Emma Heming Willis found new ways to communicate with husband Bruce Willis after his frontotemporal dementia diagnosis.

In her book, The Unexpected Journey: Finding Strength, Hope, and Yourself on the Caregiving Path, Heming Willis, 49, details the impact the disease has had on her husband linguistically. (FTD’s most common symptoms include “struggles with decision-making, movement, speaking or language comprehension,” per the Association for Frontotemporal Degeneration.)

“Because Bruce can’t communicate with me (due to the variant of FTD he has, primary progressive aphasia), I must make judgment calls for him about absolutely everything. I can’t ask him how he’s feeling, what’s wrong or if something hurts,” Heming Willis wrote. “Instead, I read his body language or look into his eyes to understand what’s bothering him and what he’s experiencing. I compare this to the instinct that you have as a parent. With just one glance at your child, you can tell immediately if something isn’t right. And with one look at Bruce, I can tell if his neck hurts or if he’s got a headache.”

Primary progressive aphasia “begins gradually, with speech or language symptoms that vary depending on the brain areas affected by the disease,” according to The Weill Institute for Neurosciences Memory and Aging Center.

Related: Emma Heming Willis Was ‘Scared to Say Anything’ About Bruce’s Dementia

Emma Heming Willis is opening up about her mission to help other caregivers and patients amid husband Bruce Willis‘ frontotemporal dementia battle. “Early on, I was very isolated. I was too scared to say anything to anyone,” Heming Willis, 49, told People in an interview published on Wednesday, September 3. “I was in so much […]

The outlet notes that in one type of the variant, “people may initially have trouble producing speech, whereas, in another variant, word-finding and comprehension problems are more pronounced.”

Heming Willis revealed in August that Willis was living in a second home with a full-time care team as he battles the disease. She defended their living arrangement both on Instagram and during an appearance on Good Morning America on Tuesday, September 9.

GettyImages-184571861 Bruce Willis and Emma Heming attend Fashion's Night Out: Dinner to Preview the Richard Hambleton Exhibition at the Armani Ristorante on September 10, 2009 in New York City. (Photo by Neil Rasmus/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images)

Bruce Willis and Emma Heming Willis
Jon Kopaloff/FilmMagic

“It was a hard decision for us, but it was the safest and best decision not just for Bruce but also for our two young girls,” she said during the interview. “And, you know, it’s really not up for a debate. Now I know that Bruce has the best care 100 percent of the time. His needs are met 100 percent of the time, as well as our two young daughters. So I’m not gonna take a vote on that.”

Heming Willis also recently reflected on making the most of her time with Willis and continuing their love story.

Related: Emma Heming Willis Recalls When Bruce Willis Marriage Started to ‘Feel Off’

Emma Heming Willis’ upcoming memoir, reveals the moment her relationship with Bruce Willis “began to feel off” amid his ongoing health struggles. “There were conversations that I recalled differently than Bruce did, and there seemed to be a lot of miscommunications between the two of us,” Heming Willis, 49, wrote in an excerpt from her […]

“Bruce is very present in his body, and there is something so lovely and wonderful about that,” she told People on September 4. “He’s not thinking about what happened yesterday or what’s happening in the future. He is very grounded in today.”

She added a sweet sentiment: “Sometimes, love does not need words. I can just sit there with Bruce, and we look at each other and we laugh and smile and that, to me, is more than anything.”

The Unexpected Journey: Finding Strength, Hope, and Yourself on the Caregiving Path is out now.

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