venue and the great people here has helped me so much in dealing with this horrible disease, I know I often times repeat myself but being able to just vent is so helpful in keeping my sanity. Others here have posted some very helpful reading materials and videos that are extremely helpful….take a little time and look for those.

  • Grenah
    Grenah Member Posts: 10
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    I am eternally grateful for the person who directed me to this site. It is full of understanding, strategies, referrals. My mother often thinks there are people in the house, children, adults, in groups and alone. When she asks either I have not seen them or they have gone home. Lately, she thinks she has a job. She doesn't know where it is, what she does, who her boss is but needs to get her briefcase (she never carried one in her life). I'll ask where this job is or what she does and assure that the office will return her purse and/or briefcase. Trying to get information is helpful and distracts a little from her wanting to leave. It's an ever changing landscape and I think we have only just begun. There were early signs before but when she fell and hit her head the brakes came off the dementia train. The video may prove to be very helpful. Thanks for listening.

  • Jeff H
    Jeff H Member Posts: 144
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    The best advice I have seen is to agree with what your mother thinks she sees. Do not try to say no to what she thinks she sees. It's best to just agree and play out her scenario or try to redirect. I haven't had must success with redirection but It's worth trying. I wish you the best.

  • Geot
    Geot Member Posts: 58
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    I was my DW's dead father for the last couple of days but now this AM I have returned to being her husband, but she is constantly asking me where has her father gone, She is very upset that something may have happened to him and very little I say to calm her isn't working. She tells me that her father has worn my clothes, used my computer, slept in my bed, was in my dresser drawers and of course it was me.

    Just need to vent a little…thanks for listening.

  • howhale
    howhale Member Posts: 291
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    Many of us have been there and often there is nothing that helps but just being there, being patient, loving her and knowing in her heart she loves you. Come and vent often, I sure did.

  • cq001
    cq001 Member Posts: 1
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    I just joined the website and this is my first post. Agree with the comments made. My first reaction when DH is delusional and/or having hallucinations is to make sure he does not have a urinary tract infection. It can result in either or both. However, it is not always the case.
  • Geot
    Geot Member Posts: 58
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    I do try to notice anything health wise and report that to her doctor…..I know she doesn't have the mental capacity to do that herself or will just try to hide it. Her doctor told me that the disease itself is not what will eventually take Altheimer patient's life, but it is always some form of infections…. knowing that I am hyper vigilant.

    Happy Easter to all…

  • Geot
    Geot Member Posts: 58
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    Every now and then my DW does remember some names or incidents that totally surprise me but anything in the present is forgotten fairly quickly. She really has problems with the date and days of the week constantly asking me what day it is, etc…. figuring out the calendar does nothing but confuse her.

  • howhale
    howhale Member Posts: 291
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    So sorry you are suffering through this behavior ut I experienced it also with my DW in her latter stages of the disease. Television became a problem quite often and it came into use less and less often. I finally realized that only programs that had little engagement with the audience were tolerated. Golf was one sport she watched from time to time. No dramas or talk shows as they were talking to her or about her. As she progressed, the television was almost never on because of the agitation it caused. She also experienced much of what you describe with other people, need to go somewhere, need to go "home", an appointment, etc., etc. I found that "participating" at some level with her helped. If I could relieve her immediate agitation by "calling" the other person, going to another room to find them, etc., etc. she would calm and, of course, her short term memory failing kicked in and she moved to something else. Leveraging their short term memory loss proved helpful to get through many similar episodes by going along as best I could to calm her. It worked most of the time but nothing stays the same and there were times when I just had to suffer through. Rationalizing, explaining, trying to "prove" a point, etc., etc. does not help. Try to remember that the short term memory loss can be your helper to calm her so her mind moves on to the next thing. I am sure others can offer other tricks we use and used to help our loved one and ourselves survive.

  • Geot
    Geot Member Posts: 58
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    I can certainly sympathize with a lot of what you are experiencing. My DW often thinks the people in the TV show were in the house with us….when the show switches to a commercial she often times will ask me where those people went that was just here in the room. All of this is very hard to deal with and even with all the great support many here offer not all of it works all of the time…but it is so helpful.

  • howhale
    howhale Member Posts: 291
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    So true that not all the ideas work all of the time. This disease stretches our limits of adaptability, flexibility, creativity, patience and tolerance. The more ideas you have in your tool bag, the better your chance of finding one that helps, but nothing is guaranteed for sure. I had to try one idea after another until I found some that worked, until they did not work any longer, then back here for more ideas. Know that your loved one is not doing whatever their behavior is because they are trying to be difficult. It all makes sense in their world and we have to find the door into their world to help them for they can no longer come into ours. Good luck as you care for your loved one.

  • Grenah
    Grenah Member Posts: 10
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    I spoke to my current home health aide and she is not available after about 6:00 pm. She is taking nursing courses. I don't know if I want to try and find someone else or not. It is someone both my mother and I know, the thought of trying to find someone else is sort of intimidating. Evenings are the worst now. It seems my mother is entering a new phase. Yesterday the wanting to go home started about 3:00 and she was really aggressive. My sister in law had to physically block the door. It took about 2 hours for her to settle down. She was disagreeable, did not want comfort or help. The dementia started about a year ago, the train was in the station. She fell and hit her head and after that it was full blown. She went from my mother to this stranger. It settled down some after that but now it's barely manageable. The form of dementia she has is vascular and someone read that the lifespan for this disease is about 5 years. Don't know how true that is.

    Thanks for listening.

  • Geot
    Geot Member Posts: 58
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    I had a similar incident with my DW waking up one Wednesday morning and wanting to go to church. She would not listen to me telling her there is no church today. She said if I did not take her, she will walk…it's about a half mile and that certainly wasn't going to happen. I had to drive her up to the church to end this delusion.

  • howhale
    howhale Member Posts: 291
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    Sometimes you just have to appear to give-in to their demands to go somewhere. My DW had a spell where she thought she lived somewhere else, a childhood home, and needed to go home. Every effort to help her see the truth was no help. I finally got her into the car and said just give me directions and I will take you there. She gave directions for a while along a path we had driven many times to other places. Then at one point as we ventured a bit farther than completely familiar, she looked at me and said I don't know where we are, can we go home. This happened a few times and just making those drives with her directing and "in control" helped.

  • tboard
    tboard Member Posts: 265
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    My DH had his "people" I have no idea who they were but he would get irritated with me if I got him clean clothes but only enough for one person. Sometimes living with someone who has dementia is like living in a loony bin. Hang in there. None of this is easy.

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