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Edited on Thu Aug-18-05 05:04 PM by sui generis
(on edit, in 1991) ask some questions, and then when I came out the husband had wandered off (also Alzheimers).
His wife had Alzheimers too, and said that he had gone to the car, and I said I'd go see if I could find him (it was over 100 that day) and make sure he was okay.
I asked her what kind of car it was / color / make and she couldn't remember if it was blue or white, but she gave me the keys. So I asked what street she parked on (you could see out the window) and she couldn't remember, but burst into tears.
Finally got her to calm down and sit down and went out - I wandered around for eight blocks before I found him sitting on a curb between two parked cars with his mouth hanging open completely oblivious - I thought maybe he'd had a petit mal seizure or a TIA, but got him to stand up. He didn't recognize me, didn't know why he was there and started yelling at me and refused to follow me back to the building (this was before cell phones), so I got someone on the sidewalk to stay there with him, ran back to the office and arrived there in a lather, told the woman I'd found her husband but he refused to come back with me, and got her bundled into my car and drove over to where he was (by now sitting on a bus stop bench).
Just about the time she got out of the car someone else came up in their car, screeched to a halt and got out - turns out they were supposed to meet their daughter there at a completely different business and it was only by the luckiest chance that she even saw them - and this was almost an hour after I first saw them!
I don't think I would be driving (or letting them drive) if things were starting to get that bad -
I just can't imagine watching the lights dim like that - families with Alzheimers definitely have my strongest sympathy and support.
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