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.
Th thing that will really bring thing sto a head is if dad says he thinks I should visit mum more. He sees her once a week with this woman due to work commitments and I try and go every week too, in the week. He has mentioned that this is important and makes me feel very guilty if I don't go, to the extent that whenever he speaks to me the first thing he says is have you gone to see mum. I believe he still feels guilty for mum being in a home and in some ways try to push it back on me. I haven't once said that he should go more or that he shouldn't see the other woman so much and spend more time with mum. I am trying to be understanding but never seem to get the same back. I live around 40mins drive from mum's home (dad and other family member live in same town) and feel like I need to take a step back from the situation. I also have family of my own, husband, toddler and work commitments, be it part-time. but this never seems to be taken into account. I am trying to hold onto the relationship for the sake of my mum and my son but am finding it increasingly difficult. The whole situation is very sad as mum was the glue that held everything together as the woman in the family often are and we were always a close family.
I have to take a step back and just let it go. It won't change the way I feel and it probably won't make things any different but if I don't it will drive me insane.
I do admire the way the chap in the earlier posting was able to divorce his wife. I wish my dad had the strength to do this. Sadly mum cannot write now so is unable sign her signature so this would not be possible anyway.
Thanks for the comments.... wish me luck. And good luck with all the moral dilemmas surrounding the subject. It's not an easy one. x
I'm rather tickled by the notion of its being your Christian duty to see that your own intimate needs are met.
Love you "christians". Thinking every emotion stops when your loved one forgets who you are or thinks you're their brother or sister instead of their lover. I am sure that feels so fulfilling.
Thanks though for thinking the marriage license means everyone must be dead inside after this sad time. You're incredible understanding of your dead corpse of a libido means a lot to real people. Best of luck to your "spouse".