Posted by (0) Comment
![]() Hello,
We believe we know about the feelings of our pets than we do about the feelings of human beings deep into the symptoms of dementia.
We honestly believe we can look into the eyes of our pet cat, rabbit, snake, turtle and “read” his emotions. Is he happy, hungry, sad, scared, interested in being around other cats, rabbits, snakes and/or turtles.
We even go so far with pet mindreading, actually we are noticing their non verbals, that we begin to talk to them as if they could hear us, as if they could understand what we are saying, as if they know exactly who we are and where they are.
Why is it we don’t put as much effort in understanding people living with dementia. Why don’t we talk to them as if they are still here…when if fact they are all here in the moment with us. Why don’t we at least have many many Alzheimer’s Whisperers? Folks who have been trained in understanding the not verbals of folks living with the symptoms of dementia.
Why don’t we figure out/research/test means to communicate with those whose disabilities keep them from talking. Technology has been such a help to those with other disabilities to assist them in communication with us and we communicating with them. Why don’t we spend money to figure this out? Why do we throw up our hands in sorrow/frustration when a loved one can’t recognize us, doesn’t remember our name.
Why, why, why do be honestly believe we understand dumb animals more than a human being? Richard
(Editor’s picture and comment:)
|
Posted by (0) Comment
I would love to spread this DVD all over the world, unfortunately I own this one only, and I for sure won’t give it away!
t, and how to overcome many of the deep fears and feelings of desperation and hopelesness that rise from the ***************************
Hello,
I recently completed creating another DVD that directly addresses the myths, stigmas, hoaxes, lies, and stigmas of Dementia, probably of the Alzheimer’s Type. This is the script of the introduction of the DVD.
This is the message, the insight I leave to myself and I share with you for you to consider and keep with you. I don’t want to forget this stuff. This is the information I have learned, experienced both first hand and by watching and listening to other folks in boots similar to mine, but further
along in the journey. This is a summary of what I have experienced and learned, and a summary of what I wish someone had told me a week or so after I was diagnosed. It would have saved me a lot of grief, it would have saved my family from having to deal with my mood swings, my thoughts and fears of an immanent death.
A fear that I had begun the long goodbye.
A fear of dying twice, of suffering, of losing my soul, of losing myself.
A fear of being a burden on my family both financially and personally.
A fear of dying not being aware it had happened and was going to happen yet a second time.
I have witnessed a future which will be mine unless some unforeseen circumstances drastically change me and/or my
disability.I have confirmed for myself my belief in the enduring human needs that never, ever fade away regardless of the
severity of a person’s cognitive disabilities. No spirit dies before the body in which it resides dies.
No soul slips away, no person ceases to exist until shortly after they draw their final breath.
This I now know for sure.
And although I will probably reach a point where my current level of self-perceptions does not focus on, or concern itself with
seeking out this meta perspective of myself - I know for sure that my needs to be me, to be aware of today, to want to feel connected to others, to feel like I have a reason for opening my eyes every morning… these needs will always be with me, a part of me, needs of mine and somewhere inside of me wants of mine. The hunger created by unmet needs is not dulled by what others say or think of me as I slip deeper into my symptoms.
As my ability to cope with my symptoms becomes less and less effective, my higher level needs do not recede and never ever disappear. Yes, my ability to directly communicate my need for them will over time deteriorate. Yes, you will have to try harder, try different to understand me. For this I am sorry.
It is a burden that requires you to learn new ways to communicate with me and new ways for you to understand how I can communicate with you.

It is an area of psycho-social research which is all but ignored in the present rush to “cure” what ails me.
But it is the most important way you can support me and millions and millions of others living with the symptoms of dementia. Discovering how to more effectively connect with me, communicate with me, and enable me to feel like I am the human being you know that I am.
As for those of you who honestly believe there is a point of no return in the lives of people living with dementia, a point beyond which we are gone, but not yet dead, a point at which we regress, withdraw, reduce our needs to live and feel like we are alive, connected, a full human being - all I can say is: you are wrong, wrong, wrong.
You have projected your own fears, your own view of what being alive means - a view limited by your education, experience, fears for yourself - you have concluded if life can’t be as you understand it right now, then it simply cannot be any other way. I have heardsome smart, well educated professionals say people with dementia reach a drop off point where they are zombies - dead men and women shuffling around, murmuring incoherently by their standards - a conformation of the belief that if we don’t talk like you, we must not in most any ways be like you. I repeat, this is wrong, wrong, wrong. We are not, and will never be ”dead men/women walking”. No one ever is such a person! Please, please, never treat someone as if that were true.
I’m still here. We are all still here, this is more than a slogan, a catchy phrase, a title for a number of books. It is a clear statement of an absolute and enduring truth. It will never change regardless of how we are seen or treated.
As a human being my humanness will never, can never fade away.
Unfortunately the way we are treated can convince even me that such is the case. I can be convinced that I am an empty shell. Slipping, undependable cognitive abilities inhibit me from understanding what is happening to me, but even when I believe as you do that doesn’t change who I am, it only adds one more person who believes I am in the midst of the long good bye, when in fact I am not.
This is information, drawn from the shared life experiences of myself and hundreds of others folks living with the symptoms of dementia.
I wish I could have seen this a week after I was diagnosed. I don’t claim this is all absolute truth. It is relative to my ability to understand myself, to understand others.
But when most all the advice we are given is given by those who have not for one moment walked in our shoes, shared our fears, heard the words: You have dementia probably of this or that type - it should naturally come closer to resonating with your own feelings than all the books, web sites, lectures, and check lists others are so quick to point towards us.
I make no claims to be THE voice of dementia. I am really not even a voice of dementia, for each day my voice changes with my life experience, my symptoms, and my ability to view myself with any sort of objectivity.
I encourage you to seek out others who share your diagnosis, your kinds and levels of symptoms. The more we know of each other’s experiences, thoughts, and feelings the better chance we have of better knowing and understanding our own.
Right now you must decide for yourself who you are, how you want and need to be treated. As with most of life’s big decisions: not to decide is to decide.
Please, please do not let or even encourage others to decide for you.
This is not the time in your life to trust others to take complete control of how you are treated, how you are understood.
It is the time to honestly and forthrightly stand up and speak out for yourself, about yourself. It is time for you and your family and friends to understand and appreciate as best as each of you can that you have a disability, a chronic disability that will not go away, will probably get worse, and will require you to depend more and more on others to enable you to live a purposeful and purpose filled life.
Hide the diagnosis under a bushel, no.
Hide yourself in a closet, no. In the short and most certainly in the long run waiting to cross the bridges of dementia before you talk and plan for them is the absolute wrong strategy. I tried it, many try it. It makes the bridges higher and more dangerous to cross, and the roads get unnecessarily rougher and rougher for all.
This then is me standing up and speaking out to others who are living the symptoms of dementia, and I’m inviting others who do not live with these symptoms to listen and want to begin by addressing some of the myths and stigmas that are associated, in fact even promoted by some who do not live with the diagnosis of dementia.
Richard

By TOM BREEN, Associated Press -
During the portion of the show where the one-time Republican presidential candidate takes questions from viewers, Robertson was asked what advice a man should give to a friend who began seeing another woman after his wife started suffering from the incurable neurological disorder.
“I know it sounds cruel, but if he’s going to do something, he should divorce her and start all over again, but make sure she has custodial care and somebody looking after her,” Robertson said.
The chairman of the Christian Broadcasting Network, which airs the “700 Club,” said he wouldn’t “put a guilt trip” on anyone who divorces a spouse who suffers from the illness, but added, “Get some ethicist besides me to give you the answer.
Most Christian denominations at least discourage divorce, citing Jesus’ words in the Gospel of Mark that equate divorce and remarriage with adultery.
Terry Meeuwsen, Robertson’s co-host, asked him about couples’ marriage vows to take care of each other “for better or for worse” and “in sickness and in health.”
“If you respect that vow, you say ’til death do us part,’” Robertson said during the Tuesday broadcast. “This is a kind of death.”
translation:
“I see dead humans!”
So, living with the symptoms of dementia is much like being close to, exactly like being dead, except you haven’t stopped breathing yet? Is that right Pat? What about living with other cognitive disorders, other disabilities? Are these folks dead too? I wish this way of thinking was unique to Rev. Robertson’s twisted moral/ethical/religious beliefs. I wish this wasn’t just another example of stigma making, stigma reinforcing. This statement goes beyond the creation of a myth. It is simply untrue - the assumption upon which his conclusion is based and the conclusion he draws are both wrong, wrong, wrong. We should all stand up and speak out concerning the errors of Rev. Robertson’s thought process and beliefs. The fact that he felt comfortable assigning millions of people living with the symptoms of dementia to some form of living purgatory, divorced zombies, and did so on a National TV religion based show, shows how comfortable he is judging others who are not exactly like him.
The next time you feel moved to support his ministry, please remember what he believes about your mother, father, spouse, good friend. And instead of sending him a check send him a note telling him of the error of his ways.
Richard
Posted by (0) Comment


Posted by (0) Comment
I’m home again! I am Richard and I live with and have been diagnosed with the symptoms of Dementia, for sure, probably of the Alzheimer’s
type. Spending a week in Spain at a conference sponsored by the Queen - and then a week on the French Riviera, and then a week in Iowa at the School of Nursing at the University of Iowa has depleted my energy reserves, my cognitive reserves, and my weight reserves (lost 10 pounds!).
However, recall of the specifics of the business and play are as usual difficult to retrieve, and when I do, I have little confidence they are what really happened. Linda and I spent a week living with Cathy and John with their view of the port of Nice, France from their bedroom floor to ceiling windows.
I wish I could say all this travel has refilled my energy tank, but it has not. It was wonderful being around friends, rubbing shoulders with the movers and shakers of the Alzheimer’s world.
Many walk their talk, while others walk/act in a twisted way at best and an opposite way at worst away from their talk.
No one, nowhere seems anywhere near to being fully prepared for the public health crisis. Some are closer, while many are not. There are many dementia angels speaking up and out, but they have yet to be drawn into a choir that sings loud enough for everyone to hear. The movement, if indeed that is what it should become, lacks leadership, funding, sufficient staff, a shared and burning sense of connectedness, an umbrella organization, and the urgency at least as I feel it, to stand up and speak out. As for myself I am trying to feel comfortable speaking/expecting one person at a time to consider my experiences, my messages, and then decide for themselves if what they think and feel about themselves and others dealing with dementia are correct, incorrect, confused, don’t care, don’t know, know/but don’t care. and/or don’t want to know. Must you be living with the symptoms of dementia to feel the necessity for large-scale change NOW?
I lack the ability to understand why this is all happening in the face of the urgency for myself, millions of others, and millions and millions of others who are or will live with the disability of dementia within the next ten or twenty years. Why do so relatively many spend so relatively much on cure research, sacrificing psychosocial research to pharmacological research? Why do so many seem so hopeful for tomorrow, when there is so much more they could do today?
I do not know. If you do, please drop me a line and maybe we can change the world, or at least greatly improve the quality of the lives of souls living with dementia, all of whom are also living with the stigmas of the long good bye, dying twice, losing our souls, becoming sufferers.
Richard
The single biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place. … G.B. Shaw
Posted by (0) Comment
|
Write something down on a slip, and start a story with friends and family
|
|
At long last, my good friend, Anne Basting’s web site featuring an interactive and free timeslips opportunity is ready to go. It is worth your time to check this out. Official launch will be Sept. 24th. I’m hoping on the 24th, we can get some folks to use the site, tell some stories and help spread the word about this tool to bring creative engagement to people wherever they live, whatever their cognitive ability: -people living isolated at home–families living far apart–people living/working in group facilities |
|
The new storytelling software is playful and easy to use. Essentially this is a way for all of us to make up and extended story with our family and friends, each adding a section to the imaginary story. It is fun, simulating, ego boosting, and interesting. All this and did i mention FREE: Anne Bastings is one of the most productive, creative minds, and she gets ít when it comes to appreciating, challenging, stretching, and bring joy and self confidence into the minds of folks living with the symptoms of dementia.
2) Send a personal email to friends you think might love this site. I can’t thank you enough. I feel like we have an amazing tool to give people - to let the joy of imagination brighten their lives. Anne Yes you do Anne, yes you do. Thank you. I hope tousands will check this site out themselves.
Richard Taylor |