Real stories
Laury’s story: ‘Mum became utterly lost in the fog of her own mind’
Jacquelyn was 57 when she was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s disease. Here, her daughter Laury describes the dementia journey in detail – from spotting the early signs, to the final stages – and shares what she’s learned from it.
I said goodbye to my mother in May this year. Although, of course, I had been saying goodbye to her long before the day her body finally caught up with her mind.
My long goodbye with Mum began twelve years ago, with the prodromal signs of emerging Alzheimer’s disease.
She was 50 when it started. I had been noticing for some time that she had become repetitive, and she'd started to suffer with anxiety, which is something I had never seen from my mum before.
The early signs
In 2011, Mum told me that she was worried about her memory, she said that she was finding it increasingly difficult to remember things that had happened only moments before.
She asked me if I thought she might have Alzheimer’s. Her mother had it, and all her maternal aunts had it.
The family often joked that memory problems only seemed to run down the female line of our family.
I knew nothing about dementia then, but I did a little research. I found that though it is common, this is usually post the age of 65.
At that time, my mum was only 54, so I told her she was worrying about nothing, that it was probably stress, and that it would be highly unusual if she had dementia at her age because it was so rare.
Receiving a dementia diagnosis
Fast forward three years and I sat in a neurologist’s office with her, holding her hand while the doctor delivered the news that she did indeed have early-onset Alzheimer’s disease.
Mum cried and hugged me, but of course she had already known. Mum always knew best.
Eventually the shock wore off and Mum, fiercely independent as she was, began to live around her diagnosis.
Much like you do in pregnancy, you make adaptations to meet new physical frailties and demands.
For years, our lives became about Post-It notes and memory aids. And as more of her cognition began to slip away, we coped.
We got her a bus pass after she had forgotten where she’d parked for the hundredth time.
I batch-cooked on my days off and took her food containers with days of the week written on, so she didn’t have to cook. We got labelled pill dispensers so she’d remember to take her medication.
As dementia progressed
Even though we were living upside down and back to front, even though we had switched roles, as Mum became the child and I the parent, we thought we were, to some degree, winning.
But that is where dementia catches you off guard.
For so long, Mum managed. We found creative ways to live with her memory issues.
Ironically, it was almost as if we forgot she had it.
Because as a family we adapted, Mum’s dementia was the thing we lived around.
And that’s the thing. People with dementia find so many ways to live around their deficits, that for so long, though life is altered from what it once was, it is still essentially the same. Until the day that it isn’t.
Mum plateaued for so many years, retaining her autonomy, that when the decline came, it floored me. It was as if we were meandering along and then, without warning, we just fell off a cliff.
Making the decision about a care home
Eventually the day came that I had to make the decision to put Mum in residential care.
She had become increasingly impaired to the point it was no longer safe for her to live at home.
She had forgotten how to use the shower. Her oven had dust on it – she had forgotten how to use it, and most often would forget to eat. I put in a hot meals service to try and navigate this issue, but Mum would either be out when they delivered her food, or she would place the foil containers on the side and forget all about them.
She would walk about constantly and then get lost. She took to withdrawing thousands of pounds from her bank account with her pin number written on the back of the card. I would finish work and have fifteen missed calls from her neighbours telling me that she, again, had been brought home by a member of the public, completely disorientated.
The day I took Mum to the care home, I had to lie to get her there.
I told her we were just popping to see a friend. When the door closed, I had to tell her she wouldn’t be leaving with me.
It broke my heart, seeing her face. She looked so out of place, at least 20 years the junior of everyone else there.
A new side to Alzheimer’s
From there, we embarked on a new journey. One that involved 24-hour care, daily medication rounds, and Mum becoming utterly lost in the fog of her own mind.
This is what shocked me about Alzheimer’s. Until that point, I had just thought people with dementia were a bit forgetful. It didn’t sink in until that point the full horror show that watching a loved one with this cruel, insidious disease actually entailed.
In time, Mum forgot who I was, and would ask me when I went to see her if I had seen her daughter.
Sometimes she’d call me Mum. I came to learn that though she had no concept I was her daughter, she did know me to be familiar, and safe.
As Mum stood on the precipice of the steep descent of final-stage Alzheimer’s, she became increasingly fearful and aggressive.
She began to hallucinate. She would crawl on her hands and knees under tables in search of the demons only she could see. And she would walk about, marching around day and night, in circuits around and around the care home, trying all the doors, babbling to herself. Most often I would spend my visits in tears that I tried not to let her see.
The final stages
In the months leading up to her death, the walking about stopped as she forgot how to walk. With increased stasis came pressure sores.
She could no longer feed herself and would instead require feeding by staff. It was not just a case of forgetting what certain food were for. She could no longer work out how to eat, having no concept of what a knife or fork was even for.
Her word-finding ability became non-existent. Words failed her. She no longer knew how to talk, and communication became more and more difficult.
Eventually, as her body finally failed her, she became bed-bound, and I witnessed Alzheimer’s parting shot. She lost the ability to swallow. And when you can’t swallow, you can’t eat.
I had no idea that Alzheimer’s would cause such physical devastation on my vibrant, youthful mum. Why would I?
In some ways. I am thankful that I didn’t know the destination until I arrived at that place.
Saying goodbye
My mum died on 5th May 2019. She had just turned 62.
I was with her when she exhaled for the final time, telling her I loved her, and that she wasn’t alone. Telling her how proud I was of her, and how brave she had been.
I don’t know if she heard me, but I feel like she did, because she was squeezing my hand right until the end.
We went the distance together, her and I, from my beginning to her ending, and there was no other place I would have been at that moment, then making sure that my courageous mum left this Earth knowing that she was loved.
What I’ve learned on this journey
Alzheimer’s is a rollercoaster; there are surprises at every turn. Things you have no concept that you would ever know, it is the steepest of learning curves, delivering changes and challenges at every turn.
But there is also something else, something that people embarking on this journey need to know.
Some things are outside of our cognition, even when memory fails, selfhood remains.
That same independent spirit that my mother had when she was well, also manifested in dementia. In the way she marched around the nursing home. In the way she would get cross when the nurses tried to give her personal care. In the way she would nurse baby dolls with such care and attention.
Always, always, mum was a free spirit. Always, she was a mother, and that didn’t stop with the onset of Alzheimer’s, because some things are instinctive.
Some things are so deeply engrained into us that they are beyond the realms of mental capacity, or cognitive ability.
People like to pathologise dementia. They talk about how the person ‘dies’ before they are actually dead. And in some ways that is true, the coherent version of the person you knew morphs into someone different.
But this different person, the person they become, is still woven together with the essence of who they were, their core is still there.
Having seen my mother through every stage of the condition that eventually claimed her life, I know for certain that her selfhood remained.
Even when words failed her. Even when mobility was lost. Even when the world made less and less sense to her.
She was still Jacquelyn. Still Mum. Brave, fiery, resilient Mum.
Before Mum lost the ability to talk, I was visiting her one day and told her I loved her, she whispered back “me love you too. You’re my little girl”. And that is what is left when all else begins to fade. Love. Love is what remains.
Barbara Snyder
saysThank you so much for sharing your story. I have been on this journey with my Mom for many years. She is losing a bit more of herself daily. She hasn't know my name/who I am for years but like you said, I am a familiar face. I love when I see the "Mom" I knew peek through the fog of Alzheimers every once in awhile.
Tania
saysWow this is so real to me, my mum was diagnosed September 2018 and they say she has had it for 2 years prior so she was also 57, she's now 60 and she's changing so fast, faster then we thought she would, the list of things she can no longer do is growing daily. I have some many questions I'd love answers to.. where to start?! But reading others stories helps me feel like I'm not alone is this scary journey.
Ronald Simpson
saysThank you Jacqueline. My wife was diagnosed with Alzheimer's in October 2018, although I suspected something was not right for some years before this. I am know in the first year of caring for her after the diagnosis, as you say caring demands many different skills in dealing with this. After 57years of marriage it's very difficult to come to terms with the person they have know become. The worse part for me is the violent and aggressive behaviour that seems to be part of Alzheimer,s from a person who as never been this way. Thanks for your heart warming story. And God bless the society for the help I am receiving with my plight.
Roberta martin
saysIt’s so good to hear you tell about the sad times during the later stages of Alzheimer’s. So many things I have read make it sound like a little inconvenience for everyone.
My husband passed away a little over a year ago and went through so many of your mothers symptoms. He was a 20+ year retired from the USMC, so things changed drastically. That you for telling your story.
Jill
saysThank you, Jacqueline, for telling us your mother's story and the fact that the essence of this wonderful woman remained until the end.
It was the same with my mother and father who both died as a result of vascular dementia. The illness stripped them of so much but not of who they essentially were.
xxx
Mel
saysThank you so much for sharing your story. This resonates so much with what our family is going through now with my mum. It is so hard on everyone involved and something you can’t understand unless you go through it yourself. Take care xx
Alison
saysYour mums journey is almost time for time and stage by stage the same as my mums... horrendous... except my mum was trapped in the hell for another 5 years . Now dad has it .... I’m ok but really struggle to find anything positive in a diagnosis of dementia. I applaud you in finding positives ❤️ Take care and good luck for your own future
Karen
saysSo very, very true. Xx thank you for sharing xx
Beverley
saysYour beautiful story made me cry and I think your sentiments are spot on and so poignant x my beloved mum is now in 24 nursing care and has lost her mobility but still she smiles and retains that stoic nature that I so admire in her x I am so touched by your story and like me, you have been blessed with the most special of mum's . I have been on this journey with my mum the way that you have been with yours and despite being heartbreaking and very tough, it brought us even closer (which I never felt would be possible) and no words were left unsaid x I feel privileged to have a mum as special as mine and like you, feel honoured to be supporting my mum on this terrible journey as she has supported me all of my life x thank you for your beautiful words and for sharing the story of your very special mum x you were blessed to have one another
Lyn White
saysThank you so much for sharing your story I lost my dad a number of years ago the same way although he was older and had gone blind and it still hurts to this day I always do the memory walks hoping some day they will find a cure for this dreadful disease heartfelt thanks x
Sally morrow
saysAww this is so like my husbands journey. ,although he was 61 when he was on his Alzheimer’s journey, he was showing signs before that. He is at present in a care home his Alzheimer’s has advanced to late stage . But my goodness what a journey. This illness ....🙁 but still clinging on to the last we sparks that reminds us of the person they once were .
nicola
saysThank you for sharing your story my mom has just been diagnosed and I have been reading about the stages she may go through your story has given me incite into what to possibly expect thank you again and bless you
Peter Garside
saysThanks for sharing your story Laury. Its heart-breaking to read & your bereavement is still raw & not very long ago. Its good therapy to write about your experience as someone else could benefit from your experience. I lost my Wife Pauline although she was several years older than your Mother. Following my bereavement I shared my experiences via Alzheimer's Society & a huge number of people read my blog because I managed to persuade NHS to give us finance to manage Pauline's care needs in our Home. They would have paid for a Nursing Home but her death came very quickly from another cause not even diagnosed until 3 weeks before she died!
I managed to obtain Continuing Healthcare benefits which people should obtain as a right if they have a "Primary Health" need. However to ration Health Benefits in our country there is a very complex application procedure required. Having Alzheimer's is not enough, there needs to be complex overall needs. As you know personally your situation was very complex, as I suspect is the case for many tens of thousands of people & their families coping as you did. We were lucky in that our home was large enough for carers to have a bed for the night time cover required.
My experiences are on the website https://continuinghealthcare.wordpress.com/
Please tell as many people as you can so they can find out how to present their claim for help from our NHS.
Best wishes. Peter Garside
Anonymous
saysThanks for sharing this, Peter - we hope you're keeping well.
A diagnosis of Alzheimer’s or indeed any type of dementia does not carry automatic eligibility for CHC, as much as we would like it to. Eligibility for CHC funding is never ’condition specific’ and relies upon identifying the person’s needs in line with the criteria laid out by the Department of Health.
Here at Alzheimer’s Society, we suggest that the best way for people to access NHS Continuing healthcare (CHC) if they think they are eligible or they represent someone who they think is eligible, is to inform themselves fully of the CHC criteria before the process starts.
For anyone looking for more information, our page ‘Tips on preparing your case for NHS continuing healthcare’ should prove useful (https://www.alzheimers.org.uk/get-support/help-dementia-care/nhs-contin…) - we also have a free downloadable booklet with further information (https://www.alzheimers.org.uk/sites/default/files/migrate/downloads/whe…).
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Alzheimer's Society blog team