In May my father unceremoniously kicked his wife of 63 years out of the house after my mother sided with my brother in an argument. Although their last few years had been very difficult for mum, she was unaware that her naturally narcissistic husband was deep in the throws of FTD and Alzheimers. With five children to help her 'escape' we took on the decision making. Her departure escalated his dementia as he tried to cope with ADLs until one day we found him on the laundry floor peeing in a drain, bleeding from the cuts on his head from falls.
He now lives in a secure high care nursing facility and has come to terms with his diagnosis and prognosis. He is medicated (unknowingly) and this has changed his personality and thankfully his aggressive mood. At the moment he is kind, patient, gentle and VERY REMORSEFUL. Our visits are welcome but quite emotional for him. He said yesterday he desperately wants to see mum. I am not sure if he is able to apologize, but says he just wants to talk and laugh about old times. Mum, 82, has been through as much trauma as we have in the last few months moving from house to house, trying to figure out the rejection. We keep her in the loop and she is very concerned about him and is so sad how things have ended.
I feel she has tried to talk herself into hating him because of his controlling and narcissistic personality and she wonders why she put up with him for so long. I worry that as she is so used to fighting and arguing with him she could be quite spiteful towards him. As I am not sure how long dad will be in the adorable phase I feel the time is now if we are to reunite them. I guess I am asking if this is a pandora's box I need not open?
The decision is your Moms. Take her, leave them alone but be close by, See how it goes. If he gets abusive, then leave.
I, like any spouse that has had their loved one diagnosed with any type of dementia, watched my husband change. The changes in my/our case were gradual, he was always the sweet loving, caring person he had been there were "little" changes that when I looked back were not so little.
I am guessing your Mom now knows about the diagnosis. And I am sure that she is aware that his personality is under control at this time.
Let her know that you would like to all get together for the holidays. Tell her that dad would love to visit with her. Let her make the decision. Tell her that you would stay with her if she wishes, if after a bit if she wants to visit alone step out of the room. It may take a few requests for her to want to visit. But this should be her decision.
Also if your mom is not wanting to visit and hold back the spiteful thoughts, holding in anger for a long time is difficult and if she feels the need to vent it will do no good. Possibility that your dad would not even know why she is upset and that would just stress him again being yelled at. So feel her out as well.
Obviously, if I hadn't been a complete numpty with three little kids on my hands and I'd been paying attention to what was happening under my nose I would have offered her more support than just a horrified expression when she at last told me about all this. Let that pass.
Anyway. The point is that when he was finally dying, he begged her forgiveness and begged for a reconciliation, and they were remarried by a registrar shortly before he died.
She wasn't the type to articulate her feelings in any detail. But I think she was glad. Maybe not so much for his having been sorry in the end, as that it was proof to herself that she had been able to forgive. At the very least, she was satisfied.
Your mother has been taking this crap for decades. If at the end of it she is left with nothing but rage and hatred, what kind of outcome is that for her?
At the moment, she must still be incredibly stressed and sore about his very recent actions, and it's actually pretty healthy that she is angry. But it's the disease that forced this crisis, and it would be a pity if it were allowed to decide what her long, long marriage amounts to in the end.
If I were you I'd get professional help in guiding her in this. Do you have access to counselling? Are you in the UK?
If it is telling herself that she has gained her freedom, good.
If it is being the stronger and forgiving him, rescuing what she treasures from the heap, fine.
But your father really has lost all right to make any requests, let alone give instructions. All you can do is help your mother think through what *she* wants.
Getting back to answering your question, since your dad is medicated, in a better mental state, and even remorseful, as long as he and your mom want to see one another I would encourage you to make that happen for them. Talk to a social worker at the facility your dad is at, as well as the caregiving staff and nurses. They can help you by preparing your dad for the visit with Med management and help in choosing the best time of day for him to receive your mom as a visitor. They can also provide you with back up support during the visit to ease your mind as they are not emotionally invested and do not carry your burdens. This is what they do every day and have likely seen this situation played out before and are prepared for whatever comes of your parents’ reunion. You have my prayers and empathy. I hope you come to a resolution you can all live with.
The reason I say 'IF' because it should be your mom's call - by now she should have moved back into her home of so many years because under the law it is the 'matrimonial home' so once he is out she can move back in if it hasn't been sold
She is the 'injured party' here, as you describe, so she should be the one to decide if/when a meeting takes place - your dad should be in agreement but he was the 'transgressor' by throwing her out which he could not do legally even if the house is in his name alone because it is the matrimonial home
If it is his name only have him sign a paper that she has rights to it - do this while he is still able to [assuming he is now] so don't wait for long - if it is both names she can actually sue your dad for any expense incurred by his actions & maybe if it is in his alone she may have some recourse here