As a caregiving spouse for late moderte Alzheimer's patient, there is now a terrible loneliness felt in all aspects of our relationship....what are the moral and ethical issues concerning my seeking and starting a new relationship with someone else....this would be after 50 years of absolute faithfulness to our marriage and would still be there for her until such time as alternate full time living arrangements become necessary.
I notice so many assumptions about just want a relationship with the opposite sex means. Many people on this blog have jumped to the conclusion that it is all about the sex. I don't think of that at all when I think of companionship when people lose their 'other'. In my case, I was in a sales profession for most of my career in which I sold mostly to men. I have been told by bosses and other male acquaintances that I have a 'male' mind in many ways. I relate well to men; women often seem catty, won't let go of a grudge, I hate to say it, but 'bitchy' without a little testosterone around. C'mon ladies, you know what I am talking about. Men tend to not do well without women in their lives either. I do not see why we cannot have friends of the opposite sex, which often is really what both want and which is often what many people miss when they don't have the one they have loved for so long to talk to and be with.
I do not understand the harshness of folks who say "Well, then! Just go ahead and divorce her and get on with YOUR life!" as if there is nothing but a hard spot there for the one they have loved for so long. The idea of just dropping the ball and moving on seems terrible to me, compared with having a relationship that fulfills emotional, social and intellectual needs that every healthy person has.
My husband and I do not have an 'open' marriage in any sense of the word. I don't work anymore, and we have moved from where I did, so I have no reason to seek out men that I do not know! But when I did work, I had lunch with male counterparts who were friends, or we met for Happy Hour on our way home, or I was required to entertain male customers for events or meals, often taking my husband with me, and he has done the same. We live in the light of day so there is nothing we do or have done that we couldn't tell the other about, ever.
Consider that often elderly folks 'pair up' with the wife or husband of a couple that they previously socialized with when they were all younger and spent time together as a foursome or in a group. They do have history together, they do have spouses who were each other's friends, and they can share those memories together. I can think of a few couples we have good times with now that we both love spending time with. If either of us lost our spouses, it would be easy to see how the remaining ones would still share a bond and want to spend time together. Sex is not how I think of it!
I said before and I still believe that as we age, hopefully we gain compassion for others through our own experiences and learn that life is lived mostly in the gray areas, not black and white. As my 94 year old ex-grandmother-in-law used to say "Life is pretty good if you weaken!". She had learned the old, stern adages of life make existence pretty grim if you can't go with the flow and live and let live a little.
But, when my husband of 46 years suffered a major stroke, and because of it later developed vascular dementia - it would have never, ever crossed my mind to seek a "relationship" with someone else. I had a relationship, with my husband. Do we know how much they actually understand when we talk to them? There is so little known about the brain - coma patients, do they hear? Some actually do, confirm it after they wake up.
I have responded to 123Ann's question before, if he starts a new "relationship" he is setting himself up for something he does not want: guilt, remorse - that will haunt him after she passes on.
I never quit talking to my husband, I held his hand, kissed his palm and put it against my face and repeated dozens of times - "I love you and that will never change." Did he hear me? I don't know - sometimes I think he did - something in his eyes let me know. Or he would squeeze my hand. A reflex? I don't know. But it doesn't matter - what matters is the fact, I told him as many times as I could in the hope it will reach him somewhere. I loved doing it and I could tell myself, yes, he knows.
It's easier to say "yes, go on with your life, I want you to be happy" when you are healthy. My husband and I had that very same conversation. And you know what? It doesn't mean a thing when your loved one, someone bright as a penny, suddenly is reduced to someone who needs 24/7 care as you would care for an infant ...
I sincerely hope you will never have to confront this situation - it will rip your heart out.
My own grandfather, who married six months after my grandmother died, to a 'fraternity brother's wife (a guy he knew in college about 60 years before!), actually did marry because he had common ground with this lady, albeit a lifetime ago! They were both a little nutty and we all sort of shook our heads when he married so quickly. He had had prostate cancer and was impotent, way pre Viagra. This was marriage and was not about sex, but he thought of it more than companionship. After 15 years, she passed away and he met another woman - this time both were in their 90's! - who he wanted to marry again! My very judgmental mother knew he was a grown man and could do darn what he pleased. My mother never would have been the type to approve of anybody living together and she certainly didn't want her own dad doing that! But my parents devised, with a pastor, a 'ring ceremony' which was not an actual legal marriage so their assets wouldn't be messed with. My grandfather and she thought they were married and were satisfied that 'tongues were not longer wagging' at the nursing home for all the time they spent in each other's rooms. Would you consider this an illicit relationship, living in sin?
My point in all of this detail is to say that I understand heartache, loss and I am not a person speaking from a hypothetical point of view. I used to be more rigid in my thinking and this is definitely not a compromise of my values. I just have more empathy than I used to have, hard earned from experience, and no one can judge a person without walking a mile in their shoes. As for ripping my heart out, I have had it ripped out. And who knew it could be beating so happily again in my chest, cured by the power of love.
I am happy for you that were able to find a new life - I am still grieving the loss of my love, who was my life.
She is constantly booking tours all over the world and spending her husband's money. Since she no longer works since her marriage, she pends her time painting and taking pictures of all her travels.
Do what you 'know to do that is right in His eyes' and be at peace with yourself and Him. Hugs!!! O:)
You can't do better than being friends with people. A friendship tops a partial/lopsided relationship.
I think what you decide in 18 months will not just depend on your wife's condition, but on yours too, or you would have made a different decision now.
But doing it that way would have been far, far more hurtful to your mother. I personally think that it would be a more rotten thing to do to cause poor confused Mother more pain and heartbreak by insisting on an official divorce. Obviously this action is not a rejection by your father of your mother. This is something in addition to his devotion to his wife and his attempts to look out for her welfare. If this woman was her caregiver for a while it probably seems natural to Mother that she would continue an interest in her care.
To me it is far more important to preserve Mother's dignity and comfort than for Dad to maintain some kind of a conventional reputation.
Everyone in this family is going through some serious mourning. You are losing your dear mother, bit by bit. And it sounds like you are worried about losing your father, too, as he now shares his attention another woman and her children. This is understandably a very difficult time for you. Is Dad betraying Mum? In what way? Does she feel betrayed? Is she sad about this development? Is Dad neglecting her? Withholding financial support? I suspect that if the rest of the family can accept the situation it must not be an obvious betrayal.
I hope that you and your brother can reserve judgment until you are less emotionally fragile. Of course you are hurting dreadfully right now. Father's actions may seem like a logical target for your hurt and bad feelings. But the dementia would be progressing no matter what. The outcome will be the same whether Father keeps to himself or reaches out to other companionship.
Would I have considered an affair while my husband had dementia? I can't honestly say. I was always too busy and too tired to even think about it!