Daily life with dementia: Holiday and Vacation

This information comes to us from Dementia Guide, part of the National Social Services Board. These are some important considerations to help you plan and enjoy your holiday with a person with dementia.

Holiday with dementia

Going on vacation together can provide shared experiences and a break from everyday life for both people with dementia and caregivers. To make the holiday a good experience, it is important to prepare thoroughly. The person with dementia may find new surroundings confusing or respond inappropriately. As a caregiver, you may use as much energy to ensure that the person with dementia will have a good journey, you do not even get anything out of the holiday. Therefore, it is important that you carefully consider what kind of holiday that is most suitable for you. Continue reading

Jump in the puddle

My sweet friend, Amanda, sent me this video today with the caption:

This is us when we grow up!

It’s an awesome Icelandic band singing a song about the feelings and joy that come with jumping in puddles. And it’s an awesome video of people 70+ playing like 8 year olds 🙂

Enjoy the video!

English translation

Continue reading

Helping the Helpers – EVERYONE can make dementia care better!

This is an inspirational and educational post – yea! The idea is that EVERY SINGLE ONE OF US can help to improve dementia care. You don’t have to be providing direct care to make a difference in someone’s life. In fact, it could be as simple as smiling and holding a door for someone else.

If you think you are too small to make a difference, try sleeping with a mosquito. 

~His Holiness, the 14th Dalai Lama

Family members to provide personal care to someone with dementia are more likely to have higher levels of stress, higher rates of depression, and more health complications than people who care for other conditions and than non-carers. They are absorbing a lot of care responsibilities as dementia progresses and sacrificing their own privacy, personal time, relaxation, social activities, and often self-care activities. They are selflessly giving themselves to benefit someone else. And if that doesn’t bring some humanity warmth into your heart, then you need to watch some videos on kittens or something and then come back and read this post.

I have a ton of respect for family care partners. They are amazing, special people. 

And I kinda want everyone else to realize this as well. 

If you know someone who is a carer, you can lend a helping hand! And by doing even small things to make their day brighter, easier, and less stressful, you are not only helping them out but also helping to make them better able to provide care for someone else.

They may be hesitant at first, but if you really mean it, keep offering and give specific ideas of what you can do for them. Here are 20 ideas of how you can make a difference. ANYTHING will be a help. If you try any of these out, I would love to hear about your experiences in the comments below.

Happy helping 🙂

  1. Have a short coffee or tea break and hang out for 30 minutes of easy chatting
  2. Help them with laundry – offer to pick it up and bring it back all clean the next day, or spend time with them and help them sort and fold laundry in their own home
  3. Offer to wash the dishes
  4. Offer to bring over dinner “I doubled my recipe and have enough for 2 families, can I bring over some?”
  5. Clean out or wash their car
  6. Let them know that they can call on you for support
  7. Mow their lawn or rake their leaves “I’m doing yardwork this weekend, can I come over and do yours while I’m at it?”
  8. Shovel snow off their sidewalks
  9. Offer to clean their gutters in the Spring
  10. Put their garbage bins back after collection day
  11. Bring them their mail
  12. Hold a door for them
  13. Ask them how they are – but be sure to LISTEN to them as well
  14. Let them know you are going to the grocery store or pharmacy and ask if you can pick anything up for them
  15. Offer to sit in for them for a few hours one day so they can run errands, exercise, or have alone time
  16. Give them a gift certificate for a massage, pedicure, whatever they might enjoy, and offer to sit in for them during that time
  17. Send a card
  18. Make a phone call
  19. Send an email or text message
  20. Offer to pick up their kids from school or activities, or to take their kids for a slumber party night