One of my patients’ husband used to visit his wife everyday at the hospice. People kept telling him; but she does not remember who you are? His response; but I do remember who she is. She is my wife. God bless him.
@roses656411 ай бұрын
Close. The correct answer was "she is my love."
@mampiemattina573911 ай бұрын
Surrender.....we have no control.
@jackspring770911 ай бұрын
Also - one thing I would add to that. When a member of my family was dying in hospital, supposedly unconscious and doped to the gills with morphine I know he could hear and understand everything we were saying. And I'm sure its the same with a lot of people who are supposedly unresponsive. That patient's husband was absolutely right to visit her everyday, and its disgusting that people were even saying that to him, in my opinion.
@jacksquat414011 ай бұрын
@@jackspring7709: I don't think she cares about her husband. Diane wants to get it on and live her best life, now. At least that's my take.
@danerichards728011 ай бұрын
Your a selfish woman
@michaelcollins832811 ай бұрын
My parents were married for 51 years. My mom was disabled for 39 of those years. My dad took care of her, took care of me, sent me to university, worked full time at demanding jobs and was loyal to her until she passed. That man is a role model for men everywhere,
@stateofkansass10 ай бұрын
Your dad is an example. I don't know him but reading this but I'm proud of him
@Arlene_DOTK10 ай бұрын
Amen 🙏
@texan90310 ай бұрын
What an amazing guy he is.
@caseyparks395410 ай бұрын
Sadly you can’t apply those same standards to women. It’s just not in their nature.
@cameronhirtle731610 ай бұрын
Respect to your father my friend.
@ifonlyseethrumyeyes895710 ай бұрын
My husband left me when my health went bad...I kept thinking "in sickness and in health" I got back on my feet and so proud...without him
@veritorossi10 ай бұрын
But I feel this is different, she is alive but he is not here. We only have one life and I don't think it's fair for her to waste her like like this. Divorcing him doesn't mean not caring for him anymore but it's a way for her to be able to move on.
@DNAfinder200010 ай бұрын
That's what I was thinking too "in sickness and in health"... I get this lady is tired of that way of life but what about those vows they made.. My husband left me too after health issues and it just makes you wonder about who you married
@Spacewalk1110 ай бұрын
Congratulations. That’s an amazing story. In sickness and health is a tough vow when things get severe, as the lady in this video I cannot judge. I don’t know the extent of your health problems, but regardless, super happy for you, & I’m sure you came out stronger on the other side. I hope the rest of your life is filled with joy and prosperity. Bless you 🙏🏼
@ifonlyseethrumyeyes895710 ай бұрын
@@Spacewalk11 you are very sweet and yes my life has been amazing regardless. Thank you
@andrewkifee38110 ай бұрын
We say in sickness and in health, but noone ever admits that its usually just about the health only.
@wenkenobi83144 ай бұрын
She's amazingly transparent & honest where others would slink along & do what they like. Proud of her. Continue to keep your vows & live your life.
@janewinfield4541 Жыл бұрын
My husband has dementia and is in a facility. I go see him almost every day. I cannot imagine divorcing him and leaving him without my support. And yes I do everything at home. But this is not his fault and he is my heart for as long as he has.
@MagicalFishy Жыл бұрын
You are an amazing wife. May God bless you tremendously.
@retrojay86 Жыл бұрын
🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
@SpeedfreakUK Жыл бұрын
What if you were 30?
@NotSoEntertaining. Жыл бұрын
My friend who is home healthcare aid has a client who brings his girlfriend when he visits his wife who has dementia. 😅 Men don’t care.
@P.Rack25 Жыл бұрын
That is a beautiful story. Thank you for sharing.
@G_Money_ Жыл бұрын
After watching this video, I've realized that love is not a feeling, it's about commitment and your actions.
@Aminah6623 Жыл бұрын
It's duty for sure
@JustLIkerapunzel Жыл бұрын
People literally get cancer due to aweful stress levels on a scale of being in situations like being a longterm caregiver for what yould be decades. It's a horrible situation but would her husband really want this to be her faight? For her to lose her life cause he in a way lost his while still being here? It's horrible and there is simply nothing that can make it be ok. If I truly loved someone and it was me - I would not wish that faight and burden to be on my husband to sacrifice themselves in such a manner. As someone working in healthcare I think most people can't imagine the consequences of this
@dontworry1568 Жыл бұрын
its about what a man can do for a woman. if the roles were reversed, the husband would be getting tore to pieces for even considering this.
@JesusChrist-n9k Жыл бұрын
It's a decision.
@tbw980371 Жыл бұрын
This is the only right answer. Love is sacrifice.
@Author_I Жыл бұрын
I had a relative who was shot in the head by an intruder. He was irreparably damaged and unable to speak, would drool, and reverted to infantile behavior. His wife helped him do everything, including changing his diapers. She stayed with him. She was judged harshly by the family because there was endless gossip and speculation about her stepping outside her marriage. To my knowledge she was nothing by loyal. I don't think people could fathom her incredible level of loyalty. Her kids grew up to be hugely empathetic humans. I had the utmost respect for her and could not wrap my mind around that level of love. She stayed with him until he died. It still blows my mind.
@JeanJean1 Жыл бұрын
My goodness. God bless that woman.
@muma6559 Жыл бұрын
Not every person has to be the same. But that is a lovely example.
@Kate-b5j11 ай бұрын
What a profoundly good woman! Love is a choice. It is something we do-- a commitment, an action. ✅
@bopeep8611 ай бұрын
@muma6559 Same? No, not every human is the same. But what you are really saying is that not everyone is moral, not everyone is a good person, ya that's true. Some people suck.
@jodybuchanan937311 ай бұрын
There are good people who mind their own business and evil people who love nothing more than to gossip and cause trouble. It's always been that way. I learned a long time ago to ignore the petty people. They get their kicks from reactions. To quote Dr. Suess... Be who you are and say what you feel, because in the end those who matter don't mind and those who mind don't matter.
@zo_47110 күн бұрын
As an ICU nurse I can almost guarantee that medical advice was probably to palliate when he was acute but this family wasn’t ready to let go. Now, years down the track things are different
@valeriekehrt75668 күн бұрын
Hard choices. ❤
@stephaniec06255 күн бұрын
Agreed
@barefooterin281720 сағат бұрын
Yuuuuuupppppp..... that's why people need to advocate for themselves with dnr's and dni's and advance directives and couples should be having explicit conversations with each other before they even get married about what to do if something like this would happen
@Starlightbarking8 ай бұрын
I worked in a disability care home where a wife was severely disabled, the husband divorced her and remarried but remains devoted to her and visits regularly, and is her primary next of kin. He is incredibly loving and caring towards her even though she is practically in a vegetative state. Noone judged him for this, everyone was impressed with his dedication.
@chronic20238 ай бұрын
That's lovely, but how can he still be "her primary next of kin" if they are no longer married? I mean, from a legal aspect he is no longer her next of kin if they are divorced.
@Ben.N8 ай бұрын
@@chronic2023I'm guessing there's no one else
@amandahugenkiss8 ай бұрын
THANK YOU!!!
@amandahugenkiss8 ай бұрын
@@chronic2023 It's called Adult Adoption. Look it up! Lots of folks get a divorce from the partner in a coma after so many years go by, but choose to adopt them so they are considered the primary caregiver. It's not that uncommon at all.
@lottielane24868 ай бұрын
Wonderful Reply from John, . He showed deep wisdom towards Diane. The caller. I hope she can take it with her.
@angrysloth10 ай бұрын
My first girlfriend worked as a CNA in a facility for people that sustained brain injuries and I would sometimes go eat lunch with her/them. I remember once seeing a young kid my age who's wife and young kids were visiting him and he couldn't even recognize them. Almost every single one was there for a motorcycle accident, this guy included. I sold my bike within weeks and haven't ridden since.
@leslie35669 ай бұрын
Trust me you made a smart move as a daughter whose dad passed away from a motorcycle accident.
@coolwater559 ай бұрын
That's selfless... I know more than a few men who refuse to give up their bikes. My nephew had horrible bike accident, lucky to be alive. He recovered almost to normal. He promised his wife no more bikes, but bought another one.
@justaguy94519 ай бұрын
Do you know whether or not they had helmets on??
@coolwater559 ай бұрын
@@justaguy9451 Not sure who your replying to. Helmets on, yes.
@angrysloth9 ай бұрын
@@justaguy9451 mixed bag, several of the guys did, some didn’t. The guys who did probably wouldn’t be here today had they not.
@BanjoPixelSnack8 ай бұрын
My grandmother got dementia at 65 years old. She died at 75 years old and was in a home for 10 whole years. My grandfather visited her every day for ten years until she died, longer after she stopped recognising him. He lived for be 95 so he lived 20 years without her but every single year he took flowers to her grave for her birthday and their wedding anniversary and at Christmas. It is a privilege to love someone that much.
@jordanbrown13098 ай бұрын
I did not expect to cry at work today, but here we are. That's some moving stuff.
@Sauvageonne8 ай бұрын
@@jordanbrown1309 You shouldn't be watching KZbin at work. Just kidding. I know right, my heart is sinking with those stories. I hope I never have to do that for my husband because I wish him good health until the end (we agreed we'd both die when I turn 100 and he'd be 116), but if anything were to happen to him, I can't see myself ever leaving him. I don't wanna make promises but I'm pretty sure I would not leave him.
@Mad-genius7 ай бұрын
So you would have plenty of people here telling your grandfather he should just move on, find somebody else and be happy. After all your grandma didn't know who he was. But you see, Your grandfather knew what love was, he knew it wasn't about his happiness and knew he took a vow do to what he did. Wonderful man.
@marciamatteini76047 ай бұрын
What a beautiful picture of love. God bless him
@Yourhighness77777 ай бұрын
❤
@roundtowerproductions4 ай бұрын
Honestly these stories give you a whole reset on your own life and sobering perspective just hearing what other people are going through. These videos are hard to listen to but then end up bringing a great healing and wisdom. Thanks very much for everything you do and the stories you share. John, you are a world class human being, inspiring countless others to be just as loving, respectful and honest.
@GodswordwithHanna26 күн бұрын
Yes. 🙌
@lisadawley11 ай бұрын
Her honesty is very raw and real. To take this public on social media, you know she must be at her wit's end.
@gilmercastro984910 ай бұрын
She just wants validation . Think about people that have disable kids . They dont think that way .
@firelordplayz10 ай бұрын
The way she speaks is very telling of her selfishness. Just a couple examples, i.e. "He knows MY kids" (instead of OUR kids), "I have an 8-year-old" (instead of WE have an 8-year-old), etc., there were many other examples.
@angierennie907810 ай бұрын
@@firelordplayz I don’t think it’s fair to call her selfish. They have been HER kids for 5 years. She has been a single parent since the accident. Everything she has done has been to support, care, & provide for her family, husband included. I would call her selfless, & a very loving wife.
@Jay-og4yb10 ай бұрын
If this were the other way around the guy would be labeled a demon but since it's a woman it's "I won't judge, every situation is different"
@schoolofdank573610 ай бұрын
@@firelordplayzWomen need to respect their men to truly love them. How can she truly someone she no longer respects or can converse with on any level. Truly unfortunate on all levels
@healthybodz1969 Жыл бұрын
This is a woman who is totally emotionally and physically exhausted, lonely and heart broken. My heart is breaking for her. She's not just wishing her husband dead, she wants him released from his pain and anguish. Not many people would have coped with 8 children and the situation shes going through. I pray she finds some peace and the answers she's looking for x
@fauxbro1983 Жыл бұрын
When the going gets tough, quit. I guess that's your mantra
@singerjo5791 Жыл бұрын
@@fauxbro1983You have no compassion. My sister took care of an invalid husband for many years. She lost herself. Until you’ve been there don’t judge.
@bloomingale7868 Жыл бұрын
@@singerjo5791oh we can judge. Truth is truth. Vows mean nothing nowadays. Don’t make commitments of one of the guarantees is having someone to depend on at your time of need. The man is better off with strangers.
@user-bx4ti6ig3i Жыл бұрын
@@singerjo5791through sickness and in health is just a vow of convenience? She's not God nor does she decide when his time is. It's up to God not the wife. We get she's exhausted but it's her life. Life throws us a curve ball and suddenly it gets hard.
@bobbyglendinning2406 Жыл бұрын
@@fauxbro1983 ..and trolling is yours
@MrAlroyNdhlovu10 ай бұрын
This episode just put into perspective how deep marriage is. It isn't a joke. It should never be something that is taken lightly.
@richardspeciale88289 ай бұрын
So true!!
@nhayes9279 ай бұрын
Theres nothing wrong with this woman moving on at this point
@steve88039 ай бұрын
@MrAlroyNdhlovu "marriage" is just a legal term. You can have the same love and bond for someone without the government getting involved.
@janestclair36509 ай бұрын
Her children should come first
@janestclair36509 ай бұрын
Her children would be upset if they divorced ZgOD would be upset. We all get ill at some point.
@lucindastigall1636Ай бұрын
Learn to live without the comfort and support of a partner says Dr. John, who then sighs and goes home to the invaluable and treasured comfort and support of his wife.
@yonihaile177429 күн бұрын
He didn’t say that
@blackhawk593426 күн бұрын
@@yonihaile1774he did
@dingusumadre19 күн бұрын
It’s not “learn to live without comfort” it’s “learn to keep the vows you’ve made.”
@xJayhawkFANx3 күн бұрын
In sickness and in health.
@melz60195 ай бұрын
Who else was in tears listening to her? I am so heartbroken for this family. Keeping them in my prayers.
@80sriceman5 ай бұрын
🙋♂️. 😭
@rhyshayman84794 ай бұрын
Yeah big time. I've had no frame of reference for the situation but what an incredibly sad and moving story
@sherronedwards43894 ай бұрын
Prayers? That’s laughable!
@tac30164 ай бұрын
Yes, but she made a commitment to be with him in sickness and in health ... till death...
@jaylalorae4 ай бұрын
@@sherronedwards4389why?
@susanodonnell908410 ай бұрын
I just read an article about a woman whose husband is in the same condition as the callers. She did divorce her husband but obtained guardianship. She has remarried but continues to care for her ex husband and her current husband supports her and helps too.
@KinoTechUSA6910 ай бұрын
The second husband decision is kinda heinous, not gonna lie.
@ibdonsie10 ай бұрын
I know someone who did that. His first wife developed severe mental illness. Had to be institutionalized.
@sandyjuntunen408810 ай бұрын
Doesn't make it right. Basically she's got 2 husbands- at best.
@christins.148110 ай бұрын
@@sandyjuntunen4088It does if she was wanting sex. She wasn't going to cheat on him, so she divorced. This way she can gave sex without cheating and can still take care of him.
@michellelaudet536310 ай бұрын
@@christins.1481 In whose eyes? Her own. Because God said something different. And I live this myself. I am not judging, just saying.
@jakebowman8821 Жыл бұрын
As an ICU nurse I firmly believe their are things worse than death. Sometimes it’s better to go out and not try to fight nature
@rachelgooden9981 Жыл бұрын
Exactly . She refused to let him go in peace so now he’s on earth in hell.
@nt3833 Жыл бұрын
@@rachelgooden9981 maybe I missed that part of the call, but how did she “choose” to keep him alive? Was there a time she could have let him die ethically and she didn’t?
@jillianwilliams1 Жыл бұрын
Former ICU nurse here too. In the halls of ICU I certainly learned that there are way worse things than death.
@irawr256 Жыл бұрын
@@nt3833 The man was trached (meaning he was unable to be successfully weaned from the ventilator). The choice to trach is a choice that we don't know if he wanted or not. The man had a feeding tube placed that should also have been his decision about getting and keeping. I would imagine there were times in this decision-making process when doctors said that the prognosis was very poor and yet she just kept hoping things would get better (when they didn't). Many families fall into this. It's up to you whether you think it's ethical to keep someone in his state of being alive.
@angeladomer4813 Жыл бұрын
Agreed.
@adrianamaclennan78323 ай бұрын
stroke wife here---questioning the same thing. I am 8 years post husband's four strokes. Major cogntiive issues and so much more. I am just a caregiver and am so tired of the loneliness. The crying almost every day for the past 8 years. And NO support. I don't know how much longer I can go on.
@maggies882 ай бұрын
You can honour him and also not give your life up.
@thebaddoctor161421 күн бұрын
what would that look like?@@maggies88
@adelejones50596 күн бұрын
I’m sorry to hear about your situation, do not feel guilty about moving on. Only you have walked in your shoes.. no one can judge you. If your husband would have passed 8 years ago, people would have told you to live your life now. I imagine you have had years of guilt and been exhausted for the care you have shown your husband…. Sending love to you and your husband.
@gillianmurphy21114 күн бұрын
@adrianamaclennan7832 fellow human and also a random Internet stranger here - I hope you have found some clarity over the last two months. Your situation is one few people can truly understand and it's easy for others to cast judgement. Modern medicine is wonderful, but there's little support for those stuck in a caretaker situation. While you do take vows for sickness, if you literally have no life and are destroying yourself in the process, perhaps it's better to find a different situation. Divorce can be weaponized and at a certain point, if you're "married" to someone that can't even recognize you, who are you married to? A body that looks like the person that you married, but is it really 'them', eh, I'm not so sure.
@razorsmum2 күн бұрын
Very well daid. I completely agree. @gillianmurphy2111
@ronsmith224110 ай бұрын
I will not judge. Every situation is different. I hope you can work it all out. Every situation is different. But I cared for my wife with MS for 26 years. She wasn't able to stand or walk for the last 15 years. We were married for 51 years and she has since passed. The wedding vows "in sickness and in health" can be extremely difficult.
@barbarakangas325510 ай бұрын
Maybe her limbs didn't work but you were able to have a conversation with her.
@Yeat_10 ай бұрын
That sounds 1000x better than what this woman has. Her husband is essentially a vegetable. There is nothing there.
@maryanderson275910 ай бұрын
There’s a special place in heaven for you
@th430510 ай бұрын
@koreyb plenty people people with MS are not complete vegetables. Medications has helped slow progression
@shirleyhardy8919 ай бұрын
I'd rather have my husband half alive than anyone else. He's been gone 11 1/2 years and nobody could begin to fill my heart like he has since 1993.
@BetheBe6410 ай бұрын
John is a really good teacher. He doesn't tell her what she wants to hear and he doesn't judge her. He asks her to think it through and he goes there with her.
@joannasmithtransformationa313810 ай бұрын
From my perspective, John's bias is evident despite his saying he couldn't express his deepest sense on this. Seems like he had a hard time keeping that to himself.
@mariacompton141610 ай бұрын
This guy is really good..glad this popped up in my feed…awesome awesome advice..
@stefanisolomon72510 ай бұрын
I think his advice was based on what the lady shared with him regarding her strong faith and coming to terms with grieving outcomes - the ones which she has been trying to fight. I think.
@simplykiki941110 ай бұрын
His comments seemed like judgment to me.
@darlenealessio760910 ай бұрын
I think people dynamics are varied some stayed when they should have left long ago some have adult children and step children who are not weighing in. Many families continue to live on move forward no matter the stages leaving 1 no matter what it bears on them the responsibility UNFAIR DO NOT JUDGE
@andreaa.97098 ай бұрын
I am a nurse and THIS, this is one of the biggest things the public needs to understand. I have seen many patients and families in similar situations, where you have to decide EARLY ON, if your loved one would want to be kept alive with a trach and feeding tube or allowed to die. Usually that answer is a resounding NO. But all too many well intentioned wives and husbands and mothers and fathers are wholly convinced their loved one will be healed. And they miss their window (literally we call it the “death window”) to let them pass with dignity. Those who go on to get the feeding tube and trach qnd are totally dependent will die from one of a succession of infections, usually from a UTI or a pressure wound on their bottom from not being able to move. That could take 20+ years. It is truly inhumane. It is disgusting and heart breaking the state these people end up in, a state that they would have pleaded to escape if they could communicate. Doctors often try in vain to explain this reality in professional terms but families always think they know more. When it comes to strokes and TBIs and anything in the brain, those cells don’t regenerate. And I’m a Christian too but God, for whatever reason, rarely ever chooses to answer prayers of miraculous healing. He was calling this man home and instead the medical team played God at the command of this well intentioned woman. Death with dignity is a far better alternative to the horrible things that can happen when life is artificially prolonged. Ultimately- people, please have this conversation with your spouse/kids/parents so that have considered it before they’re faced with this actually happening. Because it could. It could happen to any one of us at any time.
@scottlaux69348 ай бұрын
It can be morbid, what modern medicine can do.
@Adekoyan6 ай бұрын
Thanks for writing this
@Finallyretired20226 ай бұрын
I’m a retired RN with 40 yrs os service. Thank you for writing such an important message. Too many people Never have this conversation with their loved ones. PLEASE PLEASE have this talk out of love for your family. It does make the critical time easier to handle. Again thank you for writing such a poignant message.
@carolynjones75676 ай бұрын
🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
@ingridlowrie10296 ай бұрын
Everyone should have a Power of Attorney for those times you are unable to make decisions for yourself in your sick bed but you have discussed it in detail with them when you were healthy.
@karenlewkowitz58584 ай бұрын
So appreciate the pause, the space John gave to soak it in. In real life, people usually jimp in and just talk about their own story.
@FeHopeCyndiW8 ай бұрын
I think this is a tragedy with no right answer. I won't judge. I was by my husband's side as he battled cancer for 5 years, including a craniotomy. I spent months sleeping in surgical trauma ICUs. It was hard. But, not nearly as hard as his death. I miss him so much. It was my honor to be by his side.
@dyllangames35928 ай бұрын
The right path is staying with said person. Because if she walks away never knowing what happened, then she's gonna regret it. And her kids learning that when something gets hard they can just walk away, they will keep that in forever.
@c.san.87516 ай бұрын
@@dyllangames3592 The right path is upholding her end of the promise. It is a binding union. No matter what.
@dyllangames35926 ай бұрын
@@c.san.8751 "in sickness and in health" is a vow you take. Therefore, her path is to stay with him. It doesn't say "in sickness and in health unless one of us gets sick and then the other one gets lonely"
@ellenfogle12246 ай бұрын
Those who haven't gone through this can't really understand how I feel
@c.san.87516 ай бұрын
@@ellenfogle1224 Who cares how you feel. A vow is a vow. Absolute nonsense regarding people making decisions based on how they feel. Total nonsense. Foolish and immature.
@mrenae6798 Жыл бұрын
I work as a hospice social worker(used to work in a long term care facility) and can understand where she’s coming from to an extent. I see faithful families coming in to visit their loved ones and I also see the patients that do not receive visits, but we’re aware that they have family nearby. The one thing I can say is that when it’s all over and our patients pass, I’ve never seen the faithful wife or spouse regret all the time they spent honoring their partner. They usually express relief mixed in with their grief because being a caregiver is HARD. But never regret for taking care of their loved one.
@Sibbyym Жыл бұрын
They don’t voice it but they do. Especially when it’s long term.
@lepolhart3242 Жыл бұрын
I spent 20 years as a professional carer and looked after terminally ill and disabled patients. The amount of crap I`ve seen long suffering spouses go through looking after their dying or disabled partners is bad. It`s no disney movie and it`s easy to talk about it as if it`s a movie on the hallmark channel but I don`t blame people for divorcing disabled spouses as sometimes it`s too much and the disabled person can no longer perform the husband/wife duties expected of them, they require professional care.
@AnOriginalYouTuber Жыл бұрын
As someone who'd like to get married, I needed to hear this.
@nicolab2075 Жыл бұрын
And maybe those who choose a different route don't regret their choice either.
@user-if4ke6en9r Жыл бұрын
@@lepolhart3242no one ever said that marriage was a Disney movie. That’s why you make vows. Till death do us part. “I can’t handle it, and you should be dead anyways, why should I keep my vows, dignity and loyalty?” Disgusting
@jasondonnelly1505 ай бұрын
I’m a physician who’s see’s this often. Those saying “in sickness and in health” disregard the heroism she’s already displayed. 90% of ALL people regardless of their faith will crumble under this stress. Marriage doesn’t mean that the destruction of a life requires the destruction of two.
@turtledoveexpressions42745 ай бұрын
Amen.. she still plans to take care of him, but she needs to take care of herself also and her family. If he were of sound mind, I would have a different opinion, but he doesn’t know where he’s at or who he is or all of the dynamics. She does.
@leilariley9365 ай бұрын
I'm sorry,but that's one of the COLDEST FREAKING THING I'VE EVER HEARD!!I have a similar situation,except I'm the one whose life as CHANGED....I'm glad that I'm a believer in God,and my mum thought me at an early age to be my own best friend,and suicide is a sin,and never an answer to ANY PROBLEM.I'm forever grateful for those lessons....because sickness,disability and dependency ,can OFTEN TIMES FEELS 100000 times worse,and when you come to the realisation,that YOU'RE THE FRIGGING ELEPHANT IN THE PROVERBIAL ROOM,everyone is pretending not to SEE!!
@jasondonnelly1505 ай бұрын
@@leilariley936sir ur challenges deserve empathy and respect but u must know that ur ability to respond on this forum means ur illness is nothing like this woman’s husband. He is hardly aware of what anyone has to say about him, let alone remember it the next day if he did. She desperately wants her husband back but sadly that person is gone. If he could interact like u can its unlikely she’d be asking this question. Regardless, I sincerely wish U the best in ur struggles.
@leilariley9365 ай бұрын
I'love respect your opinion ,because it's YOUR RIGHT !!Whether or not I have disclose my health issues/concerns ...yes,they're different but ,dependencies are the main commonality ,and that's the one of the worse part...HAVING TO ASK CONSTANTLY,for ANYTHING FROM ANYONE IS A KILLER WITHIN ITSELF ..I PROMISE YOU !!Take care !!
@bekahiam15 ай бұрын
I so agree with you on this
@emilykeepsmiling946525 күн бұрын
She is 100% "allowed" to move on and be happy. She's not saying she'll abandon him or anything, and she is a person with feelings. I hope she has found her happiness ❤
@dingusumadre19 күн бұрын
No one’s saying she isn’t allowed. People are making judgements of her character which are justified.
@malenahernandez937717 күн бұрын
@@dingusumadrereally? You’re dense. So she’s supposed to start and not live anymore?
@Pop-twist.15 күн бұрын
@@dingusumadreMaybe it’s justified in your world but not mine or millions of others!!!
@SanjuktaSahoo-cm6uh13 күн бұрын
@@malenahernandez9377in sickness and in health
@michaelsorensen75677 күн бұрын
@@malenahernandez9377who's supposed to stay if not family? What's monogamy if not "not living anymore"?
@JC-kq2mq10 ай бұрын
I married my high-school sweetheart after dating 9 years, in 1987. We have four kids and she had a massive heart attack in 2008 and the second one four days into being at the hospital.She was only 46 years old and I fought with getting second and third opinions. I refused unplugging her from life support and Sharp Memorial was able to put an LVAD system to her heart. She was in coma for 2 months and after a 6-month stay at the hospital she was able to come home. I thought she was going to live forever since she had a machine but 6 years later she passed away in 2014 those were the best 6 years of my life has she left me with four beautiful children we had three boys and a girl
@paularobinson-x7i9 ай бұрын
🧡💙❤️🩷🩵💜🤲🏽
@kimyoung34849 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤
@SOI-wl2lo9 ай бұрын
So much love to you, sir. Thank you for your vulnerability!
@picardy74889 ай бұрын
Your story is sad but she sure hit the jackpot with you. If you can't be there for each other, what's the point of getting married after all. The legacy she left behind is your memory of your lives together and your four beautiful kids.
@CatherineRozanski19639 ай бұрын
Respect to you as a commited partner & loving father 🌟💎💙 xXx
@jaysmith6013 Жыл бұрын
Just as I was thinking my life was hard…. Time to go say a prayer and be thankful for my health and the fact that all my family is happy and healthy and likely have not struggled with 1% of what this woman and family has gone through
@TisHotMessHistory Жыл бұрын
Amen to that!
@Daniellapalo Жыл бұрын
Same
@donaldlee6760 Жыл бұрын
Agreed, in comparison to her struggles my life is a dream come true.
@iammaximus614 Жыл бұрын
… Always Grateful every day ✝️🙌🏽
@AH2332311 ай бұрын
Amen 🙏🏼
@sunnyd4734 Жыл бұрын
My uncle had a severe debilitating stroke in 1974 and could barely walk for the remainder of his life. My aunt quit her job at age 57 to care for her husband until he died in 1990. I will never forget the love ❤️ and care she had for her husband.
@cathithomas288810 ай бұрын
Not everyone can quit their job to care for someone.
@cathyl588810 ай бұрын
That’s definitely the right thing to do!, I commend your aunt for being the stand up human being and loving wife to her hubby! She took her vows seriously 💯 “for richer or poorer, in sickness and health til death do us past!” That’s true and undying love! ❤
@azpersonal8 ай бұрын
Barely Walk is different from her situation
@eveelaz452 ай бұрын
21:41 he’s being really tough on her honestly, I feel for her. It’s not selfish to want to live your life. The best way you can after all she’s been through. Clearly she intends on continuing to care for the husband. I don’t see anything wrong with her, wanting to move on, if I pass, or if something like this happened to me, I wouldn’t want someone to be with me out of pity. If you truly love someone you want them to be happy even if it’s without you clearly this woman is suffering and feels guilty for wanting to move on
@Absinthexx72 ай бұрын
Put yourself in the shoes of the other person then. You’ve had a great relationship with your partner, you have kids, and one day you go to work or something and suffer a severe injury that now leaves you permanently disabled. Your wife or husband feels you’re no longer good enough for you because of something you can’t control, and they decide they want to leave you for someone else. You aren’t upset or don’t think it’s awful?
@blueXcss2 ай бұрын
I bet you agree with him when he is tough on the men who calls him, but as as soon he is tough on a woman and tells the woman off, "ohh he's being really though on her honesty" typical woman 😅😅
@chaschuky999Ай бұрын
@@Absinthexx7in this situation, it sounds like he literally wouldn’t know what was happening. He forgets about their 8 year old child. She’s clearly suffering being alone, in my eyes it would be cruel for me to require she stay. Two people don’t need to suffer because of my injury.
@dante698511 күн бұрын
@@chaschuky999 Exactly. He has no short-term memory. He almost certainly would have no idea his wife had divorced him. Like the caller said: What would her husband say, if he had his full faculties? I would tell my partner "I want you to move on, be happy, and have a companion if I can't provide that for you." This is a dedicated wife. There's no question about that. She is going to continue to visit, support, and love her husband as he is now. But she should find a new partner, if that's what she wants (it might not be btw, that's up to her). For all intents and purposes her husband is dead.
@kristopherhasenbuhler53936 күн бұрын
@Absinthexx7 😊 Thank you, Im sure the wife agrees that it's not an "easy" choice to make. It can also be assumed that her saying "it's for the kids" Is just her trying to use the kids as leverage to involve a new man by saying they need a lively father figure!!! If it was one of my parents in his condition, I would expect the living parent to take as much time as they need to make the "right" choice!!!
@reneecoates26895 ай бұрын
I worked with folks with TBI’s for many years. Visit him, have him in your life, but give yourself permission to move on. People who judge you will never understand, but many of us get it. You get can still love him but you deserve a life too.
@hia52354 ай бұрын
What about when God judges her?
@difficultjourney32164 ай бұрын
If these people really cared about what God thought, it wouldn't even be a consideration.
@johnsonjj1174 ай бұрын
@@hia5235caller abd Renee neither are terribly worried about God’s judgement ATM…..future them might need to be a tad worried though
@tashajoykin51924 ай бұрын
@@difficultjourney3216I think this is a case-by-case basis.
@sharondoan14473 ай бұрын
@@hia5235 As I look around at the Christians in my life, and see the choices they make, and the ones I a confessing Christian make , I am one thousand percent convinced God will judge us fairly. My faith is in the Great I AM .
@vincekissinger10478 ай бұрын
In 2011 at 48 years old I was poisoned by accident. That night I ended up a paraplegic in the first of three hospitals over the next several months. I also suffered amnesia forgetting people I had known since college. A very long story short, my wife couldnt handle my condition and eventually stopped coming to see me telling me one time that it was just too far to drive after a long days work. From Nov 2011 to Jan 2012 I had no one come to see me (including family, parents, two sisters, no friends, zero, no one). It took me 5 months to learn how to walk again but only after losing my 19 year marriage, my 23 year career and every dime I had in the bank just to recover. When I got back on my feet again I finally realized that you can only count on one person in this world - Yourself.
@jo-p58 ай бұрын
Hoping you have loving people in your life now 🌺
@Artcore1038 ай бұрын
Wrong, you will let yourself down. You can count on Jesus though. And if you learn and take the risk to trust again, there are people you can count on too, but your ex wife simply wasn't one of them.
@Artcore1038 ай бұрын
Mormonism is false, and there is no marriage in heaven.
@LouiseBrim8 ай бұрын
Heartbreaking.
@jo-p58 ай бұрын
@@Artcore103 he may or may not be Christian, but we all know people who have prayed earnestly for years for help and comfort and it never came. This gentleman learned he had to count on himself. If he finds others he can count on along the way, that is a bonus but not a given.
@pam7002 Жыл бұрын
I feel so sorry for her. Mentally, her husband is gone. As a widow, I can relate to the horrible loneliness. I would not judge her regardless of her decision. Sometimes there are just no easy answers.
@consumerdebtchitchat Жыл бұрын
You said it so well Pam.
@uscitizen3252 Жыл бұрын
I literally said the same thing. I won't judge her either way.
@beinghonest9433 Жыл бұрын
@@uscitizen3252 because you are as evil as her
@uscitizen3252 Жыл бұрын
@@beinghonest9433haha really original, fella. You sound bitter and angry.Who left you? I want to thank them. :)
@beinghonest9433 Жыл бұрын
@@uscitizen3252 i hope karma hits you hard
@CarolDobos2 ай бұрын
Wow. Been there done all of the above. My husband was in some form of hospitalizations for 107 days, after a fall in our garage. Also brain damaged. Only my husband could not talk. My husband was home for 2 years and he did pass peacefully. We still cherished every moment we had with him. I can honestly tell you, you have to follow your heart! No one knows what you’re going through. Pray for guidance!❤
@MarkovianMan11 ай бұрын
I don't think anyone can really say what they'd do unless they were faced with this very sad, unfortunate situation. We can only *think* we know what we might do.
@Kekoa55211 ай бұрын
Yeah I have seen so many comments judge her clearly the woman exhausted There so many people who can’t fathom being with a disabled person on how much work that is it so exhausting
@growngamer212111 ай бұрын
Important observation. I truly believe that I would stand by my wonderful wife whatever may come. I know, though, that you truly don't know until you have to face it down. I can't even imagine what that family has endured.
@ozhunter670811 ай бұрын
Not true. Some of us follow through with our duties and commitments. Some people actually honor thier oaths and promises especially men
@Kekoa55211 ай бұрын
@@ozhunter6708 “especially men” even as a guy y’all make me so fking cringe because both women and men are capable of such things y’all some of those type of dude like to sht on women because you think you aren’t capable of the same bs that “some” women do
@keifer781311 ай бұрын
Easy. Never get into a relationship. I'm willing to be single forever
@SUZANNECARPENTER-ou3je10 ай бұрын
My stepfather had a horrible accident at work. While in rehabilitation, he was diagnosed with a rare neuromuscular disease called Wilson's Disease. My mom stayed by his side and took care of him. He got accepted into a drug trial that worked. He recovered so much that helped life be so much better. It was never the same as before. We all accepted that the before life was gone and this was what it is now. Finally, he was diagnosed with cancer and died a year later. None of us regret our last years with my stepfather. He and my mom loved each other so much. I look forward to being with him again in heaven.
@sensimania10 ай бұрын
Did Wilson's disease lead to the type of cancer that your step-dad was diagnosed with?
@SUZANNECARPENTER-ou3je9 ай бұрын
@sensimania Well, who could really know? Wilson's is a genetic disorder that 2 out of 4 children will have if both parents have the recessive gene. Their bodies are unable to digest copper. That copper or heavy metal builds up on the liver, brain, and eyes. It causes neuromuscular symptoms. This disease is very rare. Most neurologists will never see a patient with the disease in their career. I digress. I feel that he may have had cancer from being exposed to asbestos, but my mom didn't have an autopsy. He wanted to be cremated, and she didn't take time to think it through.
@sensimania9 ай бұрын
@@SUZANNECARPENTER-ou3je Wow, that sounds like s horrible experience 😔. Thank you for explaining, and sorry for your loss 💜
@elizabethdumas4147 Жыл бұрын
As a former ICU nurse, I witnessed mutiple occasions where a long term caregiver died before the spouse. She has 8 kids who would be left to pick up the pieces! The stress of long term care giving can be horrendous. My sister did it for 10 years after her husband had a massive stroke. He could not communicate and had one complication after another. She ended up being diagnosed with cancer just before he passed but is still here. I'm not sure how divorce would alleviate anything. She does need a support group and a good therapist. Only people who have been in her shoes can truly understand. There are many out there.
@whatevergoesforme5129 Жыл бұрын
Yep, it happens many times because caregiving for a long time takes a toll on the caregiver, especially when it is a family member. It happened to my old neighbor who took care of her now deceased sister and then her ill husband. Now, the ill husband has to be taken care of by their son after she died.
@paigeawin Жыл бұрын
@@whatevergoesforme5129 Well, that's the point of family and loved ones!!! Why are you complaining about it? If you won' take care of your own family members when they are sick and disabled, why do you think you have the right to force the world to take care of them?
@whatevergoesforme5129 Жыл бұрын
@@paigeawin What are you talking about? I just told what happened to my neighbor. So what complaining about taking care of a sick or disabled family member are you talking about? It is what it is and if you can't accept a statement that is true, then you are dense. Caregiving for a long time takes a toll on the caregiver and that's the TRUTH and not a complaint. It is a reality that one has to face because so many times the patient outlives his/her caregiver whose health took a beating because of mental, emotional and physical stress that goes with the job. Nothing in my comment is about forcing the world to take care of a family member, you low IQ TROLL. I am Asian and we take care of our aging parents and don't send them to home for the aged. Forcing the world to take care of them? Where did the come from, you troll? What makes you think you have the right to preach to me when you obviously have very poor reading comprehension? Gosh, what an imbecile!
@muma6559 Жыл бұрын
@@paigeawin He is being taken care of in a facility. Nothing wrong with that
@tle813711 ай бұрын
Thank you for this message. I cannot and would not judge the unfortunate people who find themselves in these awful situations. Only they can sort it out and we wish them well in whatever decisions they make ❤❤❤
@lindeycraft25184 ай бұрын
I know exactly how this poor woman feels. Living it as well. Husband disabled due to crushed spinal cord going on 14 years now. I’m so tired and wore out and am only 55. I get the resentment and jealousy even though I know it’s morally wrong. 😔
@silvieb202414 күн бұрын
😢
@anonymousbosch92656 ай бұрын
I’d want my wife to move on, if I knew I was causing her life to be miserable I’d do everything in my power to check out
@leojaramillo77376 ай бұрын
Me too, and I am going to remind her again when she gets home today! This is heartbreaking
@anonymousbosch92656 ай бұрын
@@leojaramillo7737 I did exactly that when I made this comment and she had a tone I didn’t love on the matter
@kathyhansen28206 ай бұрын
@@anonymousbosch9265 She's been through hell and is just holding it together. I prefer her tone than a syrupy self righteous one.
@anonymousbosch92656 ай бұрын
@@kathyhansen2820 I meant that my wife had a tone about “staying forever” no matter what when I brought it up to her
@charlesbell55006 ай бұрын
@@anonymousbosch9265 Anyone who wants to be kept alive and stay married even if they can't talk, hear, walk, learn, remember, or anything like that is just selfish and stupid. The woman in the video should let her husband Rest In Peace and she should start over. Your wife literally wants you to stay with her even if she's in a vegetative state like this? Jeez, that's tough man. I probably wouldn't marry a girl who thought like that because I know for a fact that she would cheat before I would, so it doesn't even make sense.
@shariwalker2964 Жыл бұрын
When I was 12 my mom had a debilitating stroke that handicapped her for the rest of her life. She lived at home and my younger brother and I were responsible for caring for her as well as the housework and cooking while my dad (at only 39) was doing his best to keep his job and care for her and us and my grandmother did everything she could do for us as well. Once my brother and I graduated high school we both immediately joined the military to get away from that environment. At that point my mom had gotten worse and ended up in a nursing home. After caring for my mom for all this time and being with her at the nursing home everyday he talked to my brother and I about how we would feel if he started dating again. Living in that environment with her we could understand just how lonely and heartbroken he was. While he did not divorce my mom, he met a lovely woman who was there to listen and basically they became best friends. A LOT of family and friends did not agree with this. The only ones who did were the ones who walked alongside him and experienced how difficult life was with a stroke victim who was mean and hurtful and not the same woman she was before the stroke. It’s easy to judge when you haven’t walked a mile in their shoes.
@eetoved1758 Жыл бұрын
💔
@cassandramiguel1163 Жыл бұрын
thanks for sharing, did your dad end up marrying another women later on? or did they stay together?
@Trish-lamour Жыл бұрын
Exactly. Thanks for sharing your experience.
@amandavalentino3818 Жыл бұрын
Thank God for you kids
@eleanorwalmsley635 Жыл бұрын
❤❤❤
@spikedcolor6 ай бұрын
If I were severely disabled, it would break my heart to know my partner went years without being loved and cherished. Humans need connection, and I'm sure her ability to care for him and their children will be better if she is free to find love and support
@charlesbell55006 ай бұрын
YES! I'm sorry but Dr. John dropped the ball on this one. I think he was too focused on her letting him live and being with another man. Of course, that's harsh. But put the guy down, let him go peacefully and THEN move on! That way you don't have to visit him all the time with the new guy and embarrass the old guy. That's what she should do. He can't live on his own, so she's just fighting nature at this point, and that's wrong!
@uniquegeek27086 ай бұрын
Spouse has given me the directive "If I end up like that, just put me in front of an Xbox and go live your life"
@MsPinkwolf6 ай бұрын
@@charlesbell5500Put him down? He's not a dog. You can't end someone's life unless they're on life support and only the machine is keeping them alive. That's obviously not the case here.
@charlesbell55006 ай бұрын
@@MsPinkwolf That IS the case here! Aren't you paying attention? 🤣🤣🤣
@MsPinkwolf6 ай бұрын
@@charlesbell5500 You're the one who wasn't paying attention. He could walk and knew his family members. He wasn't unconscious and breathing with a machines aid.
@jayray42025 күн бұрын
This video is HEAVY. Great strategy not to give advice, but instead reflecting on the need to control.
@Mindykays11 ай бұрын
I have a husband that had a stroke 15 years ago he can’t speak well - can’t even say my kids names , he lives with pain every day and he even gets angry! But I have made covenants also and I stay with him! I find joy everyday through friendships with other women and from my kids and grandkids! I do a lot alone. Definitely not what I thought my life would be! But I do think about eternity and live for that! ❤I loved your advice to her.
@amyp6611 ай бұрын
This is how it should be. Life isn't easy but you're doing the right thing by your husband. He is truly blessed to have such a wife. Well done
@L.Fontein711 ай бұрын
Yes, live for eternity. God will bless you for all that you're doing for your husband - your loyalty and devotion. Your crown in Heaven will be absolutely stunning! ✨👑✨. 😉
@ModernMessiah10 ай бұрын
Thank you for being a real woman
@robertreynard291610 ай бұрын
Curious, how long have you been married to him? You say he had a stroke 15 years ago… how old were ‘your’ kids when you married him? It would be different if you had kids with him.
@Mindykays10 ай бұрын
@@robertreynard2916 I have now been married for 40 years and we have 5 kids my daughter was15 when he had his stroke she is our youngest
@cindyd104211 ай бұрын
As a former ICU RN, it is so extremely hard taking care of a loved one who is completely dependent on you. Labor of love….painful place she is in. 💔
@lisaboo58069 ай бұрын
My heart goes out to this caller. Much love to everyone who is a caregiver. 💕🙏
@TPWK2164 ай бұрын
She doesnt talk about of abandoning him, she talks about divorcing him so she can have som quality in her life. This women is young, she deserves all the support, getting that from his best friend is awesome. They share this love, compassion and memories of her husband before he got injured. She does not have to feel bad, her kids will understand. Theyre life changed to and they also deserve a happy life.
@bwlondonpodcast11 күн бұрын
There is something very special about it being his friend ✨
@jgyrwa4 күн бұрын
This is terrible advice(.) the breaking down of said principles, is why American society has reached an all time low. No long suffering is expected.
@jennifermarie87079 ай бұрын
That sounds unbelievably hard. I wish the best for this woman
@FreshFlamingo9 ай бұрын
@Prince15549spoken like someone who’s never been through anything actually hard. Oh you think you have. But from that total lack of compassion and empathy, you really haven’t.
@IHaveAGunForYou9 ай бұрын
@@FreshFlamingofucking sob story, shut tf up
@myme82089 ай бұрын
@Prince15549 It's human to seek a partner that can lessen lives burdens. If she hadn't slept with him, she isn't cheating and had she not been loyal she would've not cared for him from the second he had that accident not waste 3 years of her life and still take care of his 8 children. Sounds about judgmental as one can be. Had I been in that situation I'd definitely would want my partner to move on. Visiting me should be enough, I don't want their life to be stuck just because my life is stuck too.
@K_M.G8 ай бұрын
@@FreshFlamingoAs hard as cheating on her husband with HIS good friend while he is sick???
@pixelmittens8 ай бұрын
@Living_349 If you listened to the whole thing you'd know she never once cheated on him.
@davidpyle79018 ай бұрын
My wife’s health was poor for most of our 18 years. I married her in sickness and in health. I also asked myself how I would want her to behave if it was reversed. I hung with her in love to the end. I will be forever grateful I did. I have no regrets!
@AE6756 ай бұрын
❤ true love, great of you
@unicornus336 ай бұрын
God bless you David
@williamfleming2855 ай бұрын
I was blessed too ! By taking care of him For the last four years of his life . I thank GOD every day that I had the opportunity to love him even more ❤
@williamfleming2855 ай бұрын
When I took care of my husband , it was like taking care of JESUS . 45 years of marriage , and the last 4years were the best ❤
@deztheray89354 ай бұрын
Being sick is different than having brain damage and not having a personality or ability to engage with those around you, I’m sure it was still difficult but you can’t compare
@vickieottley83929 ай бұрын
Your advice on this call was excellent. This lady is a Mormon. I recognize it from the terminology she used. She made a covenant to her husband, in the temple. Now that he’s injured and disabled and won’t die, she wants you to tell her it’s ok to divorce him. I can’t imagine how hard this has been for her and her family. You gave her the perfect advice to slow down and let God lead her. Well done.
@kitbram20339 ай бұрын
And her accent.
@DI-ub3uo9 ай бұрын
Do mormons believe in reincarnation? I thought maybe she is buddhist or something. They also have temples and believe in reincarnation because she mentiones she'll be with him in the next lives
@bioluminescent62059 ай бұрын
And her 8 kids
@Dnttou04979 ай бұрын
@@bioluminescent6205 I was gonna say I knew it the moment she said 8 kids and that she’s been married since she was 19 lol
@Magenta-ju6kq9 ай бұрын
She was sealed in a temple 😢
@artlifeandloveАй бұрын
This is the first time I thought he dropped the ball. Severely. This man isnt a husband anymore. He is a walking vegetable. As long as she vsists and makes sure his physical body is being taken care of, she has done her duty.
@woodsandcreek758911 ай бұрын
I am a traumatic brain injury survivor, and I feel her pain because I saw how hard my recovery has been on everyone else( including myself) in my life.
@Being_Joe10 ай бұрын
It hard but ask them and I am sure taking care of you was worth it to them. I was a caretaker and though it was rough I would never trade it. Life is not fair and that is ok, we make the best of it.
@Maddy-fb7jr9 ай бұрын
Please don't think that way. There is only one of you and you're worth every bit of it!
@80sriceman5 ай бұрын
I can not imagine! I would want my wife to move on. As much as that hurts to even say, it would be more painful to see her suffer. This story is heartbreaking! But what an amazing woman! God bless her.
@The_Whimsical_Avoidant19 күн бұрын
And sleep with your friend? That's the part that makes me cringe. Find anyone else, but not the friend. No one wants that.
@Nieves-kt3hc7 күн бұрын
If you were brain damaged, you would not give a f.
@xhaltsalute Жыл бұрын
She is being so honest. Thank you. So many people feel so guilty thinking things like this, but this is what they feel. We need to honor this. My heart goes out to her.
@kingasif9265 Жыл бұрын
Lol 😂
@bobbyglendinning2406 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. My heart goes out to her.
@arielevenson3108 Жыл бұрын
Clearly vows means nothing nowadays for better or for worse sickness or health richer or poor …. What if you were the sick one..? And your spouse just up and left please don’t get married if you think like that just means you’ll leave when life gets hard
@retrojay86 Жыл бұрын
My heart goes out to him 🙏🏾🙏🏾
@trexxy9628 Жыл бұрын
@@seanking1775and statistically speaking, when the wife gets sick the man leaves because the poor thing can’t cope. Boo. Hoo.
@annabelmarkel55952 күн бұрын
The judgment in the comment section proves a nice quote: There is no such hate like a Christian‘s love.
@gwm88 Жыл бұрын
As a husband and father, I can not think of a worse scenario. The thought of putting my family through this is one of my fears. I’ve always told my wife, that if I had no quality of life, I wouldn’t want to live like that. I would never blame my family for feeling this way. What a terrible situation.
@eetoved1758 Жыл бұрын
❤
@JustLIkerapunzel Жыл бұрын
Exactly! People seem very judgemental but fail to see how horrible it reall is since he literally is on hospice and can't even hear and communicate properly, all while having kids of which he doesn't even recognize one. This is worse than dying and this caller did not sound like someone who wants to just leave but simply someone who needed to console to someone and have a moment where her feelings also mattered.
@eetoved1758 Жыл бұрын
@@JustLIkerapunzelamen. It's gotta be a nightmare.
@fauxbro1983 Жыл бұрын
So if the wife puts on some weight you gonna bounce?
@paigeawin Жыл бұрын
@@JustLIkerapunzel It's easy to tell from your comment and others like yours, that you are 3Dimensional and nothing more. You can't understand life beyond your mortal, manmade prison. This caller "wife Diane" who claims to be religious, moral, WHATEVER label you want, used "prayers, thoughts, and well wishes" as a demand to God. When God didn't answer her prayers the way she demanded, she then tooke her begging back into her "own control." Except now, she is looking for justification and moral permission to be a despicable spouse, employing her "poor-me, don't worry about my husband, look back here at me, poor me" campaign. Weak person she is. We ALL have had just as horrible situations that tested us, and most people, like Diane, fail. Sad that that is the majority of humanity.
@ruthirwin822210 ай бұрын
My mum looked after my dad when he had a stroke and heart attack at 42, he died at 49 and she loved him all that time, a real example to me
@KiltBill29 ай бұрын
Different patients have different needs.
@Lonniepsangel9 ай бұрын
Different caretakers have different needs.
@MadCatLady289 ай бұрын
Yeah, but he was still your dad. Traumatic brain injury is so different from other health issues because the person you loved is gone. But their body remains.
@KiltBill29 ай бұрын
@@MadCatLady28 exactly. Once someone's mind has gone, you're not caring for them, you're caring for a stranger. Often without help or respite, as they become more distressed and even violent.
@MadCatLady289 ай бұрын
@@KiltBill2 yeah. I've walked that final path with a loved one with terminal cancer more than once, also with alzheimers and with non-fatal traumatic brain injury and I'll say without a doubt the brain injury is harder. Cancer/terminal patients are still themselves, alzheimer patients will eventually pass but you still get precious, precious moments with THEM first, yet TBI is like having a loved one possessed by a stranger. Their face is the same, but the eyes are different and it feels so, so wrong and you can't even grieve properly. It is pure hell on earth. I would absolutely support this poor woman divorcing and continuing care as a loving ex-wife. No one is filling her tank and she's absolutely knackered.
@UnstoppableMorgan10 ай бұрын
Just imagine for once second that you are “jealous of other woman who’s husbands have passed.” When she said that my heart sank to my stomach. This poor woman. I know this will all have a silver lining but damn I wish I could hug her.
@karahupp45899 ай бұрын
For a second I thought you were going to judge her harshly. But your comment was beautiful… there are so many people in this comment section being telling her what she needs to do and acting like they know what it feels like to be in her position. We can’t possibly know. 😢
@joewalker90329 ай бұрын
Hey! You’re the nut-bar Morgan that tried to extort a man for money ($400,000) and wouldn’t leave his house. You’re a POS Morgan!
@adrianamaclennan78323 ай бұрын
i exactly completely understand that . There are things worse when death. This is it
@Rudgged2 ай бұрын
I know all of you don’t care about anyone, you’d kill in an instant if it meant you got a snickers
@pickles432noname62 ай бұрын
She shouldn’t be miserable for the rest of her life just so everyone will consider her to be honorable.
@amybrown137311 ай бұрын
John, I was right there 3.5 years ago as my husband passed 10/2/2020 after being by his side for his 7.5 "end of life" years as his caregiver. Those years were certainly the most difficult, lonely and depleating days of my/our lives. I will always hold them dear with deep gratitude, without one moment of regret, as they were the most precious, meaningful and transformational days of our lives together. Through grace, something beyond all convention happened and i know i would not trade even one of those days for the world. God bless, protect and provide for all caregivers and those that they have been chosen to care for.
@ryankelly80779 ай бұрын
🥺 thank you for sharing that
@southerngirl7734 ай бұрын
She should not have regrets and move on. She has given him many years already! Best of luck to her!
@noahdouglas70211 ай бұрын
I do not judge this woman and neither should we. I can’t even imagine how difficult this would be. I tried putting myself in her shoes and I felt heartbroken. She is STRONG
@accurategamer708511 ай бұрын
Must be hard being a decent person. I know right? Wonder what she would've thought if her husband was fine and wanted to leave if she got fat.
@MiyaMam94811 ай бұрын
@@accurategamer7085you can not like what’s being discussed without making the world’s worst comparison to insult the woman. Getting fat and losing your brain and will to live and short term memory are worlds apart
@JmGmail10 ай бұрын
Her justifications are too much. Be decent or be mean but accept your meanness. Don’t sugarcoat.
@JmGmail10 ай бұрын
Why not stay married, he is in hospice for years anyway. You can still be friends with the new friend. Just don’t cheat.
@maggietang453610 ай бұрын
She’s like he’s still alive. She wants him gone so she doesn’t have to pay for him.
@chiya2006 Жыл бұрын
I was a friend of a guy for like over 20 years. His wife was really a good person who respected us in every way. She was doing everything right when We were going over , from cooking to welcoming, to making us feel at home. Unfortunately she had MS and progressed to the point that the last 2 years of her life she was on bed couldn’t move anymore. We visited her a lot and brought food with us there for her and children. Her husband went away apparently just to go look for another woman. He got re married outside the country while the wife was waiting to breath her last breath. Her health deteriorated and the doctors gave her a month to live. So his kids called him and he came back for a visit but never stayed the duration until the poor woman passes away. He left & within 2 weeks she passed away. We went for her funeral and a lot of their friends were in attendance of that funeral except for the husband of 35+ years having 4 kids in between. I felt so bad for that woman I regarded her as my sister. Make it short, the husband brought his new wife to the country and settled in the same house. I decided to end my friendship right there and haven’t seen the guy for over 2 years now. Last time his daughter had a baby shower so I took my wife and kids there to attend. My wife was convincing me to go to see him, but I refused. As they live in a different city, I decided to go to a coffee shop by myself and then waited in the car the entire day until the baby shower party was over. Every time I remember this, I tell myself, why human beings are so selfish, so cruel ???
@OneandonlyD10 ай бұрын
How horrible! Hope karma got him good!
@neri192410 ай бұрын
Amazing to see man hold other man accountable!
@judigemini1789 ай бұрын
At least people like you exist, but humans will never seize to amaze me with how much they suck. 🤷♀️
@adnanorochi37614 ай бұрын
That man has no dignity!
@SalvadorOchoa-p9k9 күн бұрын
Why is she even asking, she knows that when the guy is no longer useful, or she starts making more money than him, they rarely stick around.
@AmandaSoaresMusic9 ай бұрын
Our health care system needs to stop keeping people alive at any cost. We think too little about quality of life and too much about avoiding death at any cost. We need to talk more about this subject as not to make people suffer and give patients better options when their quality of life is so poor.
@Printknight5289 ай бұрын
I know I would not want to live like that. If my lights are on but no one is home put a pillow over my face
@PhyllisBoone-sn8oi9 ай бұрын
Culturally, people have little understanding of what "do everything" spoken in a moment of crisis might actually mean. I understand the emotion. From my 30+ years working in the ICU environment, however, expectations for a whole recovery were not seen. As health care providers, we must do all we can to ensure that our patients and families receive transparent, fully informed consent for treatment from us. And we need to remember that patients and surrogate representatives make decisions according to what they believe are in the best interests of themselves or the incapacitated family member. I will admit to a great deal of moral distress in my own heart and mind when I saw and provided aggressive treatment that would most likely be futile in the end. It happens.
@stefaniemedina149 ай бұрын
Right. I cannot imagine how much this is costing. I would not want to live like that. What a nightmare:(
@PhyllisBoone-sn8oi9 ай бұрын
I would like to note that "the health care system tries to keep people alive at any cost" is not entirely true. There is also the issue of patients and families wanting to have anything and everything done that can be done to preserve the life of the patient. That is generally appropriate. The problem is that sometimes "everything" becomes futile for the patient. Ethics require that health care providers sit down with patients and families to provide information about this kind of development. I think that you can appreciate the importance of this kind of intervention in these situations. Communication is so important! Sometimes patients and families will choose to continue futile care. Most often, alternative comfort care will be chosen-palliative or hospice care, and for some patients, withdrawal of life support. Sometimes, they will still want "everything" done. That's where it gets tough on those caring for the patient, because the treatments are difficult and uncomfortable for the patient. These kinds of situations are truly emotionally charged for patients and families. But please understand that at those times, we, as health care providers and staff, don't want to see suffering prolonged uneccessisarily either. We chose our professions out of a desire to provide care and comfort to those in distress, not add to it.
@tobymichaels81719 ай бұрын
Keeping the patient alive "at all costs" is the business mantra of the medical-industrial complex. Chronically ill patients are the most profitable, and the industry has optimized itself to systematically turn healthy people into perpetual patients.
@G-inspire Жыл бұрын
‘In sickness and in health…’ This is as huge a test of that vow as one can get. More grace, wisdom and strength to her for the ‘right decision’. Tough situation.
@adspur Жыл бұрын
Modern people and especially any women nowadays aren’t wired like that.They don’t fear God.They only want what want
@GameChanger597 Жыл бұрын
He is not "sick," he is completely disabled physically and mentally. In all honesty, that is not a marriage. He's incapacitated and she is left as the babysitter and caretaker. They can't do anything together. Not raise a family together, not make decisions together, they can't even have conversations together or be intimate in any way- NOTHING. That's not a marriage. It sounds like she has already made her decision, and just wants someone to give her peace about it and clearly dr. John is not the right person to ask bc he is guilting her which I think is totally wrong.
@TGFriosania23 Жыл бұрын
This standard is only forced on women. Most men statically leave their wives the moment she isn’t capable of doing her wifely duties
@grreeeeee Жыл бұрын
is a functionally dead person sick? only in this society would we ever do this to another human being. she is a functional widow.
@dontworry1568 Жыл бұрын
youre clearly wrong here. she isn't being ridiculed for wanting to leave her husband. dont swear by a book then act like it doesn't matter when she wants something different. women leave men on a regular basis as soon as she thinks she can do better than her current situation. its called monkey branching.@@TGFriosania23
@natinatij6 ай бұрын
Women are so amazing. Having 8 kids, taking care of her husband, getting her masters and learning to get a career for the first time in her life. And some idiots are on here judging her.
@jackhoff21895 ай бұрын
Terrible wife
@ecclesiastesThreeVerseSeven5 ай бұрын
Its her character
@terickastidbits23425 ай бұрын
She opened herself up to be judged. Her earning a degree doesn’t detract from the fact that her vow of in sickness and in health was only good for 5 years
@ElleBee13155 ай бұрын
@Jb3215how many men do we hold to that standard?! 😂 how many men do we hold to their vows? Statistically men leave at alarming rates when women get sick not even disabled but sick. Men cheat at higher rates then women. Stop the BS.
@Silvermoonscorpion5 ай бұрын
As a disabled person, hubby knows the moment I'm so sick I'm not of this world really anymore, he's clear of his vow. Whether he chooses that or not is up to him but I'd want him to move on.
@nesha.y.i19 сағат бұрын
I would tell her to move on ,I can't tell someone to be alone ,without someone touching or talking to you for the next 20 years, and she is still going to take care of him.
@donnaashley34118 ай бұрын
I get what she said. My husband was in a similar situation and someone asked me how I was. I work in the medical field. I’d go to work and do medical stuff. I’d go home and do medical stuff. There wasn’t any shutting down!! When they asked me this, I didn’t know what to say. I stood there with a blank look on my face and couldn’t say anything. When I got home, I felt like an idiot. But I actually know what she’s talking about, but even when I was at 48 years old, he passed, and I still believed in sickness and in health. To this day, I can’t see anyone else. He was my world, and I’m thankful for him. ❤❤❤
@ofthelight69326 ай бұрын
I agree❤❤❤
@GolfandGrammarGrandma Жыл бұрын
John I love how you pause, listen, and “hear” your callers. To know that someone does that is wonderful.
@patsyts433111 ай бұрын
“It has to do with you saying through sickness and through health” Tough pill to swallow. I feel for her, also feel for her husband
@RubyShelton-nf4mb10 ай бұрын
It's a tough pill to swallow because it's clear that is how she thinks.
@marynorth798810 ай бұрын
In short...married going on 30yrs...Husband travelled the worlstill caringd ..then tells me he is leaving !! Before I could kick him to the kerb he had a massive heart attack ....he had nowhere to go..no family !!! Dilema ...as I wouldn't have another man gift wrapped in a lottery win ! I was crushed ... anyway said he could stay BUT NOT as a husband . Luckily the home is big enough to have our own space. Now after another major surgery still caring...! We are civil to each other and get along..reckon I've done the sickness and in health bit !! Hope he thinks his affair was worth it !!
@teijaflink222610 ай бұрын
The thing is will she even survive this in sickness and health and at the same time be able to be their for their 8 children? I can't personally imagine anything harder than taking care of someone with severe brain injury, specially as it usually changes a person completely, he's not the man she married and never will be, there is probably nothing that could be called a marriage left. Even if his physical body is there he's pretty much mentally dead. This case is a hard dilemma, do you break your views if you divorce, is it okay to divorce. I personally think it's okay to divorce and I don't think she is breaking the vows as the marriage is dead anyway if she still stays in his life (I think it would be wrong if she just completely abandoned him) but sure depends how strict you are about this.
@lindylou351910 ай бұрын
@@marynorth7988I feel once they have broken their vows, you don’t have to follow thru with yours.
@Gemmarose90127 ай бұрын
@@teijaflink2226She doesn’t take care of him. A nursing home does. She just wants to get laid. Period.
@juarezbabe11 ай бұрын
I’ve listened to John for a while now and thought I understood his style. Boy was I wrong. I thought he would immediately support her decision and agree. And he did not. What an eye opening dilemma. Thank you John for reminding us all that if we took a vow that promises “in sickness and in health” that we really sit with ourselves with open hands when the toughest most difficult situations arise.
@chefjamesmacinnis10 ай бұрын
It's a faith based show being that it's part of the ramsay network. Unless there is abuse they would never recommend divorce.
@tambou50229 ай бұрын
No one can judge her. How can you until you have been in her shoes.
@DisabilityExams9 ай бұрын
By that logic no one can judge Ted Bundy or Charles Manson.
@chantducoeur49149 ай бұрын
@@DisabilityExams sounds like you finally understand what "judge not lest ye be judged" means
@wolfmancool9 ай бұрын
It’s remarks like this why people aren’t getting married anymore. What is the point of taking vows & getting married when you are prepared to abandon them at the first sign of trouble?
@nickonicifor56389 ай бұрын
@@wolfmancool5 years.
@BumblleBee699 ай бұрын
I’ll judge. I’ve been in her shoes and certainly didn’t give up on my husband.
@Rosieblue11110 ай бұрын
This is heartbreaking. How can anyone judge this lady? She deserves to live, and have some joy again. Her children deserve to see her happy too. I wish her all the best .
@sleepyjoe168510 ай бұрын
She's a horrible person.
@angelaj722910 ай бұрын
She can have happiness in serving her husband.
@thepcal965410 ай бұрын
@@angelaj7229no she can’t. Servitude is not “happiness”. She’s not a nun.
@Mrs.AD00999 ай бұрын
@sleepyjoe1685 youre scum
@JM-yn8mb9 ай бұрын
So, she can stay married until he passes away...
@fikaczuu42735 ай бұрын
I wonder where her life is now at. Diane do what feels the best for YOU! People will judge you no matter what you do. Let them be in your skin for few weeks, perspective can shift. Be YOU, live your live and choose love❤
@alanmccarthy400411 ай бұрын
I just want to give this lady a hug. My goodness I can't even comprehend how she's survived these last few years.
@nancyclassen64210 ай бұрын
These hugs can be insulting. Be careful.
@JmGmail10 ай бұрын
Huh? Many spouses care for invalid spouse’s for years for life. Why do Americans find that so surprising?
@kelsey7411 Жыл бұрын
She says she has 30 more years left in her….. her next breath is not even guaranteed to her. She is in a hard situation, but so is her husband. Very sad
@edwardprete11 ай бұрын
The same tragedy can happen to her or anyone. Tomorrow is guaranteed to no one, so 30 years could be presumptuous.
@AnitaSouthall10 ай бұрын
My thoughts are what if she moved on and she got another situation like the current one occur with a new partner. Where do you draw the line? As a 3 x married woman I have no right to judge
@lindagallagher279410 ай бұрын
You need to live your life! You have done an amazing job! Don’t feel guilty!
@michaelcoletta454710 ай бұрын
Sounds like hubby is a de facto vegetable... in general I would tend to judge the wife's motivations harshly. BUT-- if she is being honest about how much she invested in his rehabilitation, the sacrifices she made ought to qualify her to move on for the sake of her own sanity. Again, this is presuming that this woman's timeline and details are in fact 100% truthful. There is always the chance she is playing up her struggles in an effort to get John's blessing to divorce the husband and get with his friend.
@suzzylouloudougherty523710 ай бұрын
I was crying until she said she wanted to divorce him
@lavengiggles Жыл бұрын
Dr. John hit the nail on the head. He was kind to her, but to put it bluntly her husband's not dying fast enough and that's why she wants to divorce him. (How do you even divorce a person in such a state?) I agree with finding ways to rebuild your life socially without dishonoring the man you loved for decades on end and made vows to.
@alisonf6478 Жыл бұрын
I bet her husband would want her to divorce and move on. I would absolutely if I was in his shoes. That’s unconditional love ❤
@NotSoEntertaining. Жыл бұрын
Men do it all the time 💁♀️. Apparently it’s pretty easy.
@brentayers3132 Жыл бұрын
Logistically, you draw up papers, show his mental state, get an uncontested divorce. Sometimes you have to do terrible feeling things in life, but they need to be done, if for no other reason than your own mental health. As Dr John says, “Choose guilt over resentment every time.”
@bodhisattva2348 Жыл бұрын
@@alisonf6478no he wouldn't, when the shoe is on the other foot men move the goal post.
@VanJR. Жыл бұрын
@@alisonf6478 just because YOU would do it doesn't mean her husband would or has thought about that. Let's not beat around the bush, she wants out and she can't handle it anymore. So to make herself feel better, she wants to divorce him because he didn't die "fast enough" and because she believes she'll still be "married" to him according to her flimsy Mormon belief about eternal marriage
@heatherhanson99415 ай бұрын
This interview is very hard for me to listen to. John Delony seems to be trying to make this poor woman feel guilty for wanting love. I work in healthcare and I know that nobody who hasn’t been through her exact situation should sit in a place of judgement. I wish I could find this woman and tell her that her husband wouldn’t want this life for her and that she deserves love, and shouldn’t feel guilty.
@danathomas78709 ай бұрын
My Uncle after being under anesthesia, developed Dementia. When my Aunt would go to see him he didn’t know who she was, but he would always tell her that he loved his wife and even though she came to see him he wasn’t going to cheat on his wife…. I think that was the best compliment he could still give her. Very cute….
@PannaLola5 ай бұрын
Beautiful ❤️.
@janinelewis217222 күн бұрын
I'm not crying... you're crying 😢
@danathomas787022 күн бұрын
@@janinelewis2172 what? I don’t understand
@CyrusZerbe8 ай бұрын
“I have no control. I have no power. Please lead me into what comes next.” What a prayer.
@darkhorse94728 ай бұрын
@GaiaMiranda7 ай бұрын
And yet it's the perfect prayer ANYTIME in our lives at ANY point.🙏💖
@HUMAN-VERSION46 ай бұрын
Lame ass prayer
@jaynewallace-bohannon63176 ай бұрын
After 25 years of my daughter having 3-10 seizures everyday, I know how she feels. I yelled at God one day as she seized on the floor, “Take her or heal her!” Two months later, the seizures stopped. I’m glad God chose to heal her.
@RedLineShortFilms6 ай бұрын
That's not how this works.
@cathyhart39466 ай бұрын
@@RedLineShortFilms It can work that way, but there are no promises that it will. God is merciful though and will do what it takes.
@mouthbreather2806 ай бұрын
God isn’t responsible for the bad things we deal with in this world. He’s understanding though of the many struggles and ailments we face.
@LAKatwoman6 ай бұрын
Praise God
@Thepetpedisock6 ай бұрын
He hears our prayers. He also answers our prayers...whether we whisper or scream at Him. He understands.
@KTD198812 күн бұрын
I don’t think she should divorce. I think she would feel guilt the moment she was with another man. You don’t have to be with someone to be happy. This is her partner, for life. Trust God 💜
@emilydonleycpa Жыл бұрын
She walks in and he smiles. He does still care. And what would she want him to do if it was the opposite situation?
@AnyaEightySeven Жыл бұрын
She said she would want him to find someone were situations reversed
@leahwilliams9333 Жыл бұрын
I would want my husband to still visit but find someone else. My husband knows this. Lol
@larrymcelroy1783 Жыл бұрын
I’m guessing he loved her more than life and wouldn’t dump her like a box of horse manure. Maybe I’m weird but this call gave me the creeps.
@blueravenchick Жыл бұрын
@@larrymcelroy1783 men usually leave women when they have to be a caregiver......
@deztellez2571 Жыл бұрын
@larrymcelroy1783 her husband is there but he's not there.. he has no current memory. What SO wouldn't want their lover to find someone else. She said she would still visit and take care of him.. I wouldn't want my love to live like that..
@JayWalker-tk2pr8 ай бұрын
If i have that kind of an accident, dont try to save me. Say goodbye and ket me go. Put me down. I dont want to be alive like that and i don't want to be that kind of a burden.
@bri2206 ай бұрын
My grandmother had dementia. Caring for her alone is what killed my grandfather. In my opinion who we are is our brain. I feel like your husband has already gone home. Finding a new partner that can help ease the load and care compassionately for the shell of your husband might be the right thing to do for your entire family. Many prayers. Might heart hurts for you.
@seasmoke85295 ай бұрын
I would never bring someone else in and want them or expect them to help with an old partner like that. I couldn’t do it.
@Doreen-n4j4 ай бұрын
I agree. Rather than the big D. Give yourself the permission to have an affair
@maureenfitzgerald36414 ай бұрын
I’m with you 100%.
@tac30164 ай бұрын
@@seasmoke8529 I agree
@ideaWorld4034 ай бұрын
Perhaps her moving forward into a new relationship could revive her strength and confidence to then help her carry on taking care of her disabled husband. A loved woman who feels secure in a relationship can move mountains.
@Kevinb18216 күн бұрын
Wow. Men really have it so hard and get ZERO appreciation. You can be a hard working man for 3 DECADES and if you get hurt and have a tragic accident. Your wife will drop you like garbage. Oh poor me it’s so hard. It’s so disgusting how women in the modern era do stuff like this like praying her husband just died so she wouldn’t have to be burdened by her husbands problems.
@karenproietti86967 ай бұрын
Oh Diane, I lived the same nightmare you are in. 6 years, then God called him home. I pray for your husband’s call home, too. TBI is so complex… ❤️
@Mbee3-m2b4 ай бұрын
❤💔🙏
@dumitruedelean59 Жыл бұрын
My grandmother looked after my grandfather for more than 7 years because he's had a few strokes that made him being disabled. He's been laying straight on his back all those years, he was blind, partially deaf, couldn't talk properly, couldn't sit up, couldn't have a normal diet. He was on a pureed diet all that time. Guess what? My grandmother looked after him day and night and slept next to him, she was there 24/7. And she's been with him until the day he passed away. She showed him love constantly even though my grandfather was not able to move at all because he was completely paralyzed. I love my grandmother so much for that! ❤
@kariay50 Жыл бұрын
She was with him through the good and tough times. God bless her💗
@robr268 Жыл бұрын
That was old school. How I was raised and what I saw. Everyone is selfish and those vows are selfless.
@noushs8004 Жыл бұрын
@@robr268I’ve never heard of a man stay around when their wife was that sick… it’s always the women. It’s time for women to put themselves first and be happy with all she has done for him and could possibly do.
@bloomingale7868 Жыл бұрын
It’s true. Men never stick around!! But it’s still hard hearing people break their vows today.
@kevinwalter4078 Жыл бұрын
My grandma did the same as my grandpa slowly wasted away from type 1 diabetes. He died in his 60s of kidney failure. 5 short years later, my uncle went to have a second brain tumor removed and it left him paralyzed on one side of his body, feeding tube, vent, everything. Doctors said he would never wake up and if he did, he'd be a vegetable. When he did finally wake up, he wasn't himself, but he did eventually learn to speak again, regained movement in his hand and leg on the paralyzed side. His memory never really recovered and was spotty, but you could still go talk to him. He spent 15 years in a handful of different nursing homes and my grandma went and sat with him every single day so long as she wasn't sick. She's my model for what love is. We also joked she would outlive us all, but she passed a couple months after her 90th birthday.
@TrickponyCripple9 ай бұрын
My ex husband randomly told me “if you ever become disabled it wouldn’t be fair to me to stay with you …because I like to hike”. Every now and then “because I like to hike” pops into my head and I laugh my ass off. For better or worse isn’t a promise a lot of people won’t keep.
@Dannyboyy868 ай бұрын
For better or worse unless it gets in the way of hiking 😅 very specific vowes
@Portia6208 ай бұрын
My ex left me when sick!!! Abandoned me and kids so I. Super picky who I put love too because I love my ex unconditionally. Dog should do that not humans unless it’s our kids! People will destroy you sick world and I hear semi talk about being old-fashioned. I haven’t seen too many men that are really old-fashioned yet still looking. I have to see the actions just because people say their old fashion. Don’t mean that they are. I need to see it.
@Hiya-k1i8 ай бұрын
Are you and your husband still together? If so, how were you able to get past that? ❤
@GiveWithLove8 ай бұрын
Wow that's disgusting.
@Mad-genius8 ай бұрын
At least he is your EX
@MyDarlin115 сағат бұрын
definitely a good reminder to get your advanced directive established. Talk about these things with your loved one. I can't imagine the grief and sorrow on all levels. No one can judge.
@kirkb2286 Жыл бұрын
My heart goes out to her…..it is soooo difficult to imagine how hard it is.. my wife had a brain injury in 2009 and our lives changed drastically…I cared for her for 14 years..she just recently passed away…Caring for someone that is very sick is challenging / stressful/exhausting and also rewarding. I would do it all over again if I could. I have zero judgment to anyone that does what she did..I wish her well
@rosemaryallen212811 ай бұрын
What you say resonated with me. People do not understand that there is great pleasure in looking after another soul, exhausting as it is. And a clean conscience is beyond price.
@peggystewart726211 ай бұрын
God bless you .....
@lb179811 ай бұрын
It is an experience that most people could never handle OR never understand ❤❤️💔❤️
@PDJ4L10 ай бұрын
I’m sorry for your loss🙏🏾
@Kimberly3458410 ай бұрын
Thank you for seeing that. As a nurse I’ve seen family caregivers be torn down by the extra responsibility and other family caregivers flourish feeling as if their actions are the best thing they can do for them. Personally I think the caregiver must make the choice as to how much they are willing to sacrifice. Forcing a family member to be a caregiver to preserve family tradition, culture or marriage vows isn’t how either person should live. Thank you for your hardwork and commenting about how taxing it is even though very rewarding
@Votethepower10 ай бұрын
My aunt cared for her hisband for ten years after he suffered a massive stroke that left him partially paralyzed and the inability to speak. She was religious as well, a minister. She lovingly cared for him until the day he died. Marriage is commitment, not just fun times. In difficult situations, your commitment serves as a testimony and example to others.
@christofferandersen19069 ай бұрын
She is committed tho, the divorce is simply a way to avoid needles suffering on her part.
@zavcig36129 ай бұрын
You cant judge someone unless you carrey their weight in life
@zenowens577 Жыл бұрын
“Are you teaching your children that marriage/love has boundaries” that’s a powerful question
@freyaday6076 Жыл бұрын
Marriage and love should have boundaries. What about situations where one partner is being abused? Of course, there should be boundaries and someone shouldn’t be expected to endure violence as one example.
@arikkajitendranath5596 Жыл бұрын
@@freyaday6076 yesss!
@BassReeves600 Жыл бұрын
@@freyaday6076separation and divorce are very different
@Chris_RLM Жыл бұрын
@@freyaday6076 she wasn't getting beat. She lived off the man's work, he created a comfortable life for his family, years of hard work, she just started working when this happened. The thanks he gets for that time is a wife who is tired of being lonely and doesn't want to take care of him, like he has for her and the kids. That's a slap in the face after she asked for him to be saved, she thought it would go back to normal and it didn't, so she is tired now.
@crisjr6478 Жыл бұрын
@@Chris_RLMon fukn point
@SplashjokR5 ай бұрын
Pretty much every time I watch the Deloney show I find myself tearing up.. such heavy stuff, thank you for your work John, you are an inspiration and you always have such good advice
@DawnNa_2211 ай бұрын
I feel like this is one of those decisions one must make for themselves, regardless of how anyone else feels. She’s done her duty, and clearly loves her husband, but this is obviously tearing her apart bit by bit and there is no easy path to take in her situation. I pray she finds peace with whatever decision she chooses.
@Caine_House11 ай бұрын
She wants him to die so she doesn't have to fulfill her vows.
@ashleygrant313111 ай бұрын
@@Caine_Housecorrect!
@ashleygrant313111 ай бұрын
She hasn’t “done her duty,” until he has passed. Period.
@Chasmofmisery11 ай бұрын
She's suffering and her situation is unfair
@Caine_House11 ай бұрын
@@Chasmofmisery Sure, it's hard, but life is unfair and plenty of people suffer.
@shethewriter Жыл бұрын
The fact that she got a Master's degree and took care of her family WHILE all that was going on is unbelievable. Caring for an impaired person is unbelievably hard. She's a total inspiration regardless which she chooses.
@aimeerebecca1 Жыл бұрын
Agreed!
@Dionysus_Athena Жыл бұрын
Your standards are low.
@Chet_24 Жыл бұрын
Wanting to leave someone when they need you the most is real brave. Give me a break.
@dudeorduuude5211 Жыл бұрын
@@Chet_24don't be an AH.
@KimberlyLetsGo Жыл бұрын
She didn't literally get a Master's. He was using it as a metaphor for learning a very hard time in her life.
@sammyg644611 ай бұрын
I liked the comment "you prayed "I want this to be exactly as I want it" It made me wonder how many times I have prayed that way. My mother had Alzheimer's for almost 10 years. Her personality slipped away with her memory. She died in a nursing home alone at the beginning months of COVID because visitors were not allowed. I had prayed for years for God to take her in His timing and I believe He did, but it wasn't my timing.
@maryljcanary10 ай бұрын
So true! I think we all try to counsel God.
@robertzuniga348313 күн бұрын
Life is tough and exhausting when you’re a moral person and have integrity and dedication in its easy when you’re not
@ChristianPierce-fl4qx Жыл бұрын
This is John Delony at his best. I love how he was honest without being overbearing, patient, honoring of her experience, empathetic, focusing on what he knows instead of wading in moral dilemmas, yet guiding her through her beliefs by being open about his own. I don't agree with him all the time, but I think this hard conversation is quite the gem.
@GameChanger597 Жыл бұрын
Honestly I think this is him at his worst. His comment about "if this is a cosmic and eternal bond, then what's the rush?" What an absolutely nonsensical thing to say... I was shocked to hear him say something so absurd. She's been dealing with this non existent relationship for years and isn't getting any younger. THAT'S the rush! How dense can he be?? She wants to find happiness in a union where she can be physically and emotionally intimate with her spouse which is not hard to understand or grasp. It sounds like he's guilt-tripping her. I hope she doesn't take his awful advice because what she is experiencing is not a marriage- it's a caretaker and a patient. I'm not one to condone divorce but this is definitely a situation where it needs to happen
@xreediculousx Жыл бұрын
Some people truly believe "in sickness and in health" others do not.@@GameChanger597
@eetoved1758 Жыл бұрын
@@GameChanger597I think he was using a technique to see how she would react. So she could find out how she really felt in a moment of opposition. I've seen him use this technique a lot.
@user-if4ke6en9r Жыл бұрын
@@GameChanger597where in the Bible does it say to divorce your spouse when they no longer are convenient for you? Selfish, selfish, selfish.
@TGFriosania23 Жыл бұрын
@@user-if4ke6en9r men do it all the time. But the moment a women thinks about she’s wrong and deserves to be punished. Smh. Statistically speaking most men leave their wives when she is sick.