I'm not sure how common my own experience is, but for me, taking care of my elderly mother, it's certainly more than just "repeat conversations".
She'd repeat conversations about perceived slights when there were none, imaginary hardships (she'd tell me she ran out of money all the time, what actually happened was she hid the money and then forgot about it. Every single time.), or basically just dunking on people for no reason.
Is this common? Why is it that when the memory is faulty, all the false memories that come up are negative ones? Why is it that she never misremember someone for being extra kind?
I'm curious if anyone else also experience this? How do you manage it? Any advice you could share?
Some days I find it to be very exhausting. It's not the repeat, that repeat I can entertain. It's what's being repeated.
In terms of day-to-day interactions, the best pieces of advice I received was to:
* redirect the conversation rather than argue or correct them.
* always flash a look like you just recognized them and are happy to see them before approaching.
* don't ask them if they remember something. They don't and will just rationalize a scenario in which you are antagonizing them. * don't watch action/war movies with them around.
* don't inform or remind them of their condition. It just makes them sad for a bit and they'll forget anyway.
* ask them about distant childhood memories and play them their favorite music.
I hate to end on this, but this isn't a condition that gets better. There were good days and bad days and they eventually all became bad days. Spend time with your loved one and try to get as many of those good times as you can now.
I concur with @Smeevy, especially about not arguing / correcting.
All I can add is to grow a thick skin, because you will be attacked over hallucinated events and to accept that the condition does go through swings. There are times when they seem almost like old times and then without warning out comes something totally hallucinatory.
It's like they are wearing Adam Savage's (MythBusters) T-shirt: "I reject your reality and substitute my own." And you just have to go with it.
This will help out a lot in the future.
And don't forget yourself during this time as it seems that you are some kind of primary caregiver so,I'm not trying to add additional burdens on you but, It helped me to seek out some kind of " counseling" and psychiatric help just to make sure to myself I was making the correct decisions.
There is a long road ahead of you that you will need to navigate - and I'm sure you will do this well.
Stay strong right now+ no matter how bad it seems, It could always be worse ( but it isn't)
You will find a way through this
Eventually I got tired of it and started to negatively reinforce it. Instead of consoling her, I started to tell her how hard it was to hear what she was saying and that I didn't want to hear it anymore. I asked her to focus on the positive parts of life and gave her samples of what real tragedy was like by pointing out samples in the news that she watches every night. I know it was harsh but I don't think it was harsher that her recounting the same stuff everyday to me. The negativity has slowed not stopped but at least we can have a conversation now.
This is what I did but I can't recommend it to you since your situation can be so much different. Also, her short term memory is still functioning to a point. She mostly does her daily care and she requires very little help.
Keep your mother in an environment where she can run on autopilot. Change nothing.
It’s helped me in taking care of my aunt.
It was recommended to me by a doctor who was taking care of their dad.
I've really known him for the past 20 years and he's had early onset dementia since his late 60s-early 70s. As long as I kept him in a routine of breakfast/meds, walk, lunch/meds, mail, dinner/meds, walk/coffee/news, he was doing just fine.
Recently, he took a turn for the worst. I had to go away across country for a month to take care of my dad, who has Agent Orange. When I came back, this is when all the problems started. Something messed up his routine and he wasn't taking the proper dosages of his medicines, despite the cup system I set up for him.
He was never able to get better or return back to the way he was. I suppose this actually occurred after he had surgery to remove what we thought was colon cancer, but turned out to be a oversized polyp. But just two months after that surgery, he's experiencing renal failure, liver failure, and congestive heart failure. In addition to his organ failures, his dementia is getting worse.
The VA hospital doctors are recommending I put him into a nursing home. Just a month ago, he was doing fine, taking his medicines, remembering things. Now... I'd been helping him take his meds but some days I wasn't able to get there on time, so at 8 PM one night, I put his meds by his coffee and said to take them in the morning. When I got to his home to check on him, he'd forgotten to take his meds and went into a Afib arrest, heart rate bpm at 170 and bp at 80 over 60. Right now, his medicine is keeping him alive and he doesn't understand.
Dementia is quite common in a lot of people and we're all always at risk for it. It is not ever going to get better. The best things you can do:
1. Make sure you understand the wishes of your parents meaning: you know what they want while they are living and after they die. Yes, you have to accept this reality. So get a living will, DNR requests, etc. Make sure their Will states what happens, including assets and bank accounts, etc.
2. Get the POWER OF ATTORNEY, MEDICAL POWER OF ATTORNEY, and ANYTHING YOU MAY NEED TO PROVE THAT YOU ARE NOW A LEGAL GUARDIAN WHO MAKES DECISIONS ON THEIR BEHALF.
3. If they don't already have life insurance, go to a funeral home and make plans from the plot to the casket and funeral itself. You can start paying into an account and it gets a good return. Take care of this asap.
SPEND DOWN AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE OR GET THOSE ASSETS INTO YOUR NAME OR A TRUST.
4. Spend as much time with them as long as you can, even if they can sometimes be annoying.
5. DO NOT LOSE YOUR PATIENCE. It is not their fault they are in and out... they are likely trying their best.
6. Accept this as life and a part of your life and appreciate the time you had with them.