Happy to see you are having better days, mcatrophy.
I have followed this thread, too, for the past couple years. I've empathized from afar, but, evidently, have not posted.
To see your tributes and lasting affection for your wife is touching, to put it lightly.
A couple things crossed my mind when readijg the past few posts and pages. The first is how fortunate I am to have a woman that is genuinely good and that I care about and cares for me. I was a serial monogamist, if you will. But I've been with the same one for just over ten years now. It's not always easy, and our longevity is partly by default due to a romp early on where I felt she was the most beautiful thing I'd ever seen and that it would be prudent to have her have my baby. I now have a beautiful 8 year old little girl, and a relationship that has good and bad days. Sometimes it is unclear which type of days outnumber the other, but I'm glad to have her. And it is nice to have her to grow older with. One day one of us will move into the next dimension (hopefully me first, many years from now). And I think the other will look back with a sense of loss similar to yours.
The other thought pertains to your post about Alzheimer's and general medical failings. To be sure, life is sweet. But my grandmother could not string together three words at the end of her life and I'm not sure she knew who I was the last couple times I saw her. My grandfather passed 12 days after her, but he had lost the will to live long before. As much as I value life and know that it is sweet and would miss anyone else who is close to me when one should pass, I hope to miss all of that other late-life unpleasantness myself.
The unfortunate circumstance of this existence is that it is temporary for all of us. That fact has been becoming more and more clear to me lately, due to a number of reasons I won't get into. But, I do believe that the temporariness is what makes our journey here so sweet. And I think I value both my naive sense of immortality when I was young, and my very apparent sense of mortality and imminence of bequeathing the earth to our successors before too long. It is good.
Anyhow, I guess what I'm trying to say is that your posts and watching your experiences through this all has touched me and given me yet more introspection and cause to reflect upon and appreciate my own situation. So, thanks for that.
Also, I'm happy to see your days are getting better and that (hopefully) your reflections are turning to ones of fondness while you continue to enjoy your days, rather than omnipresent sadness.
Honoring our loved ones doesn't necessarily require constant grieving, I don't think. I recall a friend of mine posting pictures on the anniversary of his dad's passing a while ago. The caption read "Dad, since you aren't here, we wore your clothes and drank your expensive scotch." And, sure enough, the pic was of the fam in Dad's clothes while drinking his top-shelf hooch!
A life well-lived is one worth celebrating. And a constant memory of a loved one is best-honored by continuing to have good days. Hopefully I don't need to put these (supposed) truisms into action soon; I don't know how successful I'll be. But I hope your days continue to improve.
Best to you, mcatrophy!