Conversations I Wish We Had About Dementia

Like many millennials whose Sisyphean task is to assist their boomer parents with technology, I visited my mom in January to help facilitate a video call with a nurse practitioner. I found her pacing up and down the hallway.

“Hi, Janet!” I greeted her. “I’m your daughter Devon.”

“Oh!” she said, as if she knew she should recognize me, but did not. I asked her how she was doing. “I feel scared,” she replied.

“Why do you feel scared?” Her answer was a nonsensical jumble of words. She was able to articulate her feeling, but not the underlying reason. I venture she was scared because she didn’t know where or when she was. I’d be scared, too.

During the video call, I cringed as the nurse practitioner explained my mom would be reevaluated for hospice in the coming weeks. I tried not to say the word “hospice” in front of her, even though she’d been on it for six months. I glanced at her nervously, wondering if the word penetrated her consciousness. She stared out the window of her room, clenching the wooden slats of the blinds with both hands. When she’s nervous or upset about what’s going on around her, she tends to grip the nearest object. Her entire world has slipped away; she is desperate to hold onto something. 

I’ve spent the last six years watching my mom deteriorate, and it’s been five years since we discovered why. 

At 37, I am an early survivor of this specific hell. It’s quiet here. After her diagnosis at age 61, it took me more than a year to be able to speak the words aloud: “My mom has Alzheimer’s disease.” Even then, I could only whisper it between sobs.

Eventually I found a virtual support group for adult children of parents with early onset Alzheimer’s—the kind that strikes before the age of 65—and a handful of us whispered to each other over Zoom once a month. I began sharing my experiences on social media and more people my age came out of the woodwork to say they, too, are slowly and silently losing a parent. 

“She’s in the end stage now and it’s the worst thing I’ve ever seen,” one woman in her thirties wrote to me about her mother. “I haven’t met anyone else with a similar experience.”

Alzheimer’s was never on my radar; there is no record of it running on either side of my family. My mom was a highly capable executive assistant who spent her free time quilting and tending to her vegetable garden. She looked forward to retirement and becoming a grandmother. I’ll always remember how she danced around my living room in 2015 when I shared the news of my pregnancy. I didn’t expect to rejoice over my daughter learning how to use the toilet, dress herself and read at the same time my mom lost those abilities.

We certainly never discussed how things might play out if she were to develop dementia. It’s a conversation I didn’t think to have—and might have been afraid to have, as if saying “Alzheimer’s” aloud could conjure it into reality. Still it crept up on my mom, stealthy and vicious, and stole her from me piece by piece.

My friends—most of whom have healthy parents who host holiday dinners and babysit their kids on weekends—sympathize, but can’t relate. It’s my lonely reality right now. But like the Stark family in “Game of Thrones,” I issue an ominous warning to my fellow millennials: Dementia is coming. 

I’ve seen it with my own eyes; I’ve heard it in the whispers. And the statistics are grim. The Alzheimer’s Association estimates 6.9 million Americans age 65 and older are living with Alzheimer’s dementia in 2024. It projects this number will balloon to 12.7 million by 2050.

I worry about the onslaught of devastation that’s coming for boomers and their millennial children. Our parents are the ones who swept us back into the nest during the Great Recession, kept us on their health insurance plans until we turned 26, and opened up guest rooms and basements to us temporarily—and not so temporarily—during the pandemic. Many of us are still paying off decades-old student loans. We’re unprepared to not only lose our parents’ support, but to muster all our energy and resources to support them. 

How many boomers have long-term care insurance or the savings to fund long-term care? How many of their children realize they will be the ones to provide or pay for this care? Are there enough neurologists to diagnose millions of new Alzheimer’s cases? Enough home health-care workers to support family caregivers? Enough memory-care facilities to house patients? Enough therapists to help families survive the excruciating experience of losing a loved one over many years?

To echo my mom, I feel scared. 

I’m not equipped to fix our health care system’s current and future failures around caring for Americans living with dementia and supporting their families, but I do have some advice on a personal level for families who may face this fate. It all starts with a conversation.

My family was completely unprepared for all the challenges of Alzheimer’s disease. Nothing will ease the heartbreak of an Alzheimer’s diagnosis, but making key decisions ahead of or shortly after a diagnosis can ease some heartache down the road for loved ones. 

When my mom was diagnosed in November 2019, I thought we had plenty of time before we needed to discuss the details of her inevitable decline and confirm her wishes. But the initially slow progression of her disease accelerated into a freefall during the first year of the pandemic, and we were left scrambling for solutions from a place of panic. Once the window has closed for someone with dementia to make informed decisions about their future, loved ones are left to make their best guesses. 

A survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that fewer than half of adults have seriously discussed long-term care plans with a loved one—including who will help take care of them and how they will pay for health care and other support they’ll need if they become seriously ill. And nearly 7 in 10 boomers will need long-term care in their remaining years according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Families should have open conversations now about the future, whether or not there is a history of dementia in the family. 

Get real about finances. 
Discuss the resources you’ll have available to pay for care. The cost of caring for someone with a progressive neurodegenerative disease is staggering, and the truth about who pays for it can be summed up by one of fellow millennial Taylor Swift’s songs: “You’re On Your Own, Kid.” 

Medicare only pays for long-term care if you require skilled services or rehabilitative care in a nursing home for a maximum of 100 days; that hardly scratches the surface of the amount of care needed for someone with dementia who typically declines over several years. Medicaid may cover some long-term care costs, but only for those with very limited financial means. Long-term care insurance can help, but be sure to review policy details and coverage limitations. Veterans may be eligible for benefits through the Department of Veterans Affairs. My friend Lauren, who cared for her grandmother with Alzheimer’s and previously worked for the Alzheimer’s Association, advises to “check out your state’s aging department or your local Area Agency on Aging (AAA). Each state is different and some have bridge programs for people with Alzheimer’s or other diseases that can be a stipend to pay for assisted living or memory care until someone qualifies for Medicaid. In some cases there are home-care grants, and others will pay for facility-based care.”

But many families—like mine—rely on personal savings and home equity to pay for care. My mom’s husband Don was initially determined to care for her at home, but in the darkest days of the pandemic, the emotional and physical toll it took on him was clear and cruel. “We can’t save her,” I told him, “but maybe we can still save you.” We moved her into a memory care facility near Seattle, which over the past four years has drained hundreds of thousands of dollars from the retirement savings they worked so hard to build. The monthly cost has risen to more than $13,000. We are counting down the months until we’ll need to sell their home. 

It’s a stark reality many Americans face, as detailed in the New York Times series “Dying Broke,” and few people realize it until it’s too late to prepare. Try calculating the median costs of care in your area—including in-home care, adult day care and full-time care in a facility—and consult with a financial advisor to get personalized guidance based on your circumstances.

Talk through medical options. 
Alzheimer’s disease is invariably fatal, but there are medications and experimental treatments that may help manage symptoms or slow the progression. Discuss whether or not you’d want to take medications or participate in a clinical trial. 

My mom began taking two medications immediately after her diagnosis. I realized in the spring of 2023 that her quality of life had declined to the point where it no longer made sense to attempt to slow the progression of the disease and, after many discussions with family members and her doctor, we tapered her off the medications. Even though I felt this was the right decision—the one she likely would have made if she could—making it was agonizing. My mom had a standard advance health care directive, but it did not account for the nuances of dementia care. How I longed for a clear record of her wishes.

Consider filling out the dementia-specific advance directive created by Dr. Barak Gaster, an internist at the University of Washington Medical Center. Discuss it with loved ones, and share copies of it with them and with health care providers. The Conversation Project also provides a guide to determining what matters most to someone living with dementia so they can have a say in their health care.

I agonized for months over whether my mom needed to endure her decline at all. Would she have wanted to end her own life instead? Should I have helped her explore options while she was still capable of carrying out a plan? The answer, it turned out, was no. Once I felt brave enough to broach the topic, Don assured me her Catholic upbringing made the idea impossible. Having no religious roots myself—and having witnessed her suffering up close—I can’t say I’d have the same answer if I find myself in her shoes someday.

It’s worth discussing where you stand on the idea and considering the options, which do not include medical aid in dying in the U.S. Even in the states where it’s legal, people with dementia are excluded from utilizing it due to two of the requirements: once they have less than six months to live, they are no longer able to make and communicate an informed decision to health care providers.

However, it filled me with great peace to read Amy Bloom’s beautiful memoir “In Love,” which chronicles her husband’s decision following an Alzheimer’s diagnosis to end his life with the help of Dignitas, a Swiss nonprofit organization. I also learned about voluntarily stopping eating and drinking, and read with great interest “The Last Day of Her Life,” a New York Times Magazine feature about how Cornell psychology professor Sandy Bem orchestrated an early exit on her own terms.

Complete and share important paperwork.
In addition to having a standard will and estate plan in place, it’s crucial to record all financial and health care wishes in the following legal and medical documents. Consider working with an attorney who specializes in estate planning or elder law to cover all your bases.

Discuss the details of these documents with the people who will be responsible for carrying out your wishes, and share copies with them and with health care providers. Don’t skip the sharing part; no one can follow your directions if they don’t know they exist.

Durable financial power of attorney: Designate an agent (and at least one backup) to make decisions regarding your money, property and belongings if you lose the capacity to do so. Following a dementia diagnosis or other mentally incapacitating health event, the agent should contact every entity involved with your finances—including Social Security, Medicare, the IRS, insurance companies, banks and utilities—to complete any paperwork required for them to recognize the agent as the sole executor of your accounts. For example, the Treasury Department doesn’t recognize power of attorney for handling federal payments like Social Security; one must separately apply to serve as a person’s representative payee.

Don described the entire process of taking control of my mom’s finances as a total nightmare. He was met with red tape at every turn, and had to physically bring my mom to several offices along with documentation from her neurologists regarding her diagnosis and mental incapacity. It was incredibly stressful for both of them. “If she had been any more incapacitated”—at the time, she was still able to hold a normal conversation and sign documents—“I don’t know how I would have possibly done it,” he said.

Advance health care directive or living will: Specify what actions should be taken for your health if you lose the capacity to make decisions. Make clear your wishes regarding artificial life support and more.

Durable health care power of attorney: Designate an agent (and at least one backup) to make health care decisions for you if you lose the capacity to do so. Discuss your wishes with these agents and make sure they are comfortable carrying them out.

Do not resuscitate (DNR) order: This medical document instructs health care providers not to perform CPR or other life-support procedures if your heart or breathing stops. Discuss your wishes with your physician, who will fill out the form.

Portable medical orders (POLST): This medical document is more specific than a DNR or advance health care directive and is for people who already have a severe illness, like dementia. The form and its exact name vary by state, but it communicates your wishes as medical orders, including whether or not you want CPR, to be transported to a hospital and to receive medically assisted nutrition. Discuss your wishes with your physician, who will fill out the form.

Millennials: Plan for your future now.
The longer we live, the more our risk of dementia increases. The time is now for millennials to prepare for our own potential long-term care needs.

If you’ve held off on contributing to a 401(k), IRA or other retirement savings plan: start today. If you already contribute and are able to increase the amount: start today. If you’ve never even heard of long-term care insurance or looked into applying for it: start today.

I felt hopeful in 2019 when Washington state established the WA Cares Fund, a first-in-the-nation mandatory long-term care insurance program, but almost laughed when I saw the maximum benefit is $36,500 (adjusted up to inflation). It’s a drop in the bucket for someone with dementia. But still, it’s better than nothing, and far more than what many Americans have planned for their long-term care.

If you have any assets, a spouse or children, it’s essential to have a will and estate plan in place, and to create a record of your financial and health care wishes before you’re no longer able to do so. You can always change them later. 

Let’s break the silence.
Alzheimer’s is the most-feared disease of older Americans, and the only one of the top 10 causes of death in the U.S. with no known cure. The stigma around Alzheimer’s causes people to live with it in silence and shame, and their families to grieve in silence and shame as well. Some call it a family disease because of the devastating impact it has on loved ones’ mental and physical health.

I’m done whispering. Now I’m yelling: Dementia is coming, but we don’t have to suffer through it alone.

I’m encouraged by my generation’s propensity to share our struggles, thanks to social media, and to embrace therapy and support groups. I believe many of us will cope with losing our parents by shedding light on our darkest experiences. It makes a world of difference to connect with others enduring the same heartbreak. The Alzheimer’s Association has a 24/7 helpline (800.272.3900) and offers support groups and a free online community for people living with dementia and their loved ones.

The greatest tragedies are made even worse by our failure to learn from them. And the lessons we learn are made even more valuable when we share them.

I still can’t save my mom, nor the millions of boomers who will be diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in the coming decades. Maybe I can, in some small way, help save the people who love them.

Destabilized

In January, I spent a whole session telling my therapist how well I was doing: I had a fulfilling daily routine, felt energized by my writing projects and was excited to continue riding the positive momentum. I thought I had it all figured out, but hubris always comes with a price.

On February 1, several of my coworkers were abruptly let go and I was moved to another team to pick up the work of a few writers who departed. I have mostly the same job, but under a new boss, in a new-to-me organization with completely different playbooks and processes.

I felt a mix of whiplash, survivor’s guilt and indignance over not having a say in the situation. All the while, the voice in my head chided: Be grateful. Other people have it worse. You don’t deserve to feel anything negative about this.

I’ve spent the past several weeks finding my footing and am still working on it. The sting of sudden change has calmed; the chaos of being thrown into an unfamiliar role has subsided. Everything is going to be okay.

And then.

Last week, my mom’s hospice social worker called to tell me she had gained weight since her last recertification and was going to be discharged. My mom initially qualified for hospice last July due to malnutrition. Even though she started eating well after that, she was recertified for hospice multiple times because her weight stayed the same. Now that she’s gained a few pounds, she no longer qualifies.

Enrolling my mom in hospice was upsetting, but I was blown away by how effective and communicative our hospice team was and grew to appreciate them as an invaluable asset while we navigate this final stage of my mom’s illness. When I suspected my mom had an eye infection, hospice sent someone ASAP to examine her and prescribe antibiotic eye drops. When my mom was having trouble with her feet, hospice sent me a list of traveling foot nurses who could come see her. When I requested a wheelchair because the one her facility put her in was broken, hospice had a new one delivered the next day. A nursing assistant visited once a week to give my mom an extra shower, and she’d take the time to dress her in nice clothes and accessories and send us photos. Our hospice team made my mom a priority and improved her quality of life. To lose them now feels like a gut punch.

It seems wrong to say that my mom “graduating” from hospice is a bad thing. Who wouldn’t want their parent to take a step back from the precipice of certain death? But she’s more or less in the same place, just with less support.

My mom is not getting better in any meaningful way. She is significantly worse now than she was last summer in that she now spends 98% of her time in a wheelchair due to her frequent falls. That doesn’t matter to Medicare, which pays for hospice, and she seems a way out from requalifying, whether it’s for malnutrition or dementia. But she inevitably will, and I’ll travel with her to the edge again.

The voice in my head continues: Be grateful. Other people have it worse. You don’t deserve to feel anything negative about this.


I’ve struggled to find a way to describe the way I’m feeling about these things that are kind of bad, but not that bad, and also not necessarily good. It’s not an emotion that rings clear like sad or angry or helpless, although it often comprises one or more of those.

Finally I heard on a podcast the word that sums up my world lately: destabilized.

I’ve written before about feeling like I’m on Rollercoaster Road with all its twists and turns. Now I feel like I’m traveling it on a unicycle, desperately trying to keep my equilibrium. It’s been windy lately. I’m still moving forward, but struggling to find stability.

My therapist is also on leave right now, so I’m having to spot my own mental gymnastics through this.

Here’s what they would probably say to me: You are allowed to feel sad, angry, helpless and destabilized. You don’t have to be grateful; no one is keeping score. You are feeling arbitrarily shuffled around and abandoned and those are hard things no matter the circumstances. It takes time to find your equilibrium after major changes and you don’t have to rush it. Feel your feelings, and take good care of yourself.


Sunday was my mom’s last day in hospice care. We visited at her old home and she suffered a fall that included hitting her head on a wall, leaving a serious dent—in the wall, not her head. She seemed to be totally fine, but Don and I were terrified. I almost grabbed my phone to call 911, but remembered I would call hospice instead, since my mom has medical orders to only receive comfort care—not life-sustaining treatment—in the event of a serious injury.

If something terrible happened now, who would I call? My mom is in a liminal space: not sick enough for hospice, not well enough to be saved. A lost soul caught in the in-between. It feels like Don and I are floating, untethered, in that space with her. We have only each other to hold onto.

My EMT friend sent a kind message explaining I can absolutely call 911. First responders can administer first aid, then help navigate where to go from there. If my mom sustains a serious injury, it would likely trigger hospice eligibility and they would take over—a small comfort in an awful situation.


It amazes me how much it helps to name my feelings. It helps to write about them and release them, to the extent that I can. It even helps to be my own fake therapist, though I can’t wait for mine to come back.

The sting of sudden change will calm; the chaos of being thrown back into an all-too-familiar role will subside. Everything is going to be okay.

I think.

Eventually.

A Julia Child Christmas

The holidays are a tricky time for many people, for so many reasons. I learned from last year’s heartbreak to go into this year’s celebrations with zero expectations. The result: a happy Christmas with my mom, who smiled all evening.

Last year, I gave her a fleece blanket printed with family photos, and she had no reaction at all when I helped her open it. This year, I put my energy into making something she could still enjoy: Julia Child’s bœuf bourguignon, a dish we made together for Christmas dinner in 2010. It’s a labor-intensive endeavor with incredible results.

At 23, I needed my mom’s guidance to make it. It felt good to work my way through the steps we once followed together and realize, at 36, I am more than capable of doing it on my own. Her gift to me then, my gift to her now: a dish filled with love and endless patience, made richer over time.

The night ended in tears all around because we knew this might have been her last Christmas. I hope it was. I would have been ashamed to say that once, but I say it with my full chest now. Nothing good awaits. I would love for my memories of her enjoying this Christmas to be the ones that endure.

I go through periods where I’m unable to read about others’ experiences with dementia because I don’t have the capacity to absorb anyone else’s pain. Other times, like now, I feel nourished by seeing my darkest feelings reflected on the page. “Dementia sucks you in with a terrible centrifugal force,” Suzanne Finnamore writes in her new book My Disappearing Mother. “It puts you in the position of wishing your own mother dead.” On top of the emotional agony of watching a parent wither away over many years, the shame around having feelings like this is unbearable. I vow to leave it behind in 2023.

I love my mom and I wish for her suffering to end. I am a good daughter and I will be relieved when she dies. 

Dementia is an endurance sport, and right now feels like mile 20 of a marathon. The toughest bits stretch far ahead; the finish line keeps moving, and a different pain awaits there. I will do whatever it takes to continue on, side by side with my mom. 

At 23, I needed her guidance. At 36, I am more than capable. My gift to her now: a journey filled with love and endless patience.

The Next Chapter

With Alzheimer’s, there is nothing to fight. There is only a fatal truth you might at first deny and wish away, then curse and mourn, then ultimately surrender to. Trying to hold on to your loved one—as they were before or as they are now, whatever that may be today—is like holding a handful of sand. You can clench your fist tightly for as long as possible, but every last grain will inevitably slip through your fingers. At some point you realize it’s a mercy, for yourself and for them, to let go.

Perhaps that’s why I felt a wave of peace last week after we enrolled my mom in hospice care. Our Sisyphean task had ended; it was time to surrender. It felt like a seismic shift to go from doing everything we could to improve and prolong her life, to simply clearing the path and steeling ourselves to accompany her on this final leg of her journey. The only goal now is to ensure her a peaceful and painless death. It’s a hard thing, but it’s the right thing. 

The worst part is that we will lose her twice. We lost her once, in mind, years ago; we’ll lose her in body next. As upsetting as it is to see her in her current state, at least I can still hug her. At least she still responds in kind when I tell her I love her. Soon, even those last few bits of my mom will be gone forever.

But there is comfort in knowing I will find her again after her death. In her magnificent book The Last Ocean, Nicci Gerrard writes:

“Death is never a slight thing, however peaceful a passing is, however minute the distance crossed. Just a breath away, then like a feather being blown with a single puff and a whole world has disappeared.

“And yet death can also restore a person, especially when that person had been un-made by dementia. Once they die, they are no longer only old and frail and ill, they are no longer only confused and forgetful, no longer a wrecked body and a failing mind, no longer not themselves. Because they have gone from us, they can come back to us and be all the selves they have ever been. Young, old, everything in between. Robust, vulnerable, everything in between. And often we fall head over heels in love with all these selves and we understand how they contained multitudes.”

I shelved the practice of missing my Real Mom long ago. It felt like a betrayal to who she is now to long for a previous version of her. Why push aside the person in front of me in a favor of memories of someone who no longer exists in this world? She is still my mom, after all. Not in the way she once was, but through no fault of her own. I know my Real Mom wanted desperately to stay with us. The least I can do is stay with her, holding her hand through every heartbreaking devolution.

I know I’ll eventually miss even the hardest days with her. But I also look forward to reclaiming my Real Mom. I hope to shuffle these most recent years to the back of my mind and make space for the warm glow of happy memories to come flooding back. I’d like to trade the awkward, one-sided conversations for our long discussions over fish tacos at the mall. Can I archive the many times I wiped her nose and changed her briefs and hear her laugh again instead?

All of it will always exist, but I hope my first thoughts of my mom each day will not be of this painful ending, but of the very best of her. I suppose it’s on me to choose to play the highlight reel. That’s the gift in this tragedy: Because they have gone from us, they can come back to us.

She has already popped up a few times. When we received the hospice referral from her doctor, I lay awake that night with this image from her 2015 wedding day in my mind. She was smiling, in love, happy and hopeful for the future.

I cried to this version of my mom: “I’m so, so sorry I couldn’t save you.” My heart broke for her, knowing now what was ahead. I felt ill, like I wanted to peel off my skin, as if sacrificing myself would make any difference. I wanted to go back to that day and somehow change it all for her.

The sick thing—the thing that makes me grateful for biweekly therapy sessions over the past two-and-a-half years and counting—is that I’m not sorry for my current mom. Rather, I’m relieved there is an end in sight to her suffering. Different feelings for different moms. My therapist earns her paycheck a thousand times over for helping me sort through everything.

The other time my mom popped up was when I drove her back to memory care after a recent weekend visit at her old home. She was sitting shotgun next to me, silent, staring out the windshield with her mouth gently hanging open as if she didn’t have the energy or muscle memory to close it. In a flash, I saw my Real Mom sitting there instead. Her gaunt cheeks were plump again, her hair was styled, her clothes were carefully chosen and free from the stains of spilled food or worse. We were heading to lunch, or to her favorite Eddie Bauer Outlet, or to try on wedding dresses for the millionth time. She was there. And she still is, somewhere.

I’m not sure how to navigate this hospice period. (I bet the simple and correct answer is: one day at a time.) There is inevitability and uncertainty. How long? I hope not too long, for her sake—but also not too short. I need time to say all the things, to let her know she was the best mom and grandma, to assure her that we’ll all be okay and that she shouldn’t be scared to leave whenever she needs to. But I also don’t want to freak her out; she doesn’t know she’s dying. That’s a blessing, and also terribly sad.

My mission is to make her feel loved, like it’s her birthday or Mother’s Day every day. She has lost her appetite and taste for most food, but she’ll still make short work of a brownie or ice cream bar with her tiny bites. And while she is nonreactive to many stimuli, the right music still gets her smiling and dancing with her hands.

Let’s make this thing a party. Let’s indulge in chocolate and dancing and joy until the very end. Let’s give this life a beautiful send-off, for what is it if not to be savored with the people we love?

Wally: Part 2 (and More Life Stuff)

Start with Wally: Part 1.

Wally turned out to be everything his foster Karen said he was and more: an incredibly sweet little guy who loves all people and dogs; calm most of the time, yet super bouncy and energetic when he’s ready to play; remarkably quiet, unless he feels like he’s not getting enough attention; and so loving and loyal to us, his new family.

Karen did a great job potty training Wally, so aside from a handful of accidents in the first few weeks, we successfully skipped that hurdle of new dog ownership. Our only challenge was that Karen had allowed him to sleep in her bed, so he repeatedly tried to join Aaron and me in ours the first few nights, but eventually got the memo and learned to settle into his dog bed in our room.

I figured January would be a slow month after the holidays when I could really focus on getting to know Wally and establishing a new routine with him. I was wrong.

My mom contracted Covid at her memory care facility, and my stepdad and I heard the news from her on the phone before we ever heard anything from the facility. She isn’t the most reliable source, so we were left wondering if she really had it or not until we could get ahold of the head nurse. It turned out she had indeed tested positive during regular testing of the entire facility—and was luckily asymptomatic—but for some reason it took them nearly 24 hours to contact us, her family, and let us know.

That was the cherry on top of a huge pile of grievances we had with that facility, and we decided then and there she needed to move ASAP.

Moving is stressful for anyone, but especially for someone with dementia who needs to be in familiar surroundings to feel secure and grounded. The first time we moved her into memory care, in January 2021, it took her about three months to settle in. That period was extremely stressful for her and for us, with many phone calls and visits that ended in tears on both ends. I was not looking forward to going through that again, but we knew it was for the best.

I chose that initial facility under impossible circumstances, in a pre-vaccine world when we weren’t allowed to go inside most facilities to tour them in person, when I was desperate to give my stepdad some relief from being a 24/7 caregiver, and desperate to help my mom—who had lost an alarming amount of weight and struggled with paranoid delusions at home—in any way I could.

I don’t blame myself for choosing the wrong place, but I did see this new move as a way to right that wrong.

I started from scratch all over again, calling every memory care facility I could find on the Eastside and gathering all the information about availability, pricing, activities and more. I narrowed the options down to six—a mix of assisted living/memory care, dedicated memory care and adult family homes—and scheduled three intensive days of in-person tours and assessments.

The thing about memory care (and I supposed regular assisted living) is that you can’t get the full picture of how much it will cost each month unless you do an assessment with the facility’s nurse, where they ask all sorts of questions to determine the level of care a person will need. The higher the level of care, the higher the cost, on top of the monthly rent for the room itself.

For example, a room in memory care might run $4,000 per month in rent, but care might start at $3,000 per month for a low-needs person and go up from there if they need more assistance dressing, bathing, eating, etc. There’s also a one-time “community fee” due upon move-in that can be $1,500 to $5,500 or more, which really makes it painful to move.

(Is this the first time you’re realizing how much memory care costs? Did you know most families have to pay out-of-pocket? In the Seattle area, $7,000-$10,000+ per month is the norm. Here’s your nudge to make sure your parents have long-term care insurance!)

Because cost was a decision-making factor for us, I scheduled the tours and assessments together so we could walk away from each facility knowing exactly how much it would cost—which was super efficient, but made for three very long and exhausting days. We’d do one tour and assessment in the morning, eat lunch, then do another in the afternoon. Talking with strangers about the specifics of your mom’s terminal illness for an hour twice a day is draining. Touring sad little hallways filled with people who aren’t sure where or who they are is heartbreaking. Trying to decide where your mom is going to live—and quite possibly die—is… I can’t think of the right word, but it fucking sucks.

After the last appointment of each day, I had about a 45-minute drive home by myself when I’d blast loud, happy music and drink in all the lovely sights of the world—puffy clouds, streaks of sunset—and transport myself from the land of the dying back to the land of the living.

And when I got home, there was Wally.

Not to say that I didn’t find comfort in Aaron and Evie, but dogs bring a different sort of joy. They’re invariably, unabashedly, ridiculously thrilled to see you each time you walk in the door. They give amazing, furry snuggles. They don’t ask questions, however well-intended, that might make you cry.

Sweet Wally came right when I needed him most.

The great thing about this journey to find a new place for my mom was that she came with us on all these tours. Last time, my stepdad and I peeked into memory care windows and talked to facility directors without her, worried that she would get confused or freaked out by the process.

This time, she was ready to get the hell out of her old place and was thrilled to see all these new places. She had definite opinions on which places she did and didn’t like, and best of all: the winning place was a clear, unanimous, enthusiastic yes from all three of us.

We chose a dedicated memory care facility, which has three floors that my mom can move about freely, including a secure outdoor garden area she can access at any time. It’s clean and bright and cheerful, with friendly and helpful staff that seem happy to be there. It was the only place that brought me to tears as we toured it; the only place where it felt like she could really live, not just exist, before she dies.

It was such a relief to choose this wonderful new place in early February and give notice to her old facility, making plans to move her in March. And then! Evie got Covid.

It was inevitable, since Covid seemed to rip through her elementary school after the holidays. Luckily, she was fully vaccinated and only had a day or two of mild cold symptoms, and Aaron and I somehow never had symptoms or tested positive. Still, it was another challenge to have her be home and contagious while Aaron and I tried to keep her busy and keep up with our work, plus quarantine ourselves. Walking Wally (while wearing a mask) was my only escape.

In March, my mom’s move went as well as it could go. It took us from very early morning to late evening, but we got her completely moved in and set up in her new space. Unlike last time, when we had to direct people through the window on where to place her furniture, my stepdad, brother and I were able to set up everything just how she liked it. I carefully made her bed and folded her clothes. My brother organized her bookshelves and placed her framed photos just so. It felt amazingly redemptive to do it right this time.

And then I figured life would be good for awhile, having accomplished this herculean task that consumed the first few months of the year.

But remember the three-month settling period I mentioned last time we moved my mom? It was hard this time, too.

Despite the fact that we knew this place was such an improvement from the last one—better food, nicer people, brighter and more beautiful surroundings—my mom still had her complaints. It was after a few of these unhappy phone calls that I realized no place would satisfy because the real problem wasn’t the place; it was the dementia. And there was no place I could move her and nothing I could do to fix that.

I realized this in the midst of a session with my therapist. “All solutions with dementia are imperfect,” she said. I wrote that down because I have to accept that as badly as I want to make things right for my mom, there’s only so much I can do.

As much as I hoped this move would improve things, the satisfaction I got from it was short-lived. I got so caught up in the doing, and didn’t anticipate the rush of sadness that would fill me once the doing was done.

I desperately looked forward to the first day of spring, craving literal sunshine to brighten up life. And wouldn’t you know, we had the gloomiest, rainiest Seattle spring in a decade.

But Wally got me outside three times a day regardless. We walked and walked, rain or (rare and blessed) shine. We went to the off-leash dog park any time it wasn’t too rainy or muddy, and I loved watching him goad bigger dogs into chasing him around in big circles. He kept me moving in a season when I wanted to get back into a regular running routine, but just couldn’t bring myself to endure the rain when I wasn’t training for anything.

It also made such a difference to wake up each morning to his little face peeking up at me from my bedside; to have his constant companionship throughout mundane days working at home; and to have his quiet, loving presence in the room during my biweekly therapy sessions. He’s not an emotional support animal, but he manages to be more than just a dog, too.

Maybe part of it is that Wally has given me the opportunity to save him in ways I can’t save my mom. She had to leave her home; I took Wally into mine. I can derive daily satisfaction from meeting Wally’s needs by feeding, walking and playing with him; but even when I try my best to give my mom a better life—by spending quality time with her, taking her shopping, moving her to a new place—I still feel like I’ve failed her because the inherent cause of her pain remains. All solutions are imperfect.

And Aaron? Despite not wanting to get a dog in the slightest, even he had to admit early on that Wally is a pretty great dog. Over the past six months, I’ve watched Aaron go from cautiously tolerating him to actually liking him to downright loving him. He’ll swear otherwise if you ask, but he has indeed said the L-word, and you can see it plainly in the way he always sprinkles a little rice on the floor for Wally as he cooks, and chases him around the living room, and clearly enjoys it when Wally chooses to snuggle with him instead of me.

Wally brings joy to my stepdad and mom, too. He comes with me and Evie on our visits every weekend, and we take him on walks around the neighborhood and to the park. We toss his squeaky toys down the hall and laugh as he chases and pounces on them. He and Evie bring energy and levity to these visits. Together, they bring my mom firmly back to the land of the living, if only for a little while.

Now it’s summer. The days are brighter, literally and figuratively. It’s hard to remember a time before Wally was part of our family. And I hate to think of a time far in the future when he won’t be, because there will surely be a huge, Wally-shaped hole left behind.

I’ve always been a dog person and now, I think, I’ll always need a dog. I have the love to give, and I need the love they give.

I sure am grateful for his.