One morning when you wake up and look at your partner, you finally realize the person sleeping beside you is not the person you married. What you took for granted no longer exists. Our family doctor explained it to me this way. The ID has gone. Only the EGO remains.
Yes, it is part of Parkinson's dementia. While Wally can still calculate a mortgage in his head, he seems to have lost his empathy. An example comes to mind.
When we were checking out nursing homes in preparation for his inevitable incapacity, we were touring the lounge and a couple were playing cards in a corner of the room. Wally immediately brightened and ambled over to watch. As he watched he could see the woman could make better plays and he wanted to interfere "to teach" her. What he missed was that the woman was clearly an Alzheimer's patient. Her husband had elected to move into the nursing home with her, and this was just a social activity they could share. It didn't matter who won or lost, but Wally, obsessed with winning, couldn't stay quiet. He felt compelled to tell her what would be a better play. The woman became agitated and I could see the husband growing angrier with Wally for his interference. I jabbed him in the elbow and tried to steer him away from the couple and the table, but he refused to move. I thanked the man for letting us visit, and stood in front of Wally like a windstorm so he couldn't push the walker forward more toward them.
"The floor nurse would like us to visit the dining room before we leave," I told him to distract him.
"She can wait."
"Maybe she can, but we can't. We have to be back home in time for your four o'clock pills."
I never know when he's going to become stubborn and difficult, but this time he reluctantly turned around. Once we were in the hallway and out of earshot, I explained to him about the woman's condition and why her husband was annoyed with Wally's interference.
"But I just wanted to show them some simple moves they can play."
He couldn't see that what he wanted to do wasn't the right thing to do under the circumstances. The checks and balances that the ID provides no longer work. Only the EGO functions. We've all had to learn how to negotiate with him differently as a result.
Sometimes I feel as if I am talking to a three-year-old who doesn't understand the consequences of his actions. He lives in the moment. For example, carrying toothpicks in his hands when he is walking is an issue. He doesn't understand that, if he falls, this small object can become a sharp weapon. I have to say, "Give me the toothpicks to carry for you and you can have them back when you are seated at the table."
If I just command him to give me the toothpicks, he resists and grabs the toothpicks with fingers that become as rigid as steel. Often I can't open his hand, so rather than struggle with him, I've had to learn not to think of him as an adult but to treat him with the same reasoning I would use with a child in that moment.
Michael Fox is right. In circumstances like these, the caregiver has to be fluid, not rigid, or you are faced with a no-win power play.
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