Category Archives: General

Dementia: All Hands On Deck

Good news at last: I’ve just heard that my appointment to see the Orthopaedic Surgeon about my shoulder has been delayed.  It’s good news because it gives me another month to see if the exercise regime that my physiotherapist has given me will ease my difficulties.  As we all know there are no guarantees with surgery and anything could happen.  Obviously if hard work cures my problem that will be a real bonus and the thought of being one handed following the operation is far from attractive.  Any Care Partner needs all hands on deck with dementia the Elephant in the room.

Dementia: Looking Back: Looking Ahead (Week 10)

There have been marked changes in Maureen’s presentation during the last week.  Confusion has been rampant on many occasions, alongside real fears about men. Yesterday fear became terror as Maureen felt she was ‘losing her memory’ . The episode in the afternoon was repeated in the evening but my efforts to take Maureen ‘home’ were not as successful.  On return from the second trip of the day she said I had ‘ brought her back here again’, and ended up spending the early part of the night on the sofa as ‘she didn’t have a bed here’.  It seems likely that the days of sleeping together in the marital bed have gone: it’s the spare room for me from now on.

Once again I need to ‘up my game’ to cope with the Maureen’s reality, and explore additional support to cope with ongoing daily challenges. I have to continue providing Maureen with the level of support she clearly needs, and seek opportunities for respite from the ongoing challenge of this dreadful condition.  I will continue to post daily updates of how our journey progresses.

Good start to the day with a couple of hours making the house more dementia friendly.  I have disposed of some junk, and simplified the set up in the kitchen.  The early signs are Maureen thinks I am her husband this morning.  It will be interesting to see who she thinks I am on my return from the Leisure Centre when I offer her breakfast.

 

Dementia: From Fear to Terror

This afternoon marked a radical change in Maureen’s presentation: from fear to terror.  After we had prepared Sunday Lunch together she said ‘she needed to get back home as her husband would wonder where she had got to’.  I acccepted her reality and she told me that she lived in Coventry with her husband who was a long distance lorry driver.

She was pleased to accept my offer of a lift back home.  I drove around for a short while and she recognised where we lived as we neared home.  I let her into the house and bade her farewell as she entered our home.  She thanked me for the lift and waved me goodbye.

I returned home after a brief chat with my next door neighbours.  Maureen was pleased to see me as she was very frightened and said ‘she had lost her memory again’.  She complained that ‘the hospital had not told her how to get her memory back when she had lost it once before following stroke’. I gave her all the reassurance that I could think of and held her tight.

Maureen ate a good lunch and we watched televison for a while.  As I post this she is sleeping on the sofa.  I hope I am able to get some quality rest tonight.

Dementia: Fear and Confusion At Bedtime Returns

This is the second night running that Maureen  became distressed and confused as she prepared to go to bed.  We had enjoyed a fairly good morning with  a long walk before lunch.  The afternoon and evening passed relatively peacefully, apart from Maureen saying  there was a little boy in the corner of our lounge watching us as we played a couple of table games..

Shortly after 10pm she came down from getting ready for bed and said ‘they were having a meeting to try to find a place for her in the Ladies Room’.  She said ‘she had to wait until they had finished the meeting before she knew where she was going to sleep’.  When I tried to help she told me firmly ‘that it was nothing to do with me, and I should go to bed’.

At around 11pm Maureen came upstairs and I  went to meet her as she arrived at the top of the stairs.  This was a silly mistake and caused her to screeam.    It took me a while to calm her down and assure her that there won’t be a man in her bed tonight.  She looked so distressed as she arranged her pillows and sorted out her bed.

I think it is fair to assume that Maureen continues to ‘time travel’ and is haunted by demons from her past.   The Clinical Psychologist from the Stroke Team warned me that Maureen’s fear of men was likely to resurface as her dementia progressed.  This is so difficult to deal with as Maureen is often unclear who I am, and may see me as someone who might cause her harm.  Trying to comfort someone at arms length is quite a challenge.  Hopefully she will remember that I am only a partition wall away and to yell at any time of the night if she needs me.

Maureen did remember where I was during the night and early this morning.  She popped in to see me around 2 am before going downstairs for a while.  I stayed in bed and listened as she returned to her bedroom and shut the door.  When the coast was clear I went downstairs and turned out the lights she had left on.  Two hours later she was on the move again walking from one area of the house to another.

I left Maureen to her roaming for a while and got up when I heard her crying.  She told me ‘she was lost and couldn’t find her way around the house’.  I carefully guided her back to her bed and things went quiet for a while until I heard her crying.   Then it all made sense to me when she said: ‘my mum’s gone downstairs’

When Maureen lived with her parents she shared a bedroom with her mum.  Her dad had epilepsy and slept in a room of his own to prevent his fits from harming his wife. Therefore it’s not surprising that Maureen is confused about where she sleeps: she can’t find her mum.

I’m hoping that the sun comes out again today, and we will be able to go for a walk. The Boating Lake and a play area for children is within walking distance. There’s nothing like watching little ones in the Sand Pit or on the Pirates Ship on a sunny afternoon.

 

 

 

Dementia: ‘Walking Back To Happiness’

Yesterday a long walk shortly before lunch made a significant impact on Maureen’s presentation.  It also provided food for thought on helping Maureen to find purpose in her life.

Maureen had been going through a tough period in the morning either sleeping or looking confused as she tried to find something to fill her time.  At one stage she became very upset: convinced that men were following her into the toilet.  Despite my reassurance her distress continued for quite some time.

Around 11 am she woke from her latest sleep crying that she ‘didn’t like it here and wanted to go home’.  As she was feeling hot she went outside to walk around the garden.  I joined her and asked her if she wanted to go for a walk.

We walked for around an hour to the nearby Country Park.  On route we chatted to a couple of dog walkers and their young children.  Maureen came into her own chatting to one toddler after another.  This led me to wonder if we could find more opportunities to be in the company of young children.  We might even be able to find some voluntary work in a creche or playgroup.  This would address one of Maureen’s concerns that she feels useless,as she is not doing anything worthwhile. It would also give her an opportunity to be maternal, a role she clearly enjoys.

 

Dementia: Fear and Confusion on Friday Night

Because of the events of last night today’s post is a departure from the normal routine of Saturday’s Sprinkle of Gratitude .

I have never seen Maureen so confused and frightened as she was last night.  She was very mixed up early this morning until she settled down with dawn on the horizon.  To keep matters brief I’ll use a time log to describe events as they unfolded:

pm

Maureen awoke after resting for an hour or so on the sofa.  All seemed well until she became very distressed during her bed time routines.  She began to ask me where the others had gone.  She wondered where my daughter’s were or the girls she used to play with.  Sobbing her heart out she eventually got into bed and pulled the sheets over her head.  As I was leaving the room she said ‘she wanted to get out of this place’.

1.30 am

I was awoken by Maureen crying in the front bedroom.  She seemed very distressed and welcomed me into the marital bed.  She went back to sleep quickly, and I returned to the comfort of the spare room: my painful shoulder seems better if I have a bed to myself at the moment

4 am

Maureen popped into the spare room enquiring if I had slept well, and if my shoulder was any better.  She told me she was going downstairs to make a drink.  I joined her ten minutes later to find her in a state of confusion.  The evidence that she struggles to make a cup of tea was everwhere.  Even with my assistance her efforts brought tears to my eyes: mugs, tea, milk and sugar all over the place.

6 am 

I have eased Maureen into her sleeping position on the sofa.  I imagine she will ‘rest her eyes’ for a while.  She has been very calm for the last hour and we have had great fun talking about all sorts of topics.  She is particularly taken at the moment with ‘when the NHS became free at the point of delivery’.

Conclusion:

Maureen was time travelling last night.  She spent some of her childhood in Cleethorpes.  Whenever she is with her aunties they talk of the great times they had together: sometimes 5 of them sharing a bed.

Maureen is frequently frightened when alone with a man at night.  Her concerns are understandable as fear of abuse never leaves the victim.

Maureen’s functional capacity continues to decline: making a cup of tea or a sandwich is no longer a simple matter.

It’s going to be a long day and it would be really nice if the Sky Blues got back to winning ways at Blackpool this afternoon.

 

 

Dementia: ‘On The Road Again’

Great news: I’ve made a start this morning on sorting out my shoulder.  I had a lovely walk to the Leisure Centre and did the exercises perscribed by my phyiso.  It’s great to be on ‘the road again’ renewing contact with some old friends.

Maureen was up and about on my return.  She is currently planning a shopping list with Chloe.  With a bit of luck Chloe might even persuade her to go along with her.

There’s Spring in the air this morning.  That walk back along the Prom was beautiful.

Hey Kate (Swaffer) I told you I’d send you a tune from the Great Man!

 

 

Dementia: There Is No Quick Fix

Maureen and I both face the prospect that there are no quick fixes for the conditions that are having an impact on our lives.  There has never been a quick fix for Maureen following stroke: she has suffered brain injury and then has to deal with ‘Prescribed Disengagement’ .  The first Consultant she saw at the Memory Clinic put it bluntly: ‘you will have to learn to cope with the new reality’.

There is no quick fix for the torn tendon in my shoulder.  Some suggest surgery is a simple solution.  Others encourage me to stay away from the operating table as there is no guarantee of success.

The solution for both of us is to take more control of our own destiny.  We have to hold to our belief that the body can heal itself even the brain.  It’s another one of those situations where there is no gain without pain.  The only sensible approach is for us to put in the hard work that is needed to allow the body to recover from trauma.

Maureen is already singing in bed this morning, currently: ‘Cockeyed Optimist’.  I’m off to the Leisure Centre shortly to resume my exercise regime.  On we go as they say: we will overcome!

P.S.  I’ve already meditated this morning: must convert Maureen soon!

Dementia: Care Agency Gets Me Off The Hook

I struggled for some time yesterday about my plans to go to Coventry on Saturday to see my mum. Maureen is so confused and frightened at the moment that I became worried about leaving her for 14 hours.  The Care Agency helped me to make my mind up once they confirmed no arrangements were in place.  What seemed even more puzzling they didn’t tell me that Sue, who sat with Maureen the last time I had an away day was leaving on Friday.

Why on earth would I leave Maureen with people she didn’t know for 14 hours?   Her reaction  when Sue sat with her when I went to London was challenging enough. Goodness knows what she would have made of it if I had left her with strangers for the day.

This is not the first time that the Care Agency had let me down. On previous occasions it had cost me money when I  had to be cancel arrangements at the last minute..

I’m beginning to think it’s time Social Care was taken back into the Public Sector.  Why are we leaving some of the most vulnerable members of our society in the hands of Agencies who struggle to recruit and retain staff?  The very people who need continuity in their care arrangements are being sold short.  They are being looked after by staff with minimal training, on zero hour contracts.  Their terms and conditions of employment are a disgrace: no time between calls or travelling expenses.  This is hardly a recipe for good care in the community!