Why People With Dementia Say “I Want to Go Home” (Even When They Are Home)
One of the most painful and confusing moments for caregivers is hearing a loved one with dementia say: “I want […]
One of the most painful and confusing moments for caregivers is hearing a loved one with dementia say: “I want […]
Choosing a care home for someone with dementia is one of the most emotionally loaded decisions a family can make.
Meta description (155–160 chars): What to do when aging parents refuse to plan, won’t give POA, and expect an only
There’s a quiet kind of ache that doesn’t get talked about enough in parenting spaces. It’s the ache of watching
Paste everything below directly into that post. You’re Allowed to Change Pace Caregiving has a way of speeding everything up.
January doesn’t need a summary. You don’t need to evaluate it. You don’t need to extract lessons. You showed up.
Some caregiving happens entirely on the inside. Managing reactions. Softening conversations. Holding emotions so others don’t have to. This emotional
Caregiving often begins with questions. What’s going to happen? How bad will this get? What am I supposed to prepare
Moving slowly can feel uncomfortable in a world that rewards speed. But slowness is not failure. It’s a pace. Some
How to talk about money, housing, and care before crisis hits Most people don’t avoid planning because they don’t care.