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We are going to have to separate my husband's parents in the next week. She is going to go to Memory Care--in the same complex just a different building, and he will move to a smaller room in the same house he is in. He is ready for it--longing for it. She has become increasingly incoherent, uncooperative, angry, lashing out at him. He calls us in tears often. He has dementia, but not to the extent she does. She is not herself enough to really understand or remember if we were to tell her today. To help with the angst we are not going to tell her until closer to move day. I know that this will be difficult. In her semi-lucid moments she will be very angry with us and with him. They have been married for 58 years, so this will be a big change, even though it's very needed for both their sakes. Has anyone been through this and can you give us any pointers? Things we can say or do to help with the transition?

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Sounds like a win, win, win - thanks for letting us know!
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UPDATE-It has now been almost a month that they have been in separate houses. It was the best decision we've made in a while. MIL immediately calmed down. She had some physical issues going on and the pain seemed to be a catalyst for a lot of her anger. BUT we also have determined that she was going further down the rabbit hole. We believe that some of her anger was that she didn't know who he was and felt threatened by him. After her physical issues have resolved, she is very peaceful. She really doesn't know/remember him.
He has mourned this loss, but is happy now that she's calm and he can visit. He does not have the reasoning ability to understand the cause--says he's never known anyone with this disease before, and doesn't understand that she can't "get over it". *sigh* BUT he's making progress and is not calling daily anymore in tears.
After a hellacious year of managaing all this, my husband and I took a MUCH NEEDED vacation last week. We went to Florida and stayed with family, and were not "on call" for his parents. My BIL in VA was able to field all the calls and deal with that, with the understanding that if hands on care was needed then my adult sons who live here would step in and do what needed to be done. Fortunately nothing was needed. We decided we are going to do that once a month for a week at a time. BIL will field all calls, and if there is a hands on need of assistance, my husband will deal with the situation. I think that will really ease a lot of my husbands stress, and subsequently mine. ;-)
Thank you for all your advice and support.
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Thank you all for your insights, experience, car and prayers. Tomorrow is the big day. My husband spent the day with her in the ER. Her behavior had gotten so combative and harsh that we thought she had another UTI, and she told my husband and FIL yesterday she had diarrhea. At the ER they discovered it was the opposite! She was very impacted and constipated. The meds they gave her yesterday for diarrhea made it worse, not better. I was out of town so he was having to handle things. They sent her home with some medicine called glycolax to get things moving. She was saying she hates dad and doesn’t ever want to see him again, so this move may be just right for both of them. He will be 2 houses down from her, so the staff will take him to visit daily if he wishes. We told him he should wait a few days for her to get acclimated. Wish us luck!
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Llamalover47 Feb 2019
DILKimba: I'll be praying for you. The words that she is uttering are so hard to hear
Oh, my gosh. She certainly does not hate her spouse. Big hugs ((( ))).
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Yes, have had to do this twice. In laws and my parents. Fortunately with in laws we were able to move them back in with each other when it got to a certain point. With my parents.....that was harder. My mom had to go into a facility and dad went to independent living after selling their home. He loved her so much that it made him depressed to go see her so unfortunately he didn't see her that much and not at all at the end. I don't know how far along your dad is but as it gets closer and your mom gets adjusted maybe they can also be roommates and be together like my in laws. As for telling your mother in law?? I would pack a bag and tell her she is going to a really nice hotel or spa for a visit and tell the staff this so they will be in on it. They will take it from there. I was told by my mother's facility not to visit her for a couple of weeks so that she won't beg me to leave (would be hard on both of us) and she will be able to get adjusted to new surroundings and that will be her new home. I called every other day to check on her though. After about a month, surprisingly, she did adjust and it got easier to visit her which I did a couple times a week and I reported back to dad. Anyway, good luck and may God be with you this transition.
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Had to do the same thing with my folks. Mom to Memory Care & Dad stayed in a smaller apartment. Both in the same facility. Ended up being 2 doors from each other & separated by the locked door to Memory Care. It worked out much better than I thought it would as far as mental status. Mom didn't seem to care as long as Dad came around daily & spent time with her. And he could finally get some sleep!
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I agree that you should not tell her in advance. Let the staff handle everything. What good would it do to have you explain that she has to move and then you leave? She might think you are abandoning her or that you won’t know where to find her.

Don’t tell her, just let the staff handle the move. Then the first time you visit, make a big deal about what a nice room it is, or look at all the sunlight you get, or look how much closer you are to whatever.
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First of all, be happy they can be separated. He should not, no matter why, have to tolerate her lashing out and her outbursts. This just simply is unacceptable and must be stopped by any means. Do not say a word to her ahead of time or she will go ballistic at him and at you. The day of the move, have the staff move her and have them tend to her belongings. Let them explain things first. Do NOT visit or contact her for a few days. Give her time to blow off the big steam first. In the meantime, be there for your father and support him in any way you can. And when you finally do go to visit her, perhaps take someone with you who can explain to her why this was necessary so she doesn't attack you. Be strong. If she keeps lashing out, then do NOT go to see her. Tend to your father who seems to be a kind man.
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That is hard. I, too, wouldn't not tell her until the last minute. Even then, you may have to go with a fib.
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Your plan sounds perfect, they both may do better than you think. Peace at last. It’s tougher in y’all.
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I was amazed as I read your situation at how very similar it is to where we are with my family just now. The only thing I can add to the good advice you already have received, is to reassure your mother that none of you will abandon her. You will be only a phone call away, or you will visit often. You will bring dad to visit. There will be good, kind staff to help her all the time. And if she needs you, but can’t (remember how to) reach you, the staff will help her. This seems to help alleviate my mother’s anxiety when dad has to go to the hospital for incidents (he has different/more physical health issues tha her, in addition to their dementia). Most recently another fall has led him to be moved to the skilled part of their facility for a couple weeks. And, of course, it is not a matter of telling her this once and she is satisfied. With her AD we must tell her this often. Holding you in my thoughts.
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These transitions are difficult for everyone. Though they are in "the same place" for the people being moved it doesn't feel like the same place. For your mother, I'd suggest telling her shortly before the move and be gentle and loving as suggested below. She needs more care. You don't really have a choice. Unfortunately people with dementia often don't understand their limitations and needs.
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Be Supportive, Be Gentle, Always be There with Loving Care. This is the Best you can do t this Sad time in their life.
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You can always blame it on the doctor. "He/she thinks you need a room with more care/therapy, etc." Try to never use the word " nursing home" but instead "rehab center". I'm sorry you are going through this.
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DILKimba Feb 2019
Thank you. They are already living in an assisted living home, but MIL requires more care--she is further along the Alzheimer's road. He tries to help her, she gets mad, they fight, it's not good. :-( SO she will actually just move to a different unit. It is set up in "home", settings. She will move 2 doors down. He will stay where he is, but move to a smaller room.
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I also wouldn't say anything to her. I would just walk her to the new room and tell her "your moving to a new room Mom". Why get her upset before you have to. I wouldn't have Dad go along unless he wanted to.
They become like children and need to be handled that way.
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DILKimba Feb 2019
Thank you! We are going to actually have the staff take her to her new room while my FIL is at the doctors office on Monday afternoon. Then we’ll see how it goes as far as him visiting that afternoon or giving them some space.
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Hi,
I had the same problem with my mum and dad. Mum had advanced Alzheimer’s and Dad had Vascular Dementia. She became very abusive and lashed out a lot at my Dad even though he is blind as well and hard of hearing. She disrupted his sleep every night as well and he needed a break. They were in a Nursing Home after I had to admit defeat trying to look after both of them.
We got a separate room for Dad on a different floor. He still spent a lot of his day with Mum but knew he had somewhere safe and peaceful to retreat to. We thought that Mum would react badly to the move but she didn’t. We never mentioned that he had a separate room and she forgot what normal was. She had a new normal. If she asked where he was we just said he had gone for a walk and would be back soon and this satisfied her. The staff said this as well and eventually she stopped asking.
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DILKimba Feb 2019
Thank you! that’s the outcome we are hoping for as well! that we would get a new normal. He can go and visit whenever he wants and still has a safe place to be.
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I went through a similar situation with my folks, dad having advanced dementia, mom not as bad. I would not try to explain the move to her. At this point tell her anything to keep her calm. WE ARE GOING FOR A WALK. HERES A NICE ROOM. DAD WILL BE HERE LATER.

I had to move my dad to memory care after mom died. I was dreading it but I just told him there was a better room available and moved stuff in while aides distracted him in the dining room. Mom died in April and he ocassionally asks about her. I tell him she’s in therapy, we’ll see her later and he’s good with that.
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DILKimba Feb 2019
Thank you! It's hard when they are in different stages, but also both impaired. :-( Makes reasoning of any kind hard.
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