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Tread very carefully here. Does bil work long hours? How much does he do for his aging parents? What are his church leadership commitments?
You need to remain a supportive and loving sister, NOT the caregiver. Are you retired? Beware of mission creep.
She's still your sister, and even though she's showing some signs of mental decline, please don't patronize her, and make her feel worse than she may already be feeling about it all.
And if she struggles to find the right word, oh well. And if she laughs about it, you laugh right along with her. Don't make it a bigger deal than it is.
You'll figure things out. Again, just let her know that you are there for her, and that you love her.
And it probably wouldn't hurt for you to start educating yourself about dementia. Teepa Snow has some excellent videos on YouTube, which would be a great place to start. I'm wishing you and your sister the best.
As an elder in a church we helped plant, I can tell you that her husband will need to ask others to cover his responsibilities so he can care for his wife, just like he would hope she would have done for him. If he doesn't get coverage, oh well, the Lord will figure it out.
By all means watch the Teepa Snow videos (maybe do this with your BIL) and be helpful to him, but don't enable him to be uninvolved.
Wow. That is a great observation of how things can go.
I've seen this when a Grandmother comes to help with a new grandbaby (with the most loving best intentions!). In some cases, maybe the mix of personalities results in letting the new Dad off the hook from babycare & giving emotional support of new Mum.
The OP is not planning to take over! Just be a loving support. But, depending on BIL could indeed give him a free pass. 🤔
Its nice for you to "be there" but he should not lose sight that his vows say "in sickness and in health" and as a Christain man he needs to honor them. We had a lovely man in the Church whose wife had water on the brain which causes Dementia type symptoms. He cared for her 24/7. But he loved working in the Church. (She did too) When his expertise was needed, the Church women would get together and take turns watching his wife for him. When he had to place her, he was there every day. He had lunch with her and then stayed the afternoon.
So, do not allow this man to rely on you too much. He too will have to eventually place your sister. Caring for those with a Dementia becomes 24/7 care. You can offer to grocery shop, maybe sit with her while he goes to a meeting at Church but her primary care is his responsibility. You have your own life too.
Yeah, I got that vibe too.
Your B.I.L is an active man. I get that - he needs to keep living too.
I suppose continue to talk to him about your sister. What you can do, what other caregivers he may need to add in as time goes on as more supervision is needed (ie paid aides).
If he is VERY busy, being the good son carer, the good churcher, the good worker, but also the good husband, well ok. But if hiding out in his activities, he may be overwhelmed or in denial. There will be grief too.
Sounds like you are finding out how to connect to your changing sister very well. Just keep following your head, heart & gut instinct & you'll do fine.
As for conversation, it requires patience to "wait" while your sister searches her mind for the word she wants to use. If it doesn't come or she laughs it off, just move along in the conversation as if she "filled in the blank." If it is vital information, write down a question about the topic that her husband can fill you in on later.
a. regarding forgetting words: with practice you will find the best way to help her. Let her search a bit, then fill in the word she is looking for. You don't need to get frustrated, one frustrated sister is enough.
b. she may not be the same as before but as you say, "we've always had a great relationship and I want to be there for her". You just answered your own question. Don't take over, start by just being her sister. Visit often, she really needs you more than you know.
I suggest you watch Teepa Snow video's on youtube. Those video's helped me to learn how to deal with my Mom who has dementia.
I wish you and your sister the best!
Jenna
It can be maddening trying to communicate with some who is always searching for the right word to use. Don't make a big deal of it. I'm sure it's embarrassing for her and frustrating also. Give her time to come up with the right word, then offer what you think she might mean in a pleasant way. As for you, speak slowly, be in front of her, and use simple sentences. I like your approach of smiling when you interject.
When it gets difficult for you, make it known to her husband that he needs to reduce his commitments.
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