Living and Dying with Dementia

Submitted by scott on Fri, 10/19/2012 - 21:25

Possibly the most difficult aspect of dementia is how it sneaks up on you in plain sight. We all know it is happening but in the earlier stages there is no clue as to how insidious it is. The doctors, although they recognize its onset, say nothing about how it progresses. I don't like that term when dealing with dementia. I can see nothing of progress here. 

Living (and dying) with Dementia

Submitted by scott on Tue, 10/16/2012 - 03:58

My mother died this morning, 1am, according to the hospice nurse. We, only just yesterday, began 24 hour nurse attendance for her. She lasted 14 of those hours. For me, she was a wonderful mother, allowing me opportunities but never pushing me. Perhaps I needed pushing, but we won't go into that just now. For several years now her dementia became more and more a controlling characteristic of her life. For the first few years it was merely humorous short-term memory loss. Just a few years ago it had developed to the point where she got lost driving to and from the grocery store.

Living with Dementia

Submitted by scott on Sun, 10/07/2012 - 13:25

So I've been on Family Medical Leave for about a month. Mostly I sit by a monitor I set up and watch my mother sleep. This is a Uniden system monitor and works fairly well, even in the dark. The sound is not so good so I have a First Years baby monitor also set up. I can react immediately to any cries for help or other signals of apparent urgency. For the most part even she cannot tell me what the problem is, what might be frightening her. She seldom reports being in any pain. Mostly these cries occur when she awakens and does not know where she is.