Hi. My wife passed away in March of 2015. I am still close to her side of the family and will talk to her mother every couple of weeks. Today, my brother-in-law (my wife's brother) called me to tell me that my mother-in-law told him that I told her I am divorcing myself from that side of the family, no longer want to see her and am going to bars looking for a new wife. I never said anything of the sort. This is coming right out of the blue. I have always been cordial to her.
I have to admit that I limit my visits because she always talks about depressing subjects and repeats herself constantly. I know her accusing me is the dementia talking but I'm not quite sure how to handle it.
In psychology, confabulation (verb: confabulate) is a memory disturbance, defined as the production of fabricated, distorted or misinterpreted memories about oneself or the world, without the conscious intention to deceive.
Key factors in confabulations are there is no intent to deceive, second the person being unaware that the information is blatantly false.
Be aware confabulating is distinct from lying.
Confabulations are a major annoyance and can be dangerous— when we the take everything in a discussion at face value. Confabulating is very frequently observed in people with Alzheimer’s.
Confabulating is distinct from lying because there is no intent to deceive, and the person being unaware that the information is blatantly false. Carers challenge: is what they say true?
It is difficult for everyone to accept a mind is damaged by Alzheimer's Disease.
Not only is memory damaged their ability to process thoughts and conversations is impaired.
Understand the similarities between confabulation and delusions; e.g., both involve the production of unintentional false statements, both are resistant to contradictory evidence.
Recognize the difference between confabulations and delusions that are frequently observed in Alzheimer’s patients include beliefs about theft, the patient’s house not being his home, a spouse, is an impostor, belief an intruder is in the house, abandonment, spousal infidelity, and paranoia.
An aide/caregiver must understand the individual has Alzheimer's Disease, be aware of the danger, and treat the person with patience. Also, Confabulation is common.
Conversing with someone who has Alzheimer's is often like talking with your cat. Acknowledge, respond, be affectionate, develop boundless patience. Forget about rational responses.
Thank God every day that this is not your real mother, that she still has a living child, and that you are not responsible for her.
There are very few stories here with a silver lining: yours is one of them. You can walk away. Stay in touch with the brother or anyone else if you care to. Focus on yourself and the rest of your life.
Chances are she'll forget her new truth over time or it will be replaced. That is the way it always happens with my mother. The only concern is to make sure that the fabricated stories don't cause any harm. That can be prevented by good communication -- something it sounds like you have with your in-laws.
BTW, when someone has dementia, time gets distorted. You might come over one day and the next day MIL will think you haven't been there for weeks. Maybe that is going on and made her think you were distancing yourself, leading to the thinking she had about you divorcing, etc. We never know what goes on in the mind when truth and sense of time is distorted.
I am speaking of the one with dementia and anyone who would accept what anyone else says as truth without looking for the truth and drawing conclusions using their own mind.
My father is in a Veterans Home and I live with my mother. Daddy sometimes thinks about things that aren't true, like people stealing. However, Mother invents or reinvents anything and everything on a regular basis. It is part of the process of aging. We have learned to take what she says and let it slide on by. As long as the family understands that what your MIL is saying has very little basis in reality in will be much easier for each of you.
Mil even though it was all documented her lies on me thru home health and docs the family still chooses to believe her thank God I made sure all was on proper record
Attorney at law Kevin P. Keane:
"records not reduced to writing, are NOT worth the paper they ain't written on".