Find Senior Care (City or Zip)
Join Now Log In
P
Pumpkinspice Posted October 2022

Losing a loved one to dementia

This is not a question, it’s more of a rant if I can even call it that, because this is the only site I know of where I know people will be able to relate. Losing a loved one to dementia is so incredibly painful. Something that I don't feel is talked about enough in culture or society. I'm currently going through this with my aunt who I use to be very close to. Now because of dementia I can't be close to her. And I have it easy compared to most. She's not nasty or difficult to get along with. She's just so out of it now. It's so painful to watch. And the fact that there is nothing I can do to stop it makes it even worse. She has deteriorated so rapidly. Just two years ago, she was the smartest person I knew. Yesterday, I sent her a text just saying I love you. Today she called me and said "I'm not ignoring you, I just haven't been able to figure out how to text you back." She has had this phone for over a year now, but she's forgetting how to use it. Now it looks like she's lost the ability to text. She's the one who got me into texting many years ago when texting first became a thing 😥.


The worst part is, I can't be there for her because dementia has clouded her judgement so much that she lets my homeless, drug addict cousin stay with her, and I have a restraining order against him because he is out of control and has assaulted me in the past. So, I just have to love her from a distance and only communicate with her over the phone, which she is quickly forgetting how to use. Maybe someone will read this and relate. Maybe nobody will. But if you can relate to it, just know that my heart breaks for you.

freqflyer Oct 2022
Pumpkinspice, dementia is so sad to watch. I remember my Dad, who was in his 90's, starting to show "sundowning". He would call me at home saying he was in meetings the whole day and had missed the last bus back to home.... so he will stay at the hotel. The "hotel" was his senior facilities. In his mind he was thinking he was back in the 1940's. So I just played along any time he did such a call.

It was also sad to see Dad not able to use his computer. As a hobby he use to do computer code for software programs that he created. He was heartbroken as technology was moving faster than he was able to learn. Even I was having problems learning it, and here in the past I have done beta testing for new software.

Forget about cellphones. I knew my Dad wouldn't use one as his brain was ingrained with how to use the landline, so is my brain. Dad had a portable landline phone but he kept forgetting to set it in the cradle to charge, would forget to turn off the phone after a call, would misplace it, things just weren't simple any more, dementia or not. He went back to the sit on the desk and wall phone landline, hello old friend :)

Even I no longer text on my cellphone. It is so much quicker to just call someone. I just have it for emergencies if I am on the road, it's my phonebooth in my purse, just wish it would cost only 25 cents to make a call. Maybe it is time for your Aunt to go back to a landline, she could use it blindfolded :)

Fawnby Oct 2022
I'm concerned about your homeless drug-addict cousin staying with her. You mention that he's out of control and has attacked you. If your aunt is forgetting how to communicate with the outside world, I don't think she should be alone with this person. It's impossible to know what a violent addict will do, and she's very vulnerable now. I hope you can stay out of his way but take this a step further and make sure she is safe. And yes, I do relate to the fact that people don't talk about how hard dementia is. They have no idea until they've dealt with it, and some just step away. I have a friend who could never relate to how much I'd been through taking care of my parents even though she's normally a kind and caring person and her father died of it (but she didn't help due to distance and trauma from the way he treated her). Ironically, I suspect that she now has dementia herself.

ADVERTISEMENT


Geaton777 Oct 2022
"Losing a loved one to dementia is so incredibly painful. Something that I don't feel is talked about enough in culture or society."

It's not talked about because it either freaks people out, or people don't think it will ever apply to them, or they have 0 experience with it and cannot relate to it at all so they don't think it's a relevant topic — it's just an "old people" thing. Then cannot even begin to imagine the impact it has on the person and their family/caregivers.

I personally don't think it will ever be any different.

I'm so sorry for your sorrow. Everything about dementia is hard and sucks. Thank goodness for this forum. May you receive peace in your heart.

funkygrandma59 Oct 2022
Sadly any of us who have lost a loved one to this horrific disease or are still dealing with someone with it, can relate. It's a journey that none of us would have signed up for, yet it's one that many are having to go on with their loved ones as our aging population is growing daily.
It should be a good reminder to us all that we should tell the people we care about that we love them while we can and while they understand, and to treat them with respect, as we never know what our future will hold for us, and as we all know....what goes around comes around.
So keep on loving your aunt, even if it's from afar, and know that she loves you too, despite her now broken brain.
You will be a better, stronger and more compassionate person when this is all said and done.
God bless you.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ask a Question

Subscribe to
Our Newsletter