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Way forward

Kit_Kat
Kit_Kat Member Posts: 5
25 Care Reactions First Comment
Member

Hello,

I am here to join one of the worst clubs.

I’ve been having a hard time lately, especially because my husband has started to accept—without much resistance—that he needs help. That’s not like him. I mentioned adult day care, and he said we should talk about it.

He is legally blind and was diagnosed when he was around 35 (legally blind).

Mild cognitive impairment late 50s. He can't recite months backward, etc.

I used to think cancer was the worst disease someone could get. Now I think dementia is the hardest—for the family.

And yet, if he’s lucky, he won’t fully understand what’s happening. I don’t know how this will progress. I once thought he would be completely blind by now, and that hasn’t happened.

Yesterday we watched an old episode of House. It was about a woman who brought her husband—who had young-onset Alzheimer’s, in his forties—to the hospital for an experimental drug. It was difficult but useful to watch. At one point, the man struck his wife, and my husband said that people should be institutionalized when that happens. I can’t imagine him ever doing something like that, but conversations like these remind me of what I know he would want.

I’ve always taken care of everything myself. This is as much as I can bring myself to write.

I try not to dwell on it. There are children working in sweatshops. I joke that I should write really depressing Hallmark cards. Still, I believe there’s a lesson in all of this. I look for it—the chance to grow, to become a better person.

Most of the time, though, it still feels unreal.

Comments

  • Russinator
    Russinator Member Posts: 309
    Third Anniversary 100 Care Reactions 100 Likes 100 Comments
    Member

    (HUGS))

  • Kit_Kat
    Kit_Kat Member Posts: 5
    25 Care Reactions First Comment
    Member

    Thank you for the kind words. I am sorry to compare misery. It's how I cope. Though it has allowed me to not seek help as " I don't have it that bad." I have learned more about myself, life, and marriage. You can't put off living.

  • Call me Gram
    Call me Gram Member Posts: 141
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    Member
    edited April 18

    Oh, Kit_Kat… my dark-humor side is hanging on to your words. I can see the card now… "Don't put off living, because you'll be dead before you know it." (Too morbid? Sorry. 😘) I could have a lot of fun with this idea of depressing Hallmark cards.

    Sending you lots of love and praying you find joy in the midst of this unexpected journey.

    Gram

  • Call me Gram
    Call me Gram Member Posts: 141
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    Member
    edited April 18

    This is beautiful, CindyBum. You could write a book. I think your perspective is unique and it could help so many people. Your response to and growth through this experience is humbling and inspiring (and your sense of humor in so many of your posts has lifted my spirits more than once).

    Thank you for sharing your life with us.

    Gram

  • Russinator
    Russinator Member Posts: 309
    Third Anniversary 100 Care Reactions 100 Likes 100 Comments
    Member

    CindyBum: Gram took the words out of my mouth.

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