Alzheimer's Daughter

The Story

Alzheimer’s Daughter introduces the reader to my healthy parents, Ed and Ibby, years before their diagnosis, then recounts painful details as our roles reversed and I became my parents’ parent.


Their disease started as translucent, confused thoughts and ended in a locked memory care unit after a near decade of descent into the opaque world of Alzheimer's.

I began writing Alzheimer’s Daughter one week after my mother's death––when I was stunned, realizing Dad had no memory of her or their 66-year marriage.

I write to pay tribute to the undying spirit at Ed and Ibby's core, and with the hope that the story of their parallel decline might be helpful to others.

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Liz O'Donnell Connects With All Working Daughters Who Are Caregivers Through Her New Book

I search the top 100 books in Alzheimer's and Eldercare every day. 

The stunning cover of Working Daughter caught my eye recently. I reached out to Liz O'Donnell and read her book, cover to cover. Wow, she hits the nail on the head as she speaks honestly about the challenges of caregiving for an elder family member, (in her case, both parents) while trying to do it all, staying afloat in her own family life and her career.

This week AlzAuthors.com is pleased to welcome Liz O'Donnell, who shares her book, Working Daughter.

 

 

Liz writes:

On July 1, 2014, both of my parents were diagnosed with terminal illnesses. My father had been acting forgetful and confused and he had been in the hospital for ten days while they evaluated him. That day, I had a meeting with his care team and they told me he had Alzheimer’s and dementia, that he could no longer live at home, and that I had a week to place him in a memory care facility. I left the meeting – reeling – and before I even exited the hospital parking lot, my cell phone rang. It was a doctor at another nearby hospital. A few days earlier my mother had been sent there with stomach pains. That doctor told me mother had ovarian cancer and asked me if I could come right away, so we could tell her the news together.

Please read her entire post here.


Wednesday, August 12, 2020

New Children's Book, The Story of Mrs. Inez, by Madeline Wolfe

If a child in your life needs a gentle explanation of Alzheimer's, please check out Madeline Wolfe's delightful children's book The Story of Mrs. Inez.

Madeline shares:

The character of Mrs. Inez is loosely based on my grandmother’s former roommate, who I met at a nursing home around five years ago. This book is a tribute to her, my own late grandmother, and anyone else who can no longer tell their story.

 

Please read the entire post from AlzAuthors.com here.
 

Monday, August 3, 2020

Thank you, eMediHealth

Thank you, 
for voting my blog, Alzheimer's Daughter,
#4 for Best Alzheimer's and Dementia blogs to follow for 2020. 
I'm amazed and humbled to be counted as worthy.


Tuesday, July 28, 2020

I Laughed, Cried and Gasped, All Within the First Chapter of "Jinxed, Laughing in the Face of Alzheimer's" by Marlene Jaxon

This week AlzAuthors.com welcomes Marlene Jaxon, author of Jinxed, Laughing in the Face of Alzheimer's

Marlene shares:
The book’s title was obvious to me right from day one: Jinxed! Laughing in the Face of Alzheimer’s. My mother (whose lifelong nickname was Jinx) and I had laughed together more in the years I spent as her caregiver than during any other time in my adult memory. She got the biggest kick out of the comical voices I used to soothe her fears and prompt her cooperation; my silliness incited her own. Wacky dancing and singing usually ensued. And the family trip we took to Disneyland in her final years – although not memorable to her – was a laugh-filled adventure we’ll never forget. The logistical difficulties of traveling with a dementia patient were by far outweighed by the delight Mom displayed as she enjoyed the wonders of “The Happiest Place on Earth” wearing her pink, princess Minnie Mouse ears. I had a suspicion such lovely caregiver experiences were uncommon, so I enthusiastically committed my energy to writing our story – with no idea what awaited me.

Please read the entire post here.

Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Reverberations, Book of Personal Essays by Marion Agnew





On a summer day in 1992, my mother told how, more than forty years earlier, my then-baby brother broke his leg. Then she told it again. She told the story four times in one hour, in fact.

But my father and I didn’t talk about it. We couldn’t—not yet, for many reasons.
  • Because my mother, a retired mathematics professor who’d earned her PhD when few women even attended undergraduate school, had always identified with her intellect, her ambition, her drive. Without that, who would she be?
  • Because my father’s ability to cope in the day-to-day depended on denying that anything was wrong.
  • But mostly, because of stigma. 
People in my parents’ community were uncomfortable with dementia, which increased my father’s embarrassment and isolation, and my mother’s loneliness.

In 1997, my mother’s family physician finally diagnosed Mom with “probable Alzheimer’s.” Even then, it took months before eventually—carefully, gently, fearfully—my father and I began talking about twin taboo subjects: health and money.

I lived 800 miles away—close enough to visit my parents every couple of months and be free with unsolicited advice, but too far to be of actual help in their daily lives. Each time I left, I wanted to tell myself, “It’s not so bad.” I needed to soothe my guilt at leaving them. But I knew better.

After Mom’s diagnosis, I wrote about what I’d seen and about the disease itself. I tried to make concrete the general words to describe symptoms like “confusion” and “agitation,” by describing my Mom and our interactions.

After her death, I gained some distance from Alzheimer’s. I drew closer to my father. I began to see the time of her illness as only one part of their lives.

And because I was a professional writer, I kept writing. I tried for years to find the right format in which to tell the story—Mom’s, mine, our family’s—and what I’d learned.

At last, I found personal essays, a form that allowed me to write both “in the moment” of Mom’s illness and in my years-later “now,” with the hard-won wisdom I’d acquired as time passed. I still write, often about the sometimes-surprising moments when I miss both of my parents again, years after their deaths. Over the years, I published essays in literary journals. Some received recognition.

At last, I felt ready to rejoin the conversation around Alzheimer’s and other dementias. Signature Editions released my essay collection, Reverberations: a Daughter’s Meditations on Alzheimer’s, in October of 2019.

I hope readers see that people with dementia and their care partners remain people—unique individuals, with lives that include joys both big and small. I hope readers understand that while a family’s emotions can include guilt, anger, and embarrassment, they can also include love.

I hope that somewhere, a reader gives my book to a friend, and they start a conversation. Because talking about Alzheimer’s and dementia is how we create a more understanding community for all of us.

Marion Agnew lives and writes in an office in the municipality of Shuniah in northwestern Ontario, overlooking Lake Superior.

Instagram: marionagnew

Twitter: @shuniahwriter

Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Michelle Spray Writes a Helpful Children's Book: Waiting for the Mailman

By Michelle Spray

Waiting for the Mailman is a wonderfully written and much-needed children’s book about Alzheimer’s. It details the progression from dementia in easy language from the point of view of Niki, whose Grandma Louise lived with them. Niki loved to have cookie dunking contests with Grandma to see how long the cookie stayed in the milk without crumbling! “Our very favorite thing to do was to laugh and tell stories together while sitting in the kitchen. She taught me the importance of staying strong and being true to my authentic self. … Sometimes Grandma would look all over the house for something that she had misplaced. I lose stuff all the time, but for some reason when Grandma couldn’t find something she would get really upset. I think it was because she was losing things more and more. One day, Grandma even lost herself. The police found her and brought her back home safely. She peeked in the doorway but still looked confused … Grandma loved to wait for the mailman, even if he'd already delivered the mail! She waited and waited and waited. Every time she walked to the mailbox she wore her winter coat and hat, even in the hot summer.”

Niki shares stories about Grandma; the time she left the stove on and the house filled with smoke, how she stopped wanting to play cards and began repeat phrases. The day Grandma didn’t recognize her, she tried not to cry. “I soon stopped trying to make her know me because it made her upset. Instead, I smiled, and tried to make her smile with a song or a poem that she might remember from her childhood. In time, she forgot a lot more things, but that's okay because I knew to expect it.”

To read the remainder of Michelle's post go to AlzAuthors: https://alzauthors.com/2020/06/09/michelle-spray-waiting-for-mail-man/

Tuesday, June 2, 2020



AlzAuthors celebrates 5 years of connecting dementia resources with caregivers this month. I’ve been honored to be a part of the management team from the beginning and am truly amazed both by how this organization has grown, and what it has accomplished. We are now almost 250 authors strong. Learn more about what we’re up to at AlzAuthors here: 
https://alzauthors.com/2020/06/01/5-years-of-caring/