My 80 year-old mother has dementia and asks me the same questions over and over until I want to scream. I usually just answer the question like it is the first time she has asked it. Should I say "remember, you asked me that a few minutes ago" or just continue to answer her questions ?
She also sits and stares a lot. If I tell her to get dressed because we are going to the store, I will find her sitting on the bed staring. If I tell her again, she gets very upset and tells me "I am getting dressed!". Dressing to go out for an errand can take two hours or more. Should I keep pressing her to speed it up or allow two hours to get ready to go somewhere?
Lewy Body Dementia has made my laid-back husband who was never in a particular hurry anyway extremely slow. I know that he can't help it. I allow a couple hours for his morning routines. If there is a need to have things happen faster, I help him. I say, "I am so glad that you can dress yourself, and you do a good job, but today we have to leave early for the dentist and I'm going to help you so it goes faster. He hasn't objected to this yet.
The bottom line, kaygwon, is that you are not going to change your mother. You might as well go with the flow and only take charge when it is necessary.
EX: 12:00 lunch ,music at 1:00, stretching at 3:00 etc. the schedule will make a focal point and make them feel less lost. Gives a focus and a purpose and if the mind is busy trying to remember or waiting for the next thing and this will be occupying the mind.
Remember one day you may be happy if a word is spoken at all, so smile it's only the same question to you. It only drives you crazy if you let it.
Now a story about this subject.......
On Thanksgiving Day at Mom's early dementia stage and the beginning of my caregiving 24/7 days ...Early Morning I was getting ready to stuff the Turkey as Mom sat in front about 5 inches from THE TURKEY while the THANKSGIVING parade was on TV also in close view. She asked "is it a holiday today? it feels like a holiday?" so I said ""yes It's Thanksgiving" well this continued for quite awhile REPEATEDLY back and forth just as I was about to loose it completely, my boyfriend enters the kitchen and she say's to him "Did you know it's Thanksgiving today?" "Happy Thanksgiving!" LOL I only wish I could have her that way again...although at the time not funny....way funny now!!!!
You just put everything into perspective.
Blessings
Unfortunately this is a common issues in many elders who have or are developing Alzheimer's and Dementia. Here is a great article that deals with elders repeating themselves and how to not get to frustrated.
What To Do When a Parent Repeats the Same Things Over and Over
https://www.agingcare.com/articles/elders-repeating-the-same-story-146023.htm
You might also want to look at the following article. I think it would be an interesting read and have some tips you might be able to use.
Is Alzheimer's Behavior the Patient’s Problem…or the Caregiver's?https://www.agingcare.com/articles/alzheimers-bad-behaviors-impact-caregivers-148184.htm
Best of luck with your caregiving journey,
Karie H.
AgingCare.com Team
Deanna
"SMILE" and Groundhog day is just the perfect movie analogy for what they wake up to each day, if it's the same it's comfortable, they know what is going to happen next it becomes habit, not an action from memory. Another movie analogy is E.T. when Elliot does something or feels something E.T. has identical emotion. So if your in an angry most likely they will be. If your Happy etc.
It may help to know that real old habits dye hard, for example every time my Mom goes to bathroom she washes her hands to this day. She reads the signs on the door to find her room, or the bathroom, but never for get to wash her hands. They moved her room at one point so that took about three months of confusion until she got used to everything opposite direction.
Getting dressed ...... When my mother got distracted while trying to get dressed...I would help her get dressed and joked with her all the while, always telling her how beautiful she looked. She would laugh and primp. This would keep her from getting into a bad mood about having to get dressed because she always seemed to get side tracked. Blessings to you Kaygwan.
i. e., "I want to go home." Answer, "Just as soon an I finish mopping the floor." Or, "Sure but I don't remember the address, what is it?"
Just remember that no matter what answer you give, you will get the same question again in a few minutes." I love my wife without exception and she knows it. It is just that she can't help it.
Rose
Rose
If the more appropriate thing is to respond to each incident as if it is new, what do I do when the situation is that he asks for, say, a grilled cheese sandwich five minutes after he's finished one, because he's forgotten he's just eaten one. This can go on all day. If I try to explain that he's just eaten, he gets frustrated. When I've tried keeping the sandwiches coming, I eventually have to stop, because he doesn't seem to get sated.
Thanks for your advice.