My Mom and Dad have been living with me for two years. My dad is still with me and constantly asks for "that woman" I ask if he means his wife Palmie and he says yes. I told him what happened and he cries. He did attend her wake and funeral but does not remember. He is constantly asking for her. He will something happened and again I will tell him and he cries as if it is the first time I tell him. I don't know what to day it is so upsetting for him and for myself. Any advise. I do believe he knows something is wrong but forgets what. His dementia has progressed a great deal since my mom passed in February. He is 94yrs old.
My sympathies to you. First of all I appreciate the care and concern you have for your dad. Since dad's dementia is progressing it is a question of passage of time. In my opinion please keep a nice picture of mom and put a nice garland to it so that dad can see the picture and will realized that mom has gone to eternal sleep. We in India do this. Whoever passes away we will keep a remembrance picture of the person and put flower garland every week so that the soul is satisfied and we also get a bit of satisfaction. I will pray for your family and for your dad.
Lovingly,
Jothi
I made a habit of telling mother the truth. I was matter of fact, and to the point with her. I was not unkind... nor did I sugar coat the truth for her. When she asked about her folks and why they weren't here for her, I told her they had died DECADES ago! When she accused me of not telling her... I told her it was a bit difficult for me to tell her when my grandfather had died when I was 2!
Did it cause her stress? YES! Did lying to her cause her stress? YES! There is NO easy answer!
DO WHAT FEELS RIGHT TO YOU!!!
If you are uncomfortable lying to your loved one... THEN DON'T! If you are uncomfortable telling them the truth... THEN DON'T!
No matter what you tell them, you're going to feel guilty. So do what makes YOU feel best!
Good luck!
God bless you and I saw other very good ideas on here, perhaps some will help you.
But, if he is asking for explanation of how she is resting, you should choose if you want him to suffer (tell the truth!) or you want him just to calm down and move on (keep saying something comforting!)
Remember that sometimes truth can hurt. It might make your dad to go through "delirium" which should be avoided in his condition.
So, vacation, shopping, napping.... anything he will be OK with!
JulesInCA,
As far as getting your mom to the doc, yes, she does need medication for anxiety. What I suggest is you make the appointment but don't tell your mom and ahead of time fax in a letter explaining what is going on with her and detailing the symptoms you have observed. Then on the day of the appointment, tell your mom YOU have a doctors appointment and need her to come along for moral support. Be sure to give another copy of the letter to the receptionist when your mom doesn't know what you are doing (usually easy to do that with mom seated in the waiting room and you signing in at the window.)
You are now to the point where you are going to have to begin parenting your parent. This is a difficult transition, but you CAN do it. I want to recommend a book that I believe will help you:
"Elder Rage...or Take My Father, Please. How to survive caring for aging parents"
Since your mother's death was recent, it's no wonder your father's grief still is raw, even if he seems to forget she is gone. If he didn't have dementia, I suspect he still would be quite sorrowful at this stage.
Perhaps he should be evaluated for medication to help buffer his misery. After a few months had passed when Dad died, Mom got depressed. She was sad and anxious and the psychiatrist we saw gave her prescriptions which helped. She needed them for only a few months.
Another thought is to set aside an area on a mantle or shelf as a memorial to your mother -- some place your father would see it every day. Was there a printed funeral program? That could be displayed or, lacking that, a favorite photo with a caption or placard saying something like "Dearly loved. Rest in Peace." Or whatever would resonate for your father. Maybe put fresh flowers there every day.
Good luck and God bless.