"Till death do us part" takes on a new meaning when your spouse forgets your name but still reaches for your hand...
"It's good to be scared. It means you've got something to lose." - Dr. Richard Webber, Grey's Anatomy
A Story the World Needs to Hear
When Wendy, a nurse who once comforted patients, began forgetting how to use a cell phone, Lynn Wenger became more than a husband-he became an Alzheimer's caregiver.
This personal memoir book chronicles their 40-year love story colliding with early-onset Alzheimer's, a battle that turned road trips into moments of confusion and date nights into diaper changes. It's a raw, unflinching account of how dementia caregiving reshapes marriages, tests faith, and forces laughter in the darkest corners.
What You'll Witness in This Book
- A caregiver for dementia's daily grind: Battling a $420/month "miracle" pill scam, decoding Medicare loopholes, and scrubbing urine stains at 3 a.m.
- The cruel irony of Alzheimer's disease: A nurse who healed others now struggles to swallow toast. A grandmother who once soothed crying babies now shouts obscenities at TV preachers.
- Unexpected hope: How 80s rock ballads became Wendy's last tether to reality-and why Lynn blared Sweet Caroline in hospital rooms.
Why This Book Matters
Alzheimer's disease doesn't just erase memories-it rewires marriages. Lynn's story isn't just a memoir inspirational for caregivers; it's a survival guide for anyone drowning in the chaos of dementia caregiving. With dark humor and brutal honesty, he exposes:
- Why UTIs accelerate decline (and how to fight back with cranberry juice bribes).
- The guilt of snapping at a spouse who asks, "Who are you?" for the tenth time.
- The moment every caregiver for dementia dreads: signing the memory care papers.
Did You Know?
- 60% of Alzheimer's caregivers develop chronic health issues from stress. Lynn's hip gave out lifting Wendy; his journals became his therapy
- Music outlasts memory: Wendy forgot her grandkids' names but sang Sharing the Night Together flawlessly-a lifeline Lynn turned into daily karaoke therapy.
Who Should Read This Book?
- Every Alzheimer's caregiver who's ever hidden tears in a pharmacy aisle or Googled "how to bathe a resistant spouse."
- Spouses clinging to "in sickness and in health" while grieving the person they married.
- Families going through internal guilt, Medicaid, and the ache of kids asking, "Why does Grandma hate us now?"
- Anyone seeking dementia books for caregivers that trade platitudes for practicality-and despair for defiant hope.