Photo: Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty, Mike Marsland/WireImage

Kimberly Williams-Paisleyknows firsthand whatBruce Willis' family is going through.
The actor’s wife,Emma Heming Willis, announced on Thursday that he has beendiagnosed with frontotemporal dementia, revealing that his condition has worsened since his family first shared news of hisaphasia diagnosislast year.
Showing support for Bruce’s family, Williams-Paisleywrote a touching commentunderneath PEOPLE’s post about his diagnosis.
In 2005, Williams-Paisley and her family learned that her mother Linda Williams, then 62, was suffering from a form of early-onset dementia called primary progressive aphasia, which her daughter said left her moody, accident-prone and increasingly unable to recognize her own family.
In 2016, theFather of the Bridestar, 51, released acandid memoirthat chronicledher family’s journeywith her mother’s dementia:Where the Light Gets In: Losing My Mother Only to Find Her Again.
Ahead of the release, Williams-Paisley spoke with PEOPLE about how she learned to embrace the woman her mother had become. “It was really important to me to have the silver linings and the positives in it,” she said.
TheNashvillestar and wife of country superstar Brad Paisley had previously penned a heartbreaking but powerfulpersonal essay forRedbookin 2014.
“I’ve watched a passionately joyful woman, a devoted mother, an engaged listener and friend deteriorate and transform into someone almost unrecognizable,” she wrote at the time. “It’s been agonizing to slowly lose her.”
RELATED VIDEO: Emma Heming Willis Says Grief Over Husband Bruce Willis' Aphasia Diagnosis ‘Can Be Paralyzing’
Williams-Paisley found solaceafter talking to friends with similar experiences: She realized she had to love her mother in a new, “innocent” way. She learned to communicate wordlessly and found peace in small gestures, like rubbing cream on her mother’s dry hands. In doing so it allowed her to remember her mother as she used to be without succumbing to the pain of her loss.
“She is, in many ways, a ‘new’ mom. But now it’s easier to welcome memories of her as she used to be,” Williams-Paisley wrote. “I remember her as I run, the way she always used to, into a cold ocean when no one else wants to. I’m sure I know how she felt as I listen to my own children with all my heart.”
Williams died in Nov. 2016, shortly after her daughter released her book.
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In Emma’s post on Thursday, she wrote in part about her husband, “Since we announced Bruce’s diagnosis of aphasia in spring 2022, Bruce’s condition has progressed and we now have a more specific diagnosis: frontotemporal dementia (known as FTD),” she continued. “Unfortunately, challenges with communication are just one symptom of the disease Bruce faces. While this is painful, it is a relief to finally have a clear diagnosis.”
source: people.com