Anonymous wrote:My MIL passed away over a year ago and FIL has been alone since then.
He has creeping dementia and someone looks after him daily for a portion of the day. Family nearby will take him out to meals on a daily basis.
Recently he was found crying and stated that if MIL was still there "everything would be different".
While it sounds sad, I also interpret it as a continuation of him always putting the responsibility on her. And whoa, was he mean to her when she was alive, snidely putting her down when he could.
Maybe I'm wrong but I find it galling.
Anonymous wrote:My MIL passed away over a year ago and FIL has been alone since then.
He has creeping dementia and someone looks after him daily for a portion of the day. Family nearby will take him out to meals on a daily basis.
Recently he was found crying and stated that if MIL was still there "everything would be different".
While it sounds sad, I also interpret it as a continuation of him always putting the responsibility on her. And whoa, was he mean to her when she was alive, snidely putting her down when he could.
Maybe I'm wrong but I find it galling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, he wants his wife. I’m a widow, I get it. Check yourself.
+1. He spent decades with his wife, and now he has dementia and misses her. Sounds pretty normal to me. Weird flex on your part, op.
My FIL with dementia is like this too. He doesn’t remember how horrible he was to her.
They don't realize they were horrible. That's why they don't remember. Also if they realize that they were horrible, it would cause a lot of grief, so their brains sort of protect them from that realization, especially as they get older.
My sister forced my mom to confront some of her awful parenting in her 70s and honestly I wish she hadn't. My mom couldn't handle it and it just made it that much harder. At some point you have to accept a person did what they did and let it go because they are too old to be held accountable. Your FIL cannot make up for the way he treated his wife now. I'm okay with people deciding not to care for elderly people who were abusive to them or their loved ones, but I don't see the point in trying to punish them at this age. Either care for them and let it go, or let someone else care for them and move on with your life. You are not going to extract a satisfying penance from an elderly person with dementia. You just aren't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, you are mean to him when he is alive. Guess you two are a lot alike.
How do you know I was mean to him? I sewed buttons on his shirts and jackets, cleaned the pool most seasons, got on the roof and swept off the leaves, did a massive home improvement project on his property without compensation where I installed everything from sweating plumbing to tiling, etc...
Not the sons but me, the DIL.
By the way, he's still very much alive.
Anonymous wrote:My MIL passed away over a year ago and FIL has been alone since then.
He has creeping dementia and someone looks after him daily for a portion of the day. Family nearby will take him out to meals on a daily basis.
Recently he was found crying and stated that if MIL was still there "everything would be different".
While it sounds sad, I also interpret it as a continuation of him always putting the responsibility on her. And whoa, was he mean to her when she was alive, snidely putting her down when he could.
Maybe I'm wrong but I find it galling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Super weird to be judging him and also gleefully reveling in his grief.
Who said I was reveling in his grief? Wow, there are some people here to jump to the worst conclusions.
I grieve my MIL too.
Anonymous wrote:No, he wants his wife. I’m a widow, I get it. Check yourself.
Anonymous wrote:I mean, you are mean to him when he is alive. Guess you two are a lot alike.