How do you get over losing someone when they are still there?
I have asked myself that question so many times!
It is my father who has vascular dementia, he has been in a care home for nearly 2yrs now as he became aggressive towards mum, and I became concerned for her safety. They were married for 65yrs last March, and she actually moved into the home two months after him because they couldnt live without each other. I felt it would be ok because there was always someone there for her if he kicked off, and they knew when she needed her own space.
I have been through so many emotions, similar to the ones you describe. When I slept on their settee the week before he went into the home I would listen for his movement in his bedroom in the morning, and be upset/angry that he was still alive and we would have to deal with whatever was coming. I wanted an early escape from the disease as I have already gone through it with my MIL. She is also in a nursing home with late stage alzheimers, bedridden, double incontinent, mostly withdrawn but comes out of herself occasionally, and we have been called a few times thinking it was 'the end', but she bounces back!
So many times I have wished both of them could be released from their 'prisons', and find myself planning the funerals, imagining life without them, even planning holidays and a future free from worry, anxiety, guilt and anticipation of the 'final moments'. Then I visit dad, and we make eye contact and we listen to Al Jolson on his little tape recorder, I sing to him and sometimes he is not impressed but on the whole he enjoys it and very occasionally he joins in!
He is still my dad, and he is still in there whatever form he takes, however he manages to communicate (or not), at some level there is a connection I just have to be open to it.
To go back to the original question, I don't think we ever get over losing someone, whether they are still here or not. I was looking on the Cruse Bereavement website the other day, mum died last September and I am just beginning to feel the effects now, as my primary concern was dad and how he was managing his grief. Dementia has given him a safety cushion, as he does not remember most of the time. They had a video from the BBC, about 'Why grief is not something you have to get over'. It helped me to understand grief a little more and how to deal with it.
Grief is a process, whether the person is there in body or in spirit, it's how you deal with it that is the key. I also have read the book 'Letting go of the person you used to be' by Lama Surya Das. This book has supported me through a few tough situations regarding loss and change, two things we do not take very kindly to a humans!
I hope this post helps, it is also my first, even though I have been a member for quite a while xx
Hi ..first time..I am living in a long goodbye situation. My hubby has been in the home for 15 months now. I also go 4 times a week. I live close by. He is only 70 , he had a brain injury at 41. They tell me that his dementia doesn't follow any rules because of the brain injury. He has almost died 4 times since summer. I have sit by his bed and felt him dying and some how he manages to keep coming back from the edge. At first I thought I was lonely in the house but after awhile I realized I am going through the 7 stages of grief. I feel all kinds of strange feelings. When people die at the home, it is like I am jealous, I think they don't have to suffer any more. I try not to think about my life , or that I live around my routine of going to the nursing home. My husband is very bad, in late stage , he is in a wheelchair and diapers , he can't see much or use his hands, or words when he speaks. He lost his ability to understand conversations and answer me back more then 2 years ago. That was really when I noticed I no longer had him and started missing him even while he was still at home with me. I live with 100's of memories. They are my company. I do not like crying , I would rather be happy, but the more I try to happy, the sadder I feel. I am looking for things I can read or do that will help me deal with this long good bye. How do you get over losing someone when they are still there?