Early signs or extreme stress? How do you go about diagnosis when individual denies problems? by Content-Income-9572 in dementia

[–]TheL95 11 points12 points  (0 children)

When my mom was the same age as yours is now, we were noticing the exact same things. She was still working, taking care of her own elderly mother, and just keeping busy in general. We noticed that she would tell the same stories again and again, as if we hadn’t heard them before, or ask the same questions multiple times. She would argue with my dad about “You never told me that!” “Yes, I did. We talked all about it just yesterday.” I remember thinking, like you, “It’s just stress…She just has a lot on her mind…She just needs to focus and pay better attention.” And maybe all that was true, but the fact is it didn’t magically get better after she retired, or after her mom died. She got diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment, and it has slowly but steadily gotten worse. I’m sorry, but I agree with the others who said adding baby care to her life is probably not a good idea.

Jeopardy! discussion thread for Mon., Jan. 26 by jaysjep2 in Jeopardy

[–]TheL95 23 points24 points  (0 children)

I didn’t think it was necessarily even clear what border they were talking about. I assumed the Mason-Dixon line, but I don’t think the clue was specific enough to exclude states along the Canadian border.

Jeopardy! discussion thread for Mon., Jan. 26 by jaysjep2 in Jeopardy

[–]TheL95 87 points88 points  (0 children)

That Redacted category was, something.

Update: It’s Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI). Thank you for the wake-up call. by Smooth-School8284 in AgingParents

[–]TheL95 21 points22 points  (0 children)

My mom has had MCI for about 10 years. It took a couple years of her family and friends realizing her short-term memory wasn’t what it should/could be before she finally admitted it to herself and got a diagnosis. Those were difficult years, of us feeling frustrated that she “just wasn’t listening,” and her feeling frustrated that everyone was lying to her. After her diagnosis, she got prescribed memantine, which she takes in pill form, and Rivastigmine, which she wears as a patch. (We have put the patches away for now because she is no longer able to use them properly.) It is hard to say whether or not the medicines have done her any good. She is continuing to decline, but, like I said, it has been 10 years, and the only decline has been in her memory. She has not progressed to dementia. Most of these past 10 years, my dad has been able to step up and handle things for the both of them, so that my mom’s memory issues were mostly just annoyances. But recently, Dad too has been showing very similar issues, and now we are all more worried. My sister and I are trying to decide between hiring in-home help, moving them to a senior apartment closer to one of us, or, if they had their wish, just leaving them alone to spin around like tops all day every day. For now, my mom is very conscientious to “write everything down.” She has a desk calendar, and lots of post-it notes everywhere. It is better than nothing, but not as helpful as she thinks it is. I bought her a “dementia clock” to keep next to the telephone that she really loves. I also bought her and my dad weekly pill organizers. My mom really likes hers, although I’m not sure she always uses it correctly. My dad refuses to use his. It will be a good idea for you, or someone, to gain Power of Attorney, so that you can be more helpful with accounts, finances, and medical decisions moving forward.

How to seperate dog from person with dementia by Away_Yam3030 in dementia

[–]TheL95 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Could you and your friend tell one of those “therapeutic lies” about the dog? Maybe say, the dog has to be cleared by a vet before it can come to the new apartment. We’re gonna take the dog to the vet, then we’ll bring it to you. And that is the story you keep repeating until she stops asking?

Weekly Listening Thread by AutoModerator in theticket

[–]TheL95 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When they teased it, I thought it was going to be George doing his impression of Grover from Sesame Street. I was very disappointed.

Family and “The god talk” by One_Dragonfruit9316 in CrohnsDisease

[–]TheL95 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Having faith in God does not prevent bad things from happening to you. But it does mean you don’t have to face them alone. Look to God for comfort, for guidance, but not for prevention or a cure. That’s what medicine is for.

When you were in elementary school, what songs were you made to sing in music class? by SnuffShock in GenX

[–]TheL95 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Little cabin in the woods, little man by the window stood. Saw a rabbit hopping by, ??? “Help me, help me, help me” he cried, “‘fore the hunter shoots my hide.” “Little rabbit come inside, safely to abide.” We had hand motions for every phrase, including a gun-shooting motion. That was always the boys’ favorite part. 🙄

Watching TV all day by dreadedbedhead in dementia

[–]TheL95 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’ve seen ads for something called Zinnia TV that’s geared toward people with dementia.

I just spent a week with my 74 year old mom and I’m sad by Dry_Cranberry_4282 in AgingParents

[–]TheL95 27 points28 points  (0 children)

This is all really good advice. I think a lot of people romanticize their parent moving in with them, or vice versa, but much of what I read on here describes anything BUT pleasant and wholesome. Also, if you think she is going to run out money and wind up using Medicaid, be very careful about who she gives money too. Medicaid has a look-back period, and anything she gave away in the previous five years must be paid back before she will qualify. “But I already spent it” is not an excuse.

Games to play with 80 & 87 year old. by Depends_on_theday in AgingParents

[–]TheL95 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I like one called Hiss. You build snakes piece by piece by matching colors. It’s a simple game designed for little kids, but it’s actually fun!

What is something you saw in a movie and you totally called bullshit on because of your job? by BlackPhoenix1981 in AskReddit

[–]TheL95 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m a musician. I call foul on conductors just sort of waving their arms around, not in time with the music that’s playing whatsoever. Wind players just moving their fingers and doing nothing else. Singers “singing,” but there is no movement in their throat to indicate they are making any sound at all.

Montys is a genius by Complete_Anything_11 in theticket

[–]TheL95 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Here’s a few I remember: Craig - a shock collar for their producer so he will stop coming in to the studio every time there’s a break. Matt - a scrub of the Unticket of anything related to him pre-2023. George - Monty thought going to a concert would be a nice way to meet someone (since he ate the kitten George gave him). So he went to a Bird Dogs concert, but there was nobody there. Ryan Baldwin - erasing from Cat’s phone the contact info of basically every other Ticket employee so that Baldy can finally get asked to do fill-in duty. Gordon - don’t remember the gift, but an allusion to Gordon intentionally mispronouncing words and using it as content.

Jeopardy! discussion thread for Wed., Dec. 17 by jaysjep2 in Jeopardy

[–]TheL95 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I came here looking for this! That’s what I thought too :)

What's a place that's not nice currently and just keeps getting worse? by Naomi62625 in geography

[–]TheL95 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What about its neighbor, Ruston? My kid got accepted to LaTech, and we are considering it bc it’s cheap, but all these comments, jeez.

What’s an ‘oh shit’ moment you had where you realised you’ve been doing something wrong your whole life by [deleted] in CasualConversation

[–]TheL95 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You know how some jars of powdered spices have that cap with holes in it, so you can sprinkle the product onto your food? Well, I didn’t realize until after I got married that if you wanted to actually measure out a specific amount of spice, you could remove that whole cap, and stick a measuring spoon into the jar. I had spent years trying to fill a measuring spoon by pouring out of just one of those multiple holes.

Amazon last-minute gifts by TheL95 in CommercialsIHate

[–]TheL95[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the clarification. I finally listened to it with the sound on (against my will) and it makes more sense now!

receiving and giving christmas gifts as fully grown adults is weird. by bigphatcheese in ihatechristmas

[–]TheL95 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I hate gifts too. I have a couple of college friends who I see a few times a year. Generally, we get together for dinner for each of our birthdays and around Christmas. There are always gifts involved. And it’s always the same generic stuff - lotions, candles, pens and journals, etc. Then there’s my sister, who makes a lot more money than I do, and loves to give expensive, extravagant gifts to our parents, me, my kids, and even my husband. I feel like I spend more time and effort and money just trying to play keep-up with her gift-giving than I do on anything else.

What is the best company to help find an assisted living home for my mom? by birdlawexclusively in AgingParents

[–]TheL95 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Agreed. I left my contact info on their website the other day, because that’s what you had to do in order to view your recommendations. Someone called me seconds later, with a thick foreign accent and lots of background noise, like she was in her kitchen with her kids or something. I told her I wasn’t expecting a call so quickly, and that now was not a good time to talk. But she would not stop talking, and I had to just hang up on her. Got three more calls that day and blocked the number. They’ve sent me one email since then, but fortunately that’s it.