Mother’s Day is a time to reflect and honor the mother figures in your life. However, it can be challenging to figure out how to best celebrate with your Mom if she has dementia. I’ve compiled a few tips for creating a good day together (or apart, if you can’t be nearby).
Celebrating Mother’s Day when Mom has Dementia
Posted by Grace Townley-Lott, LMSW in Alzheimer's & Dementia
A Tool for Professional Caregivers: Watch The Father
Posted by Grace Townley-Lott, LMSW in Alzheimer's & Dementia
As the Oscars approach this weekend, I wanted to bring attention to a special film that’s been nominated in six categories, including best picture, best actor (Anthony Hopkins), and best supporting actress (Olivia Colman). The Father is a moving film in which the main character, beautifully played by Anthony Hopkins, advances further and further into dementia.
Embrace Spring to Increase Quality of Life for People with Dementia
Posted by Grace Townley-Lott, LMSW in Alzheimer's & Dementia
Spring is here! In no year has it been more welcome than this one, after a long, quarantined winter. If you’re a caregiver for someone with dementia, you might have felt even more isolated than most. This warmer weather brings opportunities to get a change of scenery, and depending on your comfort level, see friends at distance outdoors.
Vitamin D Deficiency and Its Link to Memory Loss
Posted by Joanna Mastoras in Health & Lifestyle, in Alzheimer's & Dementia
What role does Vitamin D, and specifically Vitamin D deficiency, play in cognitive disease? In this blog post, we’ll do a deep dive on what, if any connections, can be found in modern science between Vitamin D deficiency and memory loss.
Reconnecting with a Loved One with Dementia
Posted by Grace Townley-Lott, LMSW in Alzheimer's & Dementia
Spring is coming; a time of possibility and growth. It offers us a moment to reflect and make changes in our lives for the coming year. We all fall into roles and ruts without noticing, but we don’t have to stay there. Now is a good time to look at your relationship roles and assess how you feel about them.
Days Go By With You: A Memorable Knitting Story
Posted by Jodie Berman, MS, CTRS in Alzheimer's & Dementia
In memory of our friend, Ruth
About four years ago, my friend Ruth, one of True Care's True Bridge clients, started a knitting circle with three of her friends and their caregivers once a week in her apartment in Battery Park. Over the years, Ruth hosted the knitting circle and served snacks and drinks as the ladies knit for about 45 minutes. It was good company, with good music. The knitting circle became a social time for the ladies and a way for Ruth to showcase her strengths and share them with her friends. Ruth lived with Alzheimer’s Disease for about six years, and even though her cognitive memory was fading, her muscle and motor memory continued to flourish.