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At least having some fresh eyes on the situation will help. There may be a med that will help to calm your DH so he isn't frantic, which it sounds like he is.
Some people will say to simply 'play along' with the delusions, but I personally think that does a disservice to the patient. It's definitely annoying for the CG. Maybe, if nothing else helps (medications, diversions, etc) then agreeing with him may, and I mean may be the way to go. Only you can really answer as to how much of this behavior you can handle.
My MIL gets these ideas in her head and there's nothing DH can do to calm her down. I finally told him that she does have a scrip for Valium and to give her one when she gets the idea that her house is going to be invaded by mice (one of her most 'humorous' delusions.) Once he got her CALM, then he was able to explain to her why the mice she sees in her yard are not trying to break into her house..she remembered that and the obsession with mice ended. (To be replaced with the belief that her car was going to spontaneously catch fire.)
Sadly, Alzheimer's and Dementia are both degenerative diseases and they are hard to treat, since they are on a constant downward path.
Lately my mother thinks she's outside and wants me to help her inside where it's warm. I'll tell her once or twice she's inside and then quit.
When she yells for me and I ask what she needs she'll point to an invisible person and say to that invisible person "tell her what you need".
I'll inform my mother that she and I are the only ones in the room and she'll say "no...that lady over there was calling you".
I don't "go along" with her. I tell her the truth. Usually she'll disagree with me and that's fine as well.
IMO, since we're parenting our parents, it comes down to 90% personal preference. When I was mothering my children, I never went along with their thinking that there was a monster in the closet. I told them the truth that monsters don't exist. Same thing now with my mother. Personal preference.
When your husband asks you to tell the imaginary guy where you're going, just holler in the next room that you're leaving and will be back soon. What's the harm in that if it keeps him calm? You have to now live in his world as he can no longer live in yours.
I've heard so many stories over the years in my caregivers support group about loved ones that saw bears outside the windows, snakes in an oriental rug and dogs that have gotten in the house where no dogs lived. And each time the person caring for them just went along and told their loved one that they would get rid of them and it worked.
It does no one any good to try and argue with someone who's brain is broken and doesn't know any better, as that will only frustrate them and you, as you are probably discovering.
Teepa Snow has some good videos on YouTube about this issue(and many more)so you may want to check her out as she is an expert on dementia.
I wish you the very best.
sometimes he sees huge holes in the floor and refuses to get out of bed . Reassurance and patience, which I like many others as well I’m sure , sometimes goes out the window ….
I also will look up Teppa Snow. Thank you . FunkyGrandma59
Have you tried playing music in the background from the era that he enjoyed.
They say music is calming and it's a sense of time and place for them.
When I play jazz music or stream it on my computer, my mother sits and listens.
Sometimes I just sit and hold her hand for a few minutes until she settles.
A trip to the Geriatric Neuro-Psych Doc every 6 months may come in handy too.
They can't help it, it's their wiring in the brain. I hope this helped. I know it's hard but you sound very patient.
The Neuropsychiatrist has been the most help to my mom- the doctor is incredible, but not everyone has one in their area. We had to try two antipsychotics before we found one that worked and now we’re trying an antidepressant too. The correct meds have worked wonders and my mom’s hallucinations went away. She still has delusions and paranoia, but she’s generally redirected faster and the issues are less bothersome to her.
It took some trial and error with meds and switching doctors, but we’re in the right hands now. Wishing you well- this is so hard.
Note- you do not necessarily want a neuropsychologist (they do cognitive testing, but cannot prescribe). If you’re having trouble finding a Neuropsychiatrist- ask around or there’s a National website where all the doctors are registered and you can look up their locations.
I hold myself responsible for this terrible experience - I should have trusted my own instinct on several points (i.e. I should have transported her and stayed with her through the admission process, but they advised against it). I should have taken action quicker but I didn't. I see my mistakes now and they won't be repeated, but I still think she could benefit from inpatient.
Psychiatrist to evaluate the current situation and search for remedies that may prevent the issue from worsening.
Once she said "there's a man in the kitchen"--which we could both see in from the living room. (Creeped me out as that was my first experience since I moved into her home to care for her.) I asked Mom if he had her permission to be there. "No." I stood up and loudly ordered him out of her house, making a show of "shooing" him away, through the back door, and locked it. I went back to Mom and told he was gone and I had locked the door so he couldn't come back. She was fine then.
When our LO thought there was birds in the walls, a man living in the spare bedroom, and another woman using her shower, we tried to do the whole agree-but-you-are-safe route along with redirection. That bombed so bad.
She tried to find a gun to shoot at the woman to make her leave the house.
She had people coming into her house and searching for the man under her bed. She created a whole story of the bedroom man and her, which her friends believed, so ended up another mess to try and fix.
She had help calling a construction company to come tear the walls out of the house. When this was discovered, to keep them from tearing the walls out, we had to prove it wasn't her house as it was DH's .
The hallucinations and delusions haven't stopped but with MIL now in memory care, the hallucinations and delusions have switched to bugs in the facility. According to her, the bugs are everywhere and while she is peeling the paint off the room walls, and scratching herself relentlessly, at least she isn't shooting the facility up or tearing the walls out.
Medications, doctors advice and time are good hopes.
And sympathy from our family to you and yours.