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She crafted the blog to resonate with individuals navigating the season while juggling numerous responsibilities and caring for loved ones.
WASHINGTON — Emma Heming Willis has shared a heartfelt blog post that explores how the holiday season has transformed since her husband, Bruce Willis, was diagnosed with dementia.
“I’m offering a reflection on how the holidays evolve when dementia becomes a part of your life, encompassing grief, loss, love, and meaningful moments simultaneously,” she expressed. “A dementia diagnosis doesn’t erase the holidays. It alters them. Though these changes may be painful, they can also pave the way for new traditions, gentle joy, and connections that remain profoundly significant.”
She mentioned that the blog was penned for those experiencing the season while managing numerous challenges and caring for their loved ones.
“Grief is not exclusive to death. It also accompanies change and the ambiguous loss that caregivers are all too familiar with,” she noted. “It is tied to the understanding that life will not progress as it once did.”
She went on to describe how she was grieving the change of routine. She said Bruce Willis loved the holiday season for “the energy, family time, the traditions.” She called him a pancake-maker and a ‘get-out-in-the-snow-with-the-kids’ kind of guy and how dementia creates a space between those memories and present day.
“That space can ache,” she wrote. “I find myself, harmlessly, cursing Bruce’s name while wrestling with the holiday lights or taking on tasks that used to be his. Not because I’m mad at him, never that, but because I miss the way he once led the holiday charge.”
She encouraged caregivers to be flexible and adapt during the holidays.
“When dementia is part of your family, ‘normal’ becomes a moving target,” she wrote.
She also reminded readers that while grief can be felt, it doesn’t have to be the only thing you experience during the holidays.
“The joy doesn’t cancel out the sadness. The sadness doesn’t cancel out the joy. They coexist,” she wrote.
“There’s no denying that the holidays are different now. But different doesn’t mean empty,” she wrote. “If this season feels heavy for you, please know that you’re not alone. You’re not doing it wrong. And there is no single “right” way to move through this time of year when dementia is part of your life. There is only your way. And that is enough.”
The couple married in 2009 and share two daughters, Mabel Willis and Evelyn Willis. The former action star was previously married to actress Demi Moore, with whom he has three daughters.
Bruce Willis retired from acting in 2022 after he was diagnosed with aphasia and then frontotemporal dementia (FTD). The 70-year-old “Die Hard” star has rarely been seen in public since then, but the family occasionally post photos and videos with him on social media.