Emma Willis' interview about Bruce's dementia is vuglar
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Weep not for Emma Willis.

What she has wrought is particularly ghoulish, even by Hollywood standards.

Ever since announcing that her husband, movie star Bruce Willis, was diagnosed with aphasia and, one year later, frontotemporal dementia, Emma has become a prominent figure in promoting ‘compassionate care’.

Yet, an important question arises — not that ABC’s Diane Sawyer addressed it during her flattering, hour-long primetime interview with Emma on Tuesday — just how genuine is this display of compassion?

It was unsettling to witness Emma, 47, much younger than Bruce at 70, navigate the stairs in a home likely funded by her husband’s career, styled like Meghan Markle in elegant monochrome attire, sporting a minimalist makeup look, as she took her seat for the spotlight.

She was wearing glasses, perhaps to underscore her new seriousness. Yes, she was a model once, but now she is a writer and an activist.

Weep not for Emma Willis. What she has wrought is particularly ghoulish, even by Hollywood standards

Weep not for Emma Willis. What she has wrought is particularly ghoulish, even by Hollywood standards

Sawyer’s narrated introduction claimed: ‘This is Emma Willis, an avowed lifelong introvert, preparing herself to speak in front of the cameras — something she never sought, and never planned for.’

PLEASE.

Once Emma signed the lucrative contract for her book ‘The Unexpected Journey: Finding Strength, Hope and Yourself on the Caregiving Path’, she surely anticipated being in the public eye more than ever.

So please, Diane Sawyer: Stop. Stop insulting ABC’s dwindling audience.

As Diane introduces a highlight reel showcasing Bruce at his peak — bold, strong, and humorous — Emma reveals her husband’s relentless health decline, but only after Diane includes some clips of a younger Bruce playfully interacting with her.

It’s all so gross. So utterly distasteful, these two women sitting around and talking — really, it feels more like gossiping — about all the ways in which Bruce’s motor functions and memory are failing him.

About a one-time icon of American masculinity being brought to his knees by an incurable disease, which Sawyer tells us is ‘the black belt of dementias’.

But let’s talk more about Emma.

‘I was so panicked,’ she says of hearing her husband’s diagnosis. ‘I was free-falling.’

How did Bruce react, Sawyer wants to know.

‘I don’t think Bruce ever really connected the dots,’ Emma says.

How crass, vulgar and self-serving.

On Friday, Emma said that critics of hers don’t know what they’re talking about.

Well, unfortunately, I do. My mother has suffered with dementia for years, and it is a very small and select few who see her and know her condition.

We do not use her decline as the stuff of family text threads. When we take pictures of her, it’s for health and medical reasons, and there is zero chance those images would ever find their way to peripheral family and friends, let alone to social media.

Dementia, in whatever form, robs the sufferer of everything — but the cruelest cut is the loss of personal dignity.

My family do all we can to ensure that my mother has hers. It would be unthinkable, to any of us, to bleat out how hard her condition is for us, let alone marinate in self-pity.

So to see Emma, and Bruce’s grown daughters with his first wife Demi Moore, and Demi herself pose for photos with Bruce — whose eyes are vacant, who clearly doesn’t know what is going on — and splash them all over Instagram is disgusting.

It serves one purpose, to my mind: To make them all look like the most benevolent, generous, patient, loving people on the planet.

It's all so gross. So utterly distasteful, these two women sitting around and talking - really, it feels more like gossiping - about all the ways in which Bruce's motor functions and memory are failing him

It’s all so gross. So utterly distasteful, these two women sitting around and talking – really, it feels more like gossiping – about all the ways in which Bruce’s motor functions and memory are failing him 

About a one-time icon of American masculinity being brought to his knees by an incurable disease, which Diane Sawyer tells us is 'the black belt of dementias' (pictured back in 2013)

About a one-time icon of American masculinity being brought to his knees by an incurable disease, which Diane Sawyer tells us is ‘the black belt of dementias’ (pictured back in 2013)

As anyone with direct experience knows, it’s profoundly frustrating and difficult to spend a sustained amount of time with someone whose dementia has advanced.

It’s not helping the discourse for Emma or the rest of the Willis clan to pretend that this kind of caregiving is easy, let alone pretty and ‘Insta perfect’.

Or that the dementia patient ever knows peace, as those images of Bruce with his eyes closed, Emma nestled into his neck, would have us believe.

Not so.

When a patient with advanced dementia is calm, it’s usually because they’re heavily medicated.

Now: Emma is selling her book as a public service — as enlightenment on this form of dementia and how caregivers can best give said care.

A thin premise, indeed. All forms of dementia are hardly understood. All civilian caregivers suffer burnout.

The difference here is that Emma’s husband worked himself to the bone, even while sick, to make sure his entire family — Emma, their two children, and his three daughters with Demi — would be financially secure.

Not every family has a multimillion-dollar fortune to move their loved one into a private residence with round-the-clock, individualized care, as Emma has done.

There is zero reason for this book to exist, or for Emma’s media tour, or for Bruce and Demi’s daughter Scout to release her second album (who even knew there was a first?) on September 5, just days before her stepmother’s book publishes on September 9.

Back to this primetime interview, replete with once-private family photos.

‘Bruce is in really great health, overall,’ Emma says. ‘You know, it’s just his brain that is failing him’.

Diane: ‘But the language is —’

Emma: ‘Yeah, the language is going… It’s hard, but I’m grateful. I’m grateful that my husband is still very much here.’

I can only speak for myself and those closest to my mom, but trust me when I say we wish something else would take her, swiftly and painlessly, to end her suffering.

We don’t feel grateful that she is still ‘very much here’, because she is not.

Perhaps Emma has good reason to feel differently, even though Bruce has progressed so far in his illness.

After all, her book is already a bestseller on Amazon.

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