Living with triplets

I said in reply to a comment on one of the posts the other day that living with someone who has dementia is a little like living with twins but I've decided it's more like living with identical triplets - they look exactly alike but each has their own personality.  You begin with the nicest one and live a long and happy life but then your other half starts to change places with one or other of his two siblings.  The swaps happen infrequently at first and in short bursts so things just seem a little off but it's nothing you can put your finger on.  Then the swaps become more frequent and you know something isn't right but, because he/she doesn't always swap with the same sibling, each time it happens the reactions are different and you're not sure what just happened.  Eventually however your life partner, your best friend and the corner stone of your life, fades into the background leaving his two siblings to take it in turns to switch places.  The problem here is that, although you know the nice one of the triplets, the one you committed to in the first place, has gone you never know which sibling you're going to get on any given day and then, just when you've come to terms with the loss of the nicest one, he/she pops back for a brief visit and you're thrown all over again.  Does this sound familiar?  Let me know if you think the same.


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Comments

Unknown said…
Are you in danger of overthinking things 🤕😀
Jane said…
Possibly but this is how it feels to me. Ash is now someone who looks like my husband and sounds like my husband but in every other way is so different to the person I've spent most of my life with that he could be his twin brother. He was so steady, so full of life and at the same time so laid back that I always knew where I was with him but now I wake in a morning and hold my breath to see what sort of a day we're going to have. However, because he looks and sounds the same, I frequently forget that life is different now and then he behaves 'oddly' and it hits me all over again.
Ann said…
Absolutely ‘spot on’ Jane! This is one of the truest and most accurate, descriptions of what it’s like to live with someone you love, who is now on this awful ‘Dementia journey’, that I’ve read in a long time.

You’ve described my experience too.....it’s quite bewildering at times.
Jane said…
Thank you Ann. Was beginning to doubt myself but I know this is how I feel and your comment along with emails I've received have helped me realise I'm not on my own. It's ok to think we need to live in the moment and forget what's gone before but it's not always that easy.