Love, my dear lady, can be anguish or Nirvana, you must choose.
Whether you are the dialyzor or the caretaker, you face loss of control, and that is one of the hardest things about learning to live with chronic illness.You are not going to let him die. That said, you can take the advice given here and let him start making his own choices and living with the consequences.Being a spouse is NOT synonymous with being a caretaker. He needs a wife, not a mommy. And you need a husband, not an adolescent.You are one of the smartest people I know, and I suspect that you know exactly what to do. You're just not quite ready to do it yet and need reassurance that it's ok to step back.You'll both be happier.
I think of you caretakers, and it doesn't escape my notice that you are all women. I can't imagine my husband nagging me about my diet or whether or not I've taken my pills! He doesn't know my allopurinol from my atenolol, and he still gets potassium and phosphorus confused! Seriously, are there any wives out there with CKD/ESRD who have husbands who "do" for them? I sure don't, and I don't recall many posts from dialyzing wives complaining that their husbands nag them about their diets or their fluid intake. If I had to depend upon my husband to sort me out, I'd be dead.