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For families living with Alzheimer’s, and other dementias, the holidays can be very challenging. Holiday stress can soar when a loved one has Alzheimer’s, safety concerns intensity and beloved traditions may now bother or frighten them.

But there is a solution. Keep your loved one busy and engaged with repetitive activities that stimulate their brains while boosting their sense of usefulness and accomplishment. While you and I might easily get bored with repetitive activities, someone with dementia or Alzheimer’s disease actually can find it comforting and re-assuring. Since they lose the ability to select satisfying activities and follow through on them, you need to initiate things to do.

Here is a list of some activities families can do together:

  • String popcorn
  • Make paper chain garlands
  • Decorate apples or oranges with cloves and ribbon (pomander)
  • Make holiday cards
  • Stick stamps and return labels onto greeting cards
  • Go caroling together
  • Play old holiday music
  • Read holiday books aloud
  • Make cookies
  • Crack nuts
  • Rake fall leaves
  • Make paper snowflakes to decorate the house
  • Polish the silver
  • Put out holiday candles throughout the house
  • Find holiday related crossword puzzles (kids books)
  • Wrap gifts
  • Collect pine cones for a decorative basket
  • Stock up on classic holiday movies
  • Put together a photo album of holidays past.
  • Do a jigsaw puzzle together
  • Hang the holiday cards
  • Make a holiday card holder

When caring for an aging loved one, families may need to make adjustments to their typical traditions, so take this as an opportunity to create new family traditions.

(PHOTO CREDIT: Stockfresh)

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Caregiver Questions: Why? Why Not?

by Brandy Nasi on June 25, 2015

written by:  Elayne Forgie of Elder Care Blog, Alzheimers Care at Home

Alzheimer's Care at Home

The caregivers. They just keep coming. Heartbroken. Physically broken. Emotionally broken and often, financially broken. Struggling to make sense of what Alzheimer’s is doing to the person they love. How it’s forever changing their life and changing their entire family, in ways they say, they could never imagine.

They arrive clutching purses or carrying files overflowing with things they want to share. Things they hope I’ll explain, so they can make sense of the chaos that has become their life.

Then they sit. Stoically. Cautiously. Appearing in my trained eye, to be holding their breath. Not sure what to expect or where to begin; during this time that has been reserved just for them.

Soft music, lightly scented candles, and a soft pillow to hold on to, doesn’t do much until they center themselves.  I have them take a few deep breaths, and I tell them it’s okay to fully exhale, let go, and release. And when they do, I can see their shoulders visibly drop. They sink further into the comfort of the overstuffed chair, knowing that right now, in this moment, they are okay. And then they open their eyes, and more often than not, they begin to cry.

The pain, anger and frustration is so powerful, it permeates the room. Some just stumble over their own words as they rush to get it all out, speaking as fast as they can, not pausing, almost as though they’re afraid that if they stop, they’ll never be able to start again. Never be capable of opening up and sharing their story, their fears, their anger and their frustration. Never be comfortable, trying once more, to share feelings of sadness or guilt, which up until today, many didn’t even, know they had.

So I sit quietly as they tell me some of their stories. I let them to tell me about the pain and sadness that has become so much a part of their life.  Some sob, some yell, and some just speak softly, as the tears continue to come unabated, sliding down their checks and falling onto the files they so frequently bring along. Files containing list. Lists overflowing with questions they so desperately hope I will answer.

But I don’t have the answer they seek.  I don’t have the answer to the one most important question asked by almost every man, woman, young adult, or child that comes to speak with me. I don’t have the answer to the one question that brings each of them to the edge of their chair; with tearful, beseeching eyes, and a choked-up voice.

The question they ask when they realize they’re in a safe place; a place where no one else will hear; the safest place for them to finally ask the one question that their doctors; their internet searches; their support groups; their file; their closest friends, and most fervent prayers, have still not answered…   They ask me the question, “Why?”…  And when I pause, they ask me the question again…  “WHY?”…  And when I answer by saying “I don’t know, I become the one holding her breath.

Holding my breath and hoping they don’t ask the one question I’ve been dreading the most.  Hoping that when I say “I don’t know”, to answer their “Why”,  question, they don’t pause, look at me and ask, “Why not?”…

I know it’s just a matter of time before someone isn’t going to be satisfied with the only answer I can give. When the words“I don’t know”, won’t be good enough. When they won’t hesitate to rephrase the question, push for a better answer and, when I can’t provide it, ask me “Why Not?”  Why don’t I know? Why can’t I explain it? WHY?

As professionals, all of us are waiting for answers to the “why?” questions. We’re waiting for breakthroughs,  hoping they’ll give us more knowledge. Knowledge we hope will give us more power. Power we hope will allow us to answer more fully the “why” questions.  Questions that deserve answers that go a lot further than an “I don’t know”, response.  Answers that will enable us to better assist the patients and clients we serve.  Answers they want, answers they need and answers they deserve.

Author profile:

Elayne Forgie has spent the last 26 years working directly with patients and families living with Alzheimer’s disease or dementia. She has been recognized by Sharecare as the #3 Online Influencer for Alzheimer’s, and as one of Maria Shriver’s Alzheimer’s Advocates & Architects of Change.  She is a contributing author to a number of blogs and websites including www.alzlive.com. She is the founder and CEO of the  Alzheimer’s Care Resource Center, a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization dedicated to helping caregivers cope with the changes and challenges that accompany caring for someone with Alzheimer’s disease.

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Prevention tips to protect elderly from heat-related stress.

June 18, 2015

Elderly people (that is, people aged 65 years and older) are more prone to heat stress than younger people for several reasons: Elderly people do not adjust as well as young people to sudden changes in temperature. They are more likely to have a chronic medical condition that changes normal body responses to heat. They [...]

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5 Great Father’s Day Gifts for Dads with Memory Loss

June 11, 2015

It is often in the quiet moments with the fewest distractions that we are able to make the most heartfelt connections. By Rita Altman Some people struggle with celebrating Father’s Day once their dad begins suffering the effects of Alzheimer’s disease or other forms of memory loss. You and your family may feel like the [...]

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5 Important Reasons Why Everyone Should Investigate Clinical Trials for Alzheimer’s

June 4, 2015

In my opinion every caregiver should be investigating and identifying clinical trials for new Alzheimer’s drugs. The benefits of participating in a clinical trial are often overlooked. The benefits you will receive while participating in a clinical trial are often overlooked. Here are 5 good examples of what I mean. 1. Imagine This Your loved one [...]

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Dealing with hallucinations in dementia care

May 28, 2015

A hallucination is a very realistic-feeling perception that a person has in the absence of any actual physical stimuli. For example, a person who is hallucinating may see a human or animal that is not there. That same person may even hear or smell something that does not exist. Hallucinations are not the same thing as delusions. [...]

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9 Ways You Can Delay or Prevent Alzheimer’s – Think Exercise and Lifestyle

May 21, 2015

There is no magic bullet that will protect you from Alzheimer’s and dementia. However, there are ways that you can reduce the odds of suffering from Alzheimer’s, or possibly delay the onset of Alzheimer’s. Here are some facts that you should consider. There are at least 18 research studies showing that exercise can improve memory in people [...]

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5 Articles to Discuss On Mother’s Day with Family

May 14, 2015

Families should consider this simple proposition. If the Alzheimer’s caregiver becomes sick physically or emotionally, who is going to step into the vacuum when the caregiver no longer has the ability to care for the Alzheimer’s patient?…. By Bob DeMarco Alzheimer’s Reading Room Mother’s day weekend gives Alzheimer’s caregivers an opportunity to discuss family caregiving issues with [...]

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From Mild Cognitive Impairment to Alzheimer’s Disease

May 7, 2015

By Carole Larkin Alzheimer’s Reading Room Q. What changes can one expect when mild cognitive impairment becomes early stage Alzheimer’s? A. It’s an excellent question, and one that is not easy to answer. First, did you know that mild cognitive impairment does not always progress to Alzheimer’s disease? Research to date has shown that only a minority of [...]

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Are Alzheimer’s Caregivers the Forgotten?

April 23, 2015

By Bob DeMarco of the Alzheimer’s Reading Room I meet and talk to Alzheimer’s caregivers all the time. It is not unusual for them to tell me that as time goes on, and as Alzheimer’s worsens, one by one their family and friends fade away. One issue that really frustrates me is the treatment of Alzheimer’s care partners. [...]

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