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My heart is breaking for you. Know that you are not alone in this.

HOWEVER, the "I'll never go into a nursing home" statement was no doubt made back when it wasn't a necessity. It is now an absolute necessity, and I'll tell you why

A nursing home's staff will be far better able to care for your beloved wife than you can. It isn't a criticism on you, but rather a fact that they have multiple people to do what you cannot do alone. If she's moved to a nursing home, you will be freed up to just love on her without all the extra stress.

I don't want to scare you either, but you remind me of my dad. He was completely healthy and was my mother's caregiver from 2014 to 2018. He came from a broken home with multiple divorces, and he was determined to honor his marriage vows in sickness and in health, and he took loving care of her -- until he was diagnosed with inoperable liver cancer in October 2018 and died six weeks later.

I'm now in charge of my mother's care, and she lives in a memory care facility and is doing extremely well at nearly 91 years old. I cannot tell you how many people have told me that it's often the caregiving spouse who dies first. A trust and estate attorney told me that 70-80% of his clients have the healthy spouse die first. I heard that one before my dad got sick, and he was diagnosed a week later.

Honoring your wife means caring for her the best way possible, not necessarily the best way YOU can. You will be seeing to her care. You are not abandoning her if you put her in a place where she'll receive the care she needs -- you are doing exactly what you vowed to do.
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I agree with Lealonnie. I'm trying to figure out what your wife is thinking.....does she suffer from cognitive decline? It's just unreasonable to insist on the current situation. It makes me question if she is really seeing reality. I can't imagine insisting that someone care for me indefinitely under those circumstances. Aren't you angry about that? I'd be resentful for sure.

If her sister is serious about taking her in to care for her, I'd do a trial run by her coming to your house and doing it all without help for a week. Then, she can say if she still thinks she can do it. People say a lot of things offering to help, but, they don't have any idea of what they are talking about.

I hope you can find the answers you need. Why not have the professionals do an assessment for the care she really needs and encourage wife to accept it?
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I like CMs response too.

Big decision here. I really don't think your SIL realizes that her sister is a 24/7 job. My daughter is a Nurse. After spending the day caring for residents in the nursing home she worked, the last thing she wanted to do was care for someone else. And usually the work you are doing is done by aides.

Like the idea of maybe SIL coming to ur house and giving you some respite time. Her doing most of the work. I will assume that she is in the same age group. She may find all the lifting, etc is too much for her. She will see whats involved daily and may see where its time to place your wife.

We had a man in church that's wife had water on the brain (theirs a name for it, just can't remember. It caused Dementia like problems. He had to eventually place her. He had lunch with her every day. Spent the afternoon with her and kept her busy. He left when dinner was served. You could do the same thing. Be there for her but have your downtime too.

If you go this direction, you may want to talk to Medicaid if you feel you will ever need it. They may allow you to split what assets you have. Wife's split would be spent down with you being somewhat financially secure. You will be considered a Community Spouse.
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I haven't read through all of the responses here but I really like Countrymouse's response. I want to emphasize how important it is for you to care for yourself because something could happen to you today or tomorrow and your wife's care will be thrown in to the lap of someone so move on this...some how, some way. Try the in home visit with the SIL...if anything, to give you some time to rest and care for yourself. Get more outside help if needed; whether during the day so you can leave more and give your mind a rest or during the night, so you can get sleep. Granted, this will have to be paid for but if finances are a problem, can the adult children help?
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It's a heartbreaking decision.

A suggestion to get the willing retired nurse sister issue out of your way: is there room in your home for your sister in law to come and stay with you for, say, ten days or so?

What I think you will both find is that even with two of you on duty it's going to be a stretch; and that even with you there to guide and prompt her, it's going to dawn on SIL that this is simply not a one person job. Not sustainably. And for her to have a trial of being your wife's caregiver, with the implicit promise involved in that, would feel like a cruel betrayal when your wife still has to move into residential care later.

Another advantage would be that SIL's support in your home would give you just enough rest and thinking space to be able to gain perspective. You'll be able to think in practical terms of what is really best for your wife's welfare, taking everything into account. Trying to make plans when you are physically, mentally and emotionally exhausted - then looking back on those plans and judging yourself harshly, only because you're now detached from the reality of 24/7 caregiving - is not fair.

Finality... well, change, certainly. But it isn't as if you're planning to abandon her. What facilities have you looked at? What accommodation do they make for married couples? You may be able to find a place that is far more supportive of your relationship, and more imaginative in what they can offer, than you're expecting.
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Just a small thought... if your wife moved into a skilled nursing home very close to home & you visited from mid morning to mid afternoon every day but you were able to sleep at night & reduce your physical load? How would that be?

You would still be her husband 24hrs a day.

You would still be caring 24hrs a day.

You would just be sharing the physical caring load with trained staff.
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Paddy, I don't have any sage advice. You've already received some. Just wanted to say hang in there and HUGS!
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I’m so sorry, Paddy. I hope you figure this out soon and find peace in your heart. You deserve to be at peace.

Best wishes to you.
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Paddydaddy, it seems to me that you are close to the breaking point.
I think you need to ask yourself how long you can realistically keep this up?
What would happen if you, yourself, had an emergency?
Would there be someone close by to step up and care for your sweet wife?
As much as we always want to be there for our loved ones, sometimes the best option is to take a step back and look at the bigger picture!
My Uncle never shared with me how bad my Aunts dementia was.
So when he passed before her, her care was left to no one in particular. Because I love her, I couldn't just leave her. Not everyone is willing to step up.
You and you alone know what your limitations are. Please consider them carefully.
For what it's worth my advice is to not let it go till it's too much for you to handle.
God bless you and your wife !!
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PaddyDaddy, I too am so sorry you must make a very unhappy decision. But you need to decide with your mind and not your heart now. Having her go to a nice and very close care community is probably the best overall solution, one that helps both of you. Caregiving is very strenuous at every level. I totally understand how she feels that she will "check in" and never "check out". But she needs to work on internalizing this reality and coming to peace with it. The other options are just unsustainable. In a care community you will still be there for her very often. She will have more social interaction. She won't feel guilty about having several people orbit around her. Your mental, emotional and physical health will be protected (and she benefits from this as well). For some problems there is no win-win, there's just a "least lose-least lose" solution. But you do have this viable option that is not awful. That's more than what many people have. I hope she can come to accept this fact. May you both achieve peace in your hearts over whatever decision is made. Let us know how it goes.
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What staggers me in this situation is your wife's refusal to see reality. After 46 years of marriage and after having you care for her for 2 years now, knowing the condition she's in, she's still playing the emotional guilt card on you and saying she'd 'never' go into a nursing home, and crying about rehab, and forcing you to bring her back home again. That really blows my mind, frankly. It's selfish and it's unfair, to say the least. While it's a very sad health situation she finds herself in, what's even sadder is the situation she's forcing upon YOU.

At some point, you're going to have to wave the white flag here and have her placed in a Skilled Nursing Facility. I question the prudence of having her live with her sister, retired nurse or not. Since her sister is human, she is going to face the same exact problems you are facing and burn out in short order. NOBODY should be expected to care for another person who's suffering from THIS level of need. No ONE person, I should say as a correction. She requires a team who's devoted to her care 24/7, and who works in 3 shifts to accommodate her needs. Everyone seems to know and understand that except her.

Sit down for a heart to heart conversation about the facts of this situation. Sometimes love forces us to do things we don't necessarily want to do, but what is the best care plan for the loved one. I work as a receptionist in a Memory Care home for residents with dementia & Alzheimer's. Many spouses have had NO other choice but to place their husbands or wives there because their care became just too much to bear alone at home. So, they come to visit a lot, sometimes twice a day, to spend time with their spouse. I can see how torn they are at times, but they know in their hearts it's the best place for their loved one to be, where they're properly cared for 24/7. You can do the same once your wife is placed, if you'd like, and go back to being the husband instead of the caregiver.

It's not easy; none of this is easy. But think of yourself too, because this is not just about your wife. There are TWO of you involved here, and what's left of your life is going to be totally ruined if you have to spend it caring for your wife 24/7, which is what's required. We're not here on earth to be martyrs; we're just here to do the best we can and know when to cry uncle.

Wishing you the best of luck moving forward.
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againx100 Mar 2020
Listen to this post. She's right. Sadly, and I think you know it's true too. We're never ready to lose our spouses, but reality doesn't really care if you're ready. Cruel. But listen to your doctor daughter and do what's right even though it will be hard.
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Oh, I am so very sorry for your wife's illness and your situation. I watched my father deal with my frail mother as she lost her memory and physically declined. At one point a new assisted living facility was built within walking distance of their home and he thought that she could live there, especially for the nights, and come home during the day but my mother really didn't want to leave home so he withdrew his deposit and she remained at home with him. This was the worst decision ever. He didn't recognize the seriousness of a medical change that she had and and it went untreated, which resulted in her death. Had she been in the assisted living facility one of the nurses would have immediately recognized that she needed medical attention and it wouldn't have ended as tragically as it did. He thought he was keeping her home and where she wanted to be out of love but it's like taking a little kid to their first day of school - they don't want to go and you don't want to let them go but you know you have to. Please get your wife into a nursing facility, not just with her sister as that is not a sustainable solution. You can visit every day and enjoy her company for much longer.
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anonymous954884 Mar 2020
Thank you so much for your insight. I have to admit that when she was in the nursing facility that I missed her terribly. But at the same time I knew she was safe, well cared for, fed, and clean, and that was such a load off my mind.
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