
An estimated 4.5 million Americans , and more than half of them women currently have this condition. It is a form of dementia, they say it is degenerative-true; and terminal and of which there is no known cure known (to medical science) my quote. Not sure.
Because I am very skeptical of traditional medicine, due to the for profit industry of healthcare, and the fact that my mother exhibits symptoms (though she is blind), and because I have a natural curiosity tempered by the training of a social scientist to challenge the status quo, I am researching and reading exactly what part of the brain gets damaged and what are the building blocks that can restore it.
What I have discovered from observation, is that it manifests differently in everyone, though they may exhibit first line symptoms. The classics that magazines write about.
An old friend of mine, was going through the caregiver cycle with her husband. We used to talk and compare behaviors. Crawling on the floor for instance. Mean spirited comments, improper hygiene, outbursts of temper (hmm better watch myself !), she had no choice but to place him in a Veterans facility. It took a horrible toll on her. He died "of Alzheimer's disease."
My mother was sent to a nursing home, before I understood what the consequences to her health would be. In 2004, at 89-years of age and going blind, though we did not know it, she went up and down the stairs,fixed her coffee in the morning, sat in her favorite chair,waiting for Meals-On-Wheels.
The stay in the nursing home took all that self reliance away. They began to medicate her, she continue her outbursts, she lost weight, despite my valiant efforts to maintain and working with the dietitian. The financial part was a fraud, and it worried me along with how she was being mistreated. My attempts to remove her were blocked.
Never giving up and promising her that she would return home on March 18, 2008 a day that the spirit said "tell her, you are taking her home," though I didn't know how it was going to happen, because at this point there was a battery of evil working against me. She came home. The lawyers,the Judge they were furious. Mom and I had our armor on. She knew enough to say "Good-Bye"! daring to believe, that she did not have to endure, any further. All her trust was on me.
Now it's three years later, I am observing her. She is a resilient soul. I watch her grapple with trying to remember the sequence of things. Sometimes she forgets what she is doing. But she is blind, so that' s one less sensory organ that she has to work without. Yet I encourage her, sometimes it clicks sometimes it doesn't it.
She has quite a storehouse of her memories left,and who better than her eldest daughter can review them with her? no nurse could do that. She may hear a few bars of a song on a commercial on Spanish T.V. and quickly tell me the name. I make a note of it and go out and buy the song. She is also bi-lingual. I still ask her the definitions for words in Spanish that I am not familiar with.
She is still spiritual. She knows something is wrong but she cannot really describe it. So some cognitive damage is there or is it? If she could see, would that help her memory? we remember things by visual presentations. My dilemna is should I try to work on restoring her sight? Is this God's will?. Because you know with families there is an underlying operative.
But then I have been gifted with talents and abilities to challenge the status quo. I theorize that one eye has a cataract, possibly-- and the other glaucoma. One eye may be saved. With so much going on, I suppose I have not just "done it." But again, after sharing this it is helping me to crytallize that thought. I will call and make an appointment for her and see what happens. This blog really was going to be about the Estrogen studies,but it went in another direction.
Posted By: Marta Fernandez
Tuesday, October 28th 2008 at 7:58PM
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