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Also, this can happen to anyone. I find myself saying something to my husband and he has left the room. He is hard of hearing. Yes, I am very patient with him because we have several years to go and no sense getting impatient yet:) I just hunt him down and repeat myself. Finish the sentence, finish the thought, complete the momentary communication. You will be thankful one day.
I recommend journaling some of your more interesting exchanges. You can refer to them when you are the one doing all the talking, and you can use it as subject matter. I say this as it is what I have experienced with my Mother. When I am talking to her I remind her of incidents that perhaps she can remember. Who knows? Sometimes she responds with a big YES! It is all she can do to get one word out. Yesterday, for Mother's Day, she tried to smile. To me, that was huge.
Take care, Dear One, and savor every moment:) xo
"I've been out of the room for a while. Do you think maybe you dreamed I was here? I assure you, if I had been here I would have talked to you. I love you very much and I'm not mad at you!"
"I wish I could be with you all the time. I love you very much. Sometimes I have to be in a different room for a little while. That doesn't mean I'm mad at you."
"I'm so sorry that it felt to you like I was deliberately not talking to you. I makes me sad that you are are sad. I am not mad. I love you very much and I'm sorry for this misunderstanding."
In this case I would not agree with the hallucination or delusion -- I wouldn't say "Yes, I was mad." But I would try to reassure him of your love, without blatantly accusing him of seeing things.
When we said "for better and for worse," who ever could have had this kind of thing in mind?!
Kudos to you for trying to figure out how to handle this. And let us know if you come up with something that works for you. We learn from each other.