My Husband Lived With Lewy Body Dementia. Before He Died, He Left Me This Poem

By Mary Lou Falcone Published On: February 18, 2026

After her husband’s LBD diagnosis, one sentence became her anchor. Months after his death, she found a poem he wrote — describing life trapped inside the disease.

When my beloved husband Nicky Zann – rock ‘n’ roll teenage idol, celebrated artist, and all around wonderful human being – was diagnosed in 2019 with Lewy body dementia (LBD), our world might have exploded had it not been for one sentence that Nicky shared in the hospital waiting room: “We have had a great run, we cannot be sad.”  

Those words turned out to be my anchor as we navigated the disease together.  

Unlike Alzheimer’s disease, LBD has a major twist: fluctuations. The person with LBD goes in and out of lucidity; one moment Nicky was 100% himself, and the next he would not know who I was.  

A few months before he died, Nicky, in a lucid moment, wrote this poem, burying it in one of his sketch books for me to find three months after he passed. In it, he eloquently describes how he felt being trapped by ‘Lewy.’  

In my book, “I Didn’t See It Coming: Scenes of Love, Loss, and Lewy Body Dementia,” I share this personal insight into Nicky’s LBD experience, exactly as he wrote it. 

The poem follows:

The photo on the wall

if I’m not mistaken, was

taken when our love was

just brand new

It was not long ago, when

we were making the plans,

to love one strong 

and be true

A devil in our home,

used deception to corrupt

the loyal angel that 

my heart knew

An instant into this 

cruel and hateful reception 

vengeance replaced the heart that once 

beat true

With blinding rage, and searing pain

a ready knife filled my hand

I thrashed with intent

cutting them down and never 

was the same again

While I wait, for my date

with the hangman and his chore

and by chance I see my 

reflection 

that less than human sight that 

haunts each tortured night 

that stranger in the mirror is me…

– Nicky Zann (written in May 2020)

Featured image credit: Alaina Muckell

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