The first time you try to correct a parent with dementia, you’ll learn what doesn’t work.
You’ll explain — patiently, with evidence — that no, Mom, your husband isn’t coming home today; he passed away five years ago. You’ll watch her face shift through confusion and then grief, the same grief she had at the funeral, fresh again because for her this is news. You’ll feel awful. And tomorrow she’ll ask the same question, and you’ll be back at the same crossroads.
That moment is when most adult children learn the central truth of dementia communication: the goal isn’t to be right. The goal is to keep the person you love connected to you, and to themselves, for as long as possible. Reorienting them to your reality often works against that goal. Meeting them in their reality — gently, lovingly — usually works for it.
This post is the practical guide to what that looks like. The phrases that tend to work, the ones that don’t, and the small communication shifts that make daily caregiving meaningfully easier for everyone involved.
If you haven’t read it, the foundational read on the early stage: How to Assess Cognitive Decline in Aging Parents.
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