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A true example of a living hell on Earth.
Posted on 2/4/23 at 2:16 pm
Posted on 2/4/23 at 2:16 pm
This passage gives a new meaning to the phrase "a living hell". From an essay on of all things, medical cannabis, in today's Wall Street Journal. Can't imagine living this nightmare over and over.
quote:
One of our teaching institutions, McLean Hospital, was studying a pharmaceutical-grade version of cannabis called Marinol (dronabinol in its generic form) to treat agitation precipitated by advancing dementia. Marinol could possibly have a calming and soothing effect without many of the risks carried by pharmaceuticals typically used in patients with end-stage major neurocognitive disorders.
We felt a personal connection to this research. Both of our grandmothers are survivors of the Holocaust, and during the pandemic, we compared stories about their faltering health and declining memories. During this period, Aaron’s 96-year-old grandmother, Marian Miklin, a very stoic personality throughout her life, began to display the same kind of severely agitated behavior that we had studied so meticulously during our geriatric psychiatry fellowships.
Most notable were Mrs. Miklin’s flashbacks. In the final months of her life, she began reliving unimaginably painful memories from Auschwitz and the Nazi labor camp called Starachowice—memories she had suppressed for nearly 80 years. She would yell out for her parents and siblings who were killed in the early 1940s, and she would confuse her medical team and family members for Nazis. Most traumatizing was that she confused her phlebotomist with the notorious “Dr. Mengele,” who had tortured her at Auschwitz, begging him to stop taking her blood. Her condition seemed unresponsive to commonly prescribed medications for dementia, and Aaron’s family wondered: Could cannabis help her?
Posted on 2/4/23 at 2:19 pm to prplhze2000
Yea that’s tragic to have to relive those memories.
ETA: Time is a flat circle. Everything we have done or will do we will do over and over and over again—forever.”
This is an example.
ETA: Time is a flat circle. Everything we have done or will do we will do over and over and over again—forever.”
This is an example.
This post was edited on 2/4/23 at 3:59 pm
Posted on 2/4/23 at 2:21 pm to prplhze2000
We had a family friend who shot himself after a dementia diagnosis. Can't say I blame him.
Posted on 2/4/23 at 2:23 pm to prplhze2000
Her experience was horrible...
This POS was probably just happy to be called doctor.
quote:
confused her phlebotomist with the notorious “Dr. Mengele,”
This POS was probably just happy to be called doctor.
Posted on 2/4/23 at 2:24 pm to Jim Rockford
quote:
We had a family friend who shot himself after a dementia diagnosis. Can't say I blame him.
that will be me, Alzheimer's runs in my family
Posted on 2/4/23 at 2:56 pm to Jim Rockford
I’m not putting my family through that. If or when I get dementia I’m ending it on my terms.
Posted on 2/4/23 at 2:59 pm to prplhze2000
Lets talk about the holomodor
Posted on 2/4/23 at 3:03 pm to X123F45
Well, he didn’t go to four years of evil medical school just to be called “Mr.”, thank you very much.
Posted on 2/4/23 at 3:13 pm to Jim Rockford
quote:
We had a family friend who shot himself after a dementia diagnosis. Can't say I blame him.
Years ago, the husband of the couple I was renting from did the same thing. Just went out and sat by a tree in the backyard at shot himself. I guess if you don't want to be a burden, that's your best solution.
This post was edited on 2/4/23 at 3:15 pm
Posted on 2/4/23 at 3:16 pm to prplhze2000
dementia is horrible. i hope to any powers that be that im spared that in later life.
to add the fact she relived those type of memories. unbelievable.
to add the fact she relived those type of memories. unbelievable.
Posted on 2/4/23 at 3:17 pm to prplhze2000
If I get diagnosed with dementia I am going to develop a heroin habit and at least enjoy myself before pulling the plug.
Posted on 2/4/23 at 3:22 pm to prplhze2000
Dementia is the most cruel disease I’ve ever seen.
Posted on 2/4/23 at 3:26 pm to LSUwag
I thought this was gonna be a New Orleans post
Posted on 2/4/23 at 3:29 pm to bird35
quote:
I’m not putting my family through that. If or when I get dementia I’m ending it on my terms.
Problem is, by the time you have dementia, you likely won't realize or remember what the diagnosis means. Thus you won't be able to act on the news. But I agree with the sentiment. Alz is in my family on both sides. As it stands right now, if given the option I'd trade 10 years of elderly life to avoid 5 years of confusion. i.e I'd rather die at 65 and relatively healthy than die at 80 after 5 years of asking people what my name is.
We all know cancer is awful, but cancer has also kept millions from having to succumb to mental deterioration.
Posted on 2/4/23 at 3:54 pm to Turnblad85
Just pray to Jesus. It will all work out.
Posted on 2/4/23 at 3:56 pm to Turnblad85
quote:
Problem is, by the time you have dementia, you likely won't realize or remember what the diagnosis means. Thus you won't be able to act on the news. But I agree with the sentiment. Alz is in my family on both sides. As it stands right now, if given the option I'd trade 10 years of elderly life to avoid 5 years of confusion. i.e I'd rather die at 65 and relatively healthy than die at 80 after 5 years of asking people what my name is.
While my father was taking care of my advanced-dementia mother, he told me if he ever gets diagnosed he'd rather die. Then he told me where he keeps his 9mm. True story. It was at Thanksgiving years ago. I'm pretty sure I posted it in the annual "Thanksgiving Family Drama" thread that pio posts every year. The question is, would I be able to go through with it, and get away with it.
Posted on 2/4/23 at 4:00 pm to prplhze2000
Toward the end of my mother's dementia, she was living in a nightmare of bad childhood memories. Not holocaust, but just random stuff, screaming out her sister's name in rage, like maybe memories that get stored in the very back of the brain to forget, and then once all the brain is gone except for that back plane, then all you have left is that back plane and you just re-live through it until the part of the brain that controls your vital organs quits working, then you can finally have peace in death.
ETA- my wife's grandfather died of Alz too, didn't know anyone's name etc, but he always knew who I was, which I and their family always thought was really weird.
It's a weird disease.
ETA- my wife's grandfather died of Alz too, didn't know anyone's name etc, but he always knew who I was, which I and their family always thought was really weird.
It's a weird disease.
This post was edited on 2/4/23 at 4:03 pm
Posted on 2/4/23 at 4:21 pm to caro81
Going through a lot of these same things right now with my 98 year old mama. All my life, I've been a "fixer". I can't fix this.
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