I feel like start running and not look back!
Hello,
I haven't been back here for a while. Today is been a bad day seeing my husband behavior. He was diagnosed with MCD on Jan 2023, he’s been taking the pills since then, I never expected the pills to do a significant change BTW, his memory has gotten worse but it's not that what is driving me mad.
He spends all his waking hours, which sometimes go until 1-2am, working outside in the yard (this is AZ, 3 digits heat now) on his "projects". The problem is those projects always result in leaving the yard worse than it was, look at the photos. These are from the latest one: a water feature he was going to built among the retaining wall rocks. The first one is from when I thought he was finished with it, is nothing like you'd expect a water feature to be but I thought thanks God he’s done with it. The second photo is from today when he’s undone all that and he keeps digging
around for what? I don't know. Then he’s breaking the cement on the border of the patio bricks, if I ask why he draws a blank.
Selling the house would be the only way to get money in the event he lives long enough for the disease to get to the last stage and I won't accept to be his only caregiver since we have no family to rely on. I feel so stressed thinking how his doing will decrease the value of the house.
What can I do?
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That’s my concern will there be enough money? Yes! If we sell the house but then where do I live?
I’m angry that I may have to sell the house but he would do it for me. How selfish is that? But I am tired and starting to see more changes.
Please clarify. What is the role of a social worker? What can they do for a caretaker? I am realizing that I can't do this by myself. I don't ask for love, recognition of being my husband's wife or even appreciation, but I do want him to cooperate ...going to bed for example. I see that the push back is becoming more and more stringent. I get upset and that ruins my night's rest. He doesn't want to take his pills, change into pjs, brush his teeth. Just civilized behavior. He wants to roll into bed with his street clothes on and nothing else done. He was always a strong -willed child, a self- centered man, so this behavior mixed with ALZ should be no surprise. The way he just stands around and watches me get ready for bed with a smirk on his face, leads me to believe that he is being passive/aggressive. Yes, we have a guest room and bath; that may be my next step. 57 years is a long time to share a bed, but the time is coming to make a change. The problem is that he can't do the nighttime routine ..needs assistant to get it figured out, so leaving him on his own won't get the job done.
A friend's husband just died of Parkinson's after 15 months in a nursing home .(Montpelier, VT). She doesn't regret her decision one bit; it kept her sane. She did struggle with guilt when he said he wanted to go home, but she stayed the course and was able to visit him rested and in good spirits leaving the care to the professionals. She is now in the next chapter of being a widow. Yes, she misses him; he was mostly lucid and always knew and loved her, but she knows she did the right thing by placing him in a good facility..for him and for her. These diseases don't just affect the patient. The family is affected too; specifically the spouse. Each one of us has to make a decision. I am leaning toward memory care myself. If my husband's belligerence won't allow me to help him, then I'll have to get someone who can. I will be sad for him, but I will have no guilt.
@billiekip - I am distraught for you & your situation.
To clarify: I am not in a situation as a caregiver; I am the one getting desperate for an expression of care from my partner.
I pay for 99% of everything, b/c I can (& am comfortable with that if this were an emotionally rewarding relationship). Up until 4 years ago, that was not the case: for our first 6 years we "dated", did things together mostly on weekends (we lived 28 miles away fm each other), split everything, etc. but we were not living together then, and both of us were working.
I'm not wanting to change the topic, but it hurts to hear of others in emotionally neutral, one-sided situations. Even if a medical or mental condition is the cause.
I won't offer any solution here, as each & every single situation is different.
I do feel that caring for a loved one is part of the dynamic of relationships. But I do believe in limits, especially when there are options with other/additional caregivers/visitors/facilities.
We are in that situation with our mother (my sibling & I). Fortunately we have resources to draw on for this.
And now I'm in pain b/c my own committed relationship is not emotionally reciprocal, esp. under challenging circumstances.
I always said 'you can be more lonely with one person than on your own.'
I'm 67 and I want to interact with an engaged partner. Discussing this with him hasn't made a bit of a difference, in fact it's only gotten worse.
I'll leave it at that for now.
Everyone in these caregiving / end-of-life situations has my empathy and I applaud your endurance.
But there are limits, and to each her own.
Hugs.
If I were in your shoes, I would consider myself an independent entity and find a 3 tiered living situation. My friend just moved to one..she has an apartment now, but assisted living and nursing units are available without her having to leave the facility. Care is guaranteed for your lifetime. What you had together was great, but change happens, and your needs are different now. These memory diseases can't be cured and the trajectory changed, I'm sorry to say. Take the time while you still have the physical strength to change your situation and get your ducks in a row. You want to make decisions for yourself while you are able to. Do the best thing for yourself. Put yourself first and foremost. Take care of you. Had the tables been turned, and I had ALZ instead of my husband, I can't imagine what would have happened to me. Taking care of others has never been in his wheelhouse. Doing projects like painting his mom's apartment..fine. But personal, physical care. Nope.
I'm still waiting for the appointment with the social worker, she was booked until October. I was told by the neurologist that the SW was there to help the family with "coping strategies" to deal with the everyday tensions caused by the disease. I will post as soon as I have the appointment.
I'm sorry if this is inappropriate to ask, but couldn't you put him in a care facility? Or hire help at least for the night shift? I know all that is outrageously expensive, but if you have the means.......
It is not selfish at all, when the times comes for my husband I just pray that selling the house, as a last resource, will give me enough money to keep him in a facility. We have to put our well-being first, when they go who would take care of us ( I mean wives like me who didn't have any children) if we end in bad health ourselves b/c of having endured years and years of that kind of stress?
You've got this. Chose the best outcome for the most people. Send you the virtual hug!
Hi @jmg60, there is so much truth in what you've posted.
I watched my mom struggle with my dad's dementia. She had two caregivers in the house for a while from an agency, but it was still a nightmare. One caregiver's boyfriend got out of jail, then shot her son. She had borrowed $10 from my mom, paid her back and left with $200 "borrowed" that my mom knew she would never get back. The other woman was good with my father, she disappeared and the police went to my mom's house looking for her. My dad went into a care home. My mom died two years after he did.
We caregivers all have to face the inevitable. There is no shame in it. There are limits to what we personally can do for our loved ones, especially in our later years and with our own health challenges.