AntlionUK wrote:sd5 wrote:^^They can do whatever they like in the privacy of their (nursing) home.

Alzheimers is terrible.
The way it smells.
The things you can't control.
My grandma would walk around with one shoe in her hand collecting things.
She'd stash money. She'd wear her clothes the wrong way, put two pairs of sunglasses on or two hats, or all four at the same time.
Often it'd be like, no pants at all. But I can understand that because it was like taking care of a four year old. Except, when you told it to do something it gets very angry. Adult angry. Alzheimers is a terrible way to die, a terrible waste of my country's taxes, and will be the cause of the most death within the next twenty years. At least in North America.
The nurses that I talked to said that it's pretty much a brand new disease, but in my opinion I think it's always been around. But usually later in life. My grandma was only seventy two when she got it, which is a fairly young age. The given circumstances made sense though, her case increased after my grandfather passed. They had been together since she was fourteen and he was sixteen, I guess anyone would loose their mind after death did them part. She died about four years later. Those four years, we got her a house in the town that I live in and I took an active role in helping out.
I can't describe to you what that's like. The longest time that I stayed there for was a month. When you stayed there though, you're not allowed to leave HER alone. So I was there all by myself and my dying grandma.
I pulled some gnarley shit. The house always had alcohol, cigarettes, and my pot dealer lived in the same neighborhood. But, when your grandma was the holyest person in the world. I'm talking, had almost a direct line to God, I swear. It's scary to do that shit.
I mean, she was Irish and German, but she knew Hebrew and even went to Jerusalem just because she wanted to fully understand it. She was always a student, and never really had a job.
Healthy. I meannnnnn, only organics.
And yet she dies of a disease that strips her of all her knowledge.