He is absolutely heartbroken that I am married to my husband and not him. He keeps asking how to make things right between us, and crying about it. I have tried to redirect him, deflect his comments, explain how I’m his daughter, and his wife has died. He was married to my Mom for 25 years then divorced, and was married to his 2nd wife for 35 yrs. I think the fact that I have had to do personal grooming/bathing for him lately started this delusion (dad is very modest). I am looking for any help I can get regarding this!
This is extremely common in later stage of dementia.
I think that the best thing you can do is educate yourself by online research on the disease and by watching a whole ton of Teepa Snow videos about communicating with elders with dementia (youtube, still, I do believe). Also consider getting some books on the subject.
There will come a time when it is really not sustainable to attempt to do in home care. When visits are better for yourself AND for the person suffering this disease. I think you may be coming to that conclusion yourself, and only you can make the decision in that regard. Other than that there is the simple and repetitive "No Dad, I am not _____; I am _________". Won't work for any amount of time, but there you are.
I am so sorry.
So continue to redirect/deflect, see if you could get someone else in to help with showers at least a couple times a week & hopefully like my dad, it won’t last for too long. We ended up needing to get help with showers as things changed anyway because he started resisting us. So getting help with showers may be something you need to look into anyway as things change. Over time we did get our daughter places back in his mind. Wishing you the best. It’s a hard thing to go through & deal with.
if it were my dad I would say no dad it’s Jenny your daughter
I’m just helping you
Hopefully it was just an off moment of confusion
The solution that works today may not work permanently. If he gets too insistent about you being his wife and decides to press the point physically, you may have no choice but to place him.
Since your dad lives with you, you will probably have to remind him daily that you are his daughter, and not his wife.
You can decide if you want the caregiver for just the bathing aspect or if you want someone else to do most of the personal caregiver. This could be dependent on your dad's reactions if you are helping with toileting.
You could try talking about what you are doing ad you do it. You could also give him a wash cloth so he has something to do and is more participatory rather than passive as you are doing personal grooming.