Challenges of Everyday Life

When I arrived home from visiting Dad last night, Kate was on the phone with a person from tech support for the software that she and Ken are using for the the family album. When she finished, she seemed especially frustrated and said that she would be glad when this album is finished. Then we went to Chipotles for dinner. I commented on her frustration and asked if she had been able to recover a file that she had lost. She had not. In an effort to understand and possibly help her, I asked what she had tried to locate the file. She said she didn’t want to talk about it. This has become a very common pattern. She doesn’t understand what she is doing and can’t remember things she has done; so she is unable to communicate them to me which makes her more frustrated. I apologized for asking and said that I understood it was a problem for her, but I found myself reflexively trying to solve the problem.

All of this is back to what I wanted to say today. She finally said this had been a particularly depressing week. When I asked if there was anything particular that had happened, she just said that her brain was just not working the way it should. This conversation made me recall my mother’s frustration in the early stages of her AD when she would say, “I don’t know what’s happening to me. I just can’t remember anything anymore.” In the early stages people with AD know there is a problem and are frustrated. It is only in later stages when they are not bothered. I hope that is a long way off for Kate because when that point arrives, she will be different in other ways that she does not want (i.e., more dependent, less in touch, more obviously suffering from AD).

We have still not told anyone of her diagnosis and don’t intend to do so until some undefined later point. That will probably come when it is beginning to become more obvious to others that something is wrong.