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This has been a godsend for me. I like you have answered the same questions hundreds of times. My mom’s memory is about 10 seconds. One day I decided to make her a laminated sheet all about her and the questions she asked the most. When I’ve answered them all I care to I simply give her the sheet and she can read it as many times as she likes. Hope this helps!
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I also wanted to mention music. We have a station here on ROKU called Christian TV. It has a section called Moments of Peace. It has the most breathtaking scenes and it’s all instrumental music. It really calms and distracts my mom and I often sit with her and sing the songs for her and we talk about the scenes. Best part is it plays for about 20 hours!
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earlybird Oct 2020
MOC ,That sounds wonderful. How nice you sit with your mom and sing to her. DO I need to sign up for the Christian TV online and how much does it cost per month?
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In my experience patience goes a long way. I would answer her questions short and sweet. My mother will call me 5-6 times in one sitting. I check on her and answer her questions. I think she is calling me because she is insecure, it usually happens at night at times. One family member will sit with her until she fall asleep now and we keep a night light on. UTI's can play a role with confusion and if anything out of the ordinary I would get her tested.
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Try to answer in yes or no answers. If you can't then answer her a few times. If she's caught in a loop of asking over and over again, answer her by saying you've already answered that question and will not be discussing it again.
The question about her husband dying is different. You could use a little white lie about that one so she doesn't get upset. I worked for a lady who would ask about her husband who died every few minutes. We used to tell her that he's in rehab and can't come home yet. If we'd answered that a dozen times in a matter of minutes, we would stop answering it that day and she would stop asking it. Same with the other questions.
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My father has vascular dementia. He is an amazing man with a great sense of humor. He may ask me the same question several times a day. I have found it helpful to keep answers short and brief. Then I pause to have a moment of silence to allow him to process and respond. If he continues to repeat, I may distract him. He has taught me to have a greater sense of understanding and compassion.
Best wishes to you during this journey.
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As several mentioned, best to keep any answers you do provide as short as possible. Sometimes yes/no won't suffice, but keep the response as simple as possible. If possible, use some humor. Redirect/refocus sometimes helps.

My YB used to drone on and on, providing way too much information. Between hearing loss and dementia, it was pointless. Maybe he just likes to hear himself talk! Not long after he'd finish his response, she'd ask again. I asked why he uses such a long response, but didn't really get an answer. That might work with kids, as they get older and can process explanations, but not with dementia!
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To the best of my experience, this is their attempt to stay engaged with the outside world as long as they can. I use the questions to cue me as to what I should be asking them. These are the things they care about.
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It is heartbreaking but I did answer
each. Where is Mama? Is this my house? I did say her Mama and siblings were fine and happy. That seemed to help.
Also tried to get her interested in tv
show to talk about. That worked better to get her mind off family that
have passed.
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Normal aging.
Give answer you feel comfortable repeating as well. Sometimes you can redirect.
Dad asks about others that have died, especially repeating about how mom died is painful.
Dad loves Elvis songs and they do put his mind in a quieter places...especially the hymns.
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My mom has Alzheimer’s with about a 3-5 minute memory. (Assisted living last year didn’t work, so my brother and I have been tag-teaming every few weeks so that one of us stays with her 24/7 to keep her at home ~ and save $$ in case she has to go into memory care or nursing home.)

So, we often experience the looping of the same few questions over and over. I just answer each one as if it’s the first time she asked. At first it was pretty frustrating, but we are so used to it by now that it’s almost routine and expected.

We have found that she gets especially anxious when she has an appointment or something scheduled. She sees it on the calendar and starts looping questions (who am I seeing? why? where is it? do you know how to get there? etc.).

What has helped is writing her schedule for each day on a sheet of paper and taping it to the kitchen table, where she sits most of the time. We include time (including our departure time), appointment (dr/specialty), location, etc ~ so when she starts looping, we tell her refer to her schedule.

It’s definitely not easy ... but trying to find some hacks amid the crazy chaos helps.

Best of luck!!
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