herbavore
Bluelight Crew
Xork, I'm going to double post because I want a separate post for to respond to your description of what is going on with your family. It is heartbreaking, the worst thing I can think of--the slow painful disintegration that is hell on everyone.
I have seen many couples develop the dynamic you are talking about--where the caregiver who loved his or her partner so much loses all patience and begins to resent the victim of disease. I have known one other couple that dealt with ALS and many more where one person develops dementia and the other must go along trying to be patient, often for years. I really wish that we had a different attitude to death. How sad it is to see beautiful partnerships ravaged like that and yet, how understandable in the reality of the cumulative stress, not to mention the grief and the loss.
I wonder if talking to your mom about it would help? If you began by compassionately relating to her situation, but then admit that you feel that when she loses patience it is crushing for your Dad--and that it is so hard for you to watch. Maybe even bring up that you want to protect her from having to have this way of being together be her lasting memories, and no doubt a source of guilt, rather than the beautiful partnership they always had.
I am so sorry for your Dad and for your whole family. What a terrible disease ALS is.
I have seen many couples develop the dynamic you are talking about--where the caregiver who loved his or her partner so much loses all patience and begins to resent the victim of disease. I have known one other couple that dealt with ALS and many more where one person develops dementia and the other must go along trying to be patient, often for years. I really wish that we had a different attitude to death. How sad it is to see beautiful partnerships ravaged like that and yet, how understandable in the reality of the cumulative stress, not to mention the grief and the loss.
I wonder if talking to your mom about it would help? If you began by compassionately relating to her situation, but then admit that you feel that when she loses patience it is crushing for your Dad--and that it is so hard for you to watch. Maybe even bring up that you want to protect her from having to have this way of being together be her lasting memories, and no doubt a source of guilt, rather than the beautiful partnership they always had.
I am so sorry for your Dad and for your whole family. What a terrible disease ALS is.