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I invite you to step through this....You can spin you wheels all day long on this but is it serving you ? It is just what I ask myself a lot....Happy Thanksgiving & all that you Bless....
You just never know…..it's hard to imagine that our parents could have been young, carefree & careless. I say that because we have a 17 yr old and he flat cannot imagine that his parents did all the things we did in our "youth"; he just cannot see the 50+ yr old mom X the table from him once was quite the hottie traveling in Latin America or that his now 60+ dad hitchhiked & tomcatted around Europe. 1 egg & 1 sperm @ the right moment & coulda happen!
Anyway, she might not even know who your bio dad was, if she played around a lot. Unless you want to take a DNA test, you'll never know for sure. It's probably best to dismiss it.
You mentioned older half-siblings.... if you are close to them, could you say "You wouldn't believe what my Mom said to me last week", and tell them what she said, and see if they have a reaction. If they say "oh that is silly", then you know it was the dementia talking. Or maybe Mom had watched a TV soap opera thinking it was her real family.
Next week mention the photo again and see what she says... it might be something different.
Take care,
Carol
I'd consider this a delusion. It sounds as if your husband is supportive of you and he handled this well. Try to do the same as he did - just change the subject if this comes up again.
As you can see on this thread of comments, others have heard some pretty bizarre things from their parents as well. Painful as it is, it's best to ignore it and move forward. You truly aren't alone.
Please keep us up on how you are doing.
Carol
1. You can go about this in a matter of fact way and ask your siblings to co-operate in DNA testing. Where would you go from there? Depends what the results are. Either a) your mind will be set finally at rest or b) you won't know who the devil you are but on the other hand it might explain a good deal about past dysfunction.
2. You can accept that in our all-too human world a great many people are labouring under an illusion about who their dads are. And their mothers, in some cases (mainly those beloved by tv soap writers). This is harder to do, but it maintains the status quo. Which is not so bad. Your family is still your family. Still the people you know, whom you grew up with, with whom you have the important relationships.
So. Your best case scenario is that you have the test, your dad is your dad, and all's well with the world except for your mother being a bit confused :/ Worst case scenario, you end up paranoid and obsessively peering at family photos for the rest of your days. If it weren't for needing the co-operation and consent of others, I'd know which I'd go for - how would your siblings react, do you suppose, if you presented them with the idea of definitive research?
I met a cousin recently that we never knew we had. The lovely lady discovered who her father was and contacted him. They met shortly before he died. Our family has grown to know her and we are all happy that she has joined our family. In our case, it's turned out great. Her father, who was my uncle, had other children, and they are thrilled to have another sibling.
Do not question your mother further. You will never know if she speaks the truth or even knows the truth. Your daddy loved you above all else that is enough.
My MIL recently told me that nana was smuggled into the US on a train from Canada. I know for a fact that nana arrived from Italy on a boat and landed in Philadelphia.
Do you have half siblings? Do you REALLY want to go for genetic testing with one of them?
Sometimes those with dementia say things that are not true. My cousin says things that I know are not true. She says she was in a movie and in love with a man in the movie last week, but she didn't know if their relationship would work. lol Well, she wasn't in a movie ever. One day she said her medical doctor was sleeping in a bed in her Memory Care Unit. I know he's never been there. So, it's things that aren't true, but they believe it, so I go along with it.
If there is independent cause to search for some other person as your father, you certainly could pursue it, but for some people that opens too many cans of worms.
Having said that, these people, in their heart, believe these thing wholeheartedly. Does this have anything to do with your parentage? Could she be having delusions? Maybe, maybe not. Your dad is the man who raised you. If you just can't help yourself and you must open that can of worms, be prepared. Please don't give one elderly woman's rantings more weight that they are worth.