A Same-Sex Spouse, I Had to Cope When My Husband Lost His Driving Ability
Wrote this many years ago to Gregory, who was well-advanced on our Alzheimer’s disease journey
I wrote this piece about Gregory’s driving our car about ten years ago but just came across it. I thought sharing it with others in a similar situation would be good. I know that many members of the LGBTQ community are dealing with similar issues, Dementia/Alzheimer’s disease, but there is very little written about it.
I always referred to it as OUR Journey with dementia/Alzheimer’s disease. Gregory slowly lost his abilities, and I unwaveringly supported him through these changes. In the end, my primary responsibility was to:
- keep him safe.
- make sure he was in the right place, doing the right things, at the right time.
- make sure he knew he was loved.
- make sure that if he ever was lost (physically, emotionally, mentally), we would find each other.
Men, notoriously, tie their masculinity to their ability to drive a car. Many families struggle with getting the person dealing with dementia (often Alzheimer’s disease) to stop driving.