Monday, 17 February 2014

Where Memories Go is a tender portrait by Sally Magnusson of her mum’s frustration with dementia

Where Memories Go details a mother's frustration with dementia

Do the words ‘to lose a parent’ mean something different to the children of dementia sufferers?

Mamie Baird Magnusson died in April, 2012, aged 86. Her children had already been grappling with her loss for more than a decade. The warm, sparky, strong and inquisitive woman who had piloted their lives had gradually receded from view as dementia dimmed her sharp mind.

In her place was a frail old lady, in need of round-the-clock care, whose frustration at her failure to comprehend the world around her sometimes manifested itself in anger, even anguish.

For those who had known her, dementia seemed a particularly cruel end-of-life sentence for a woman whose lively intellect had been her passport to success. Mamie Baird had been a star writer on the Scottish Daily Express.

The joke when she married her junior colleague Magnus Magnusson – who would later find fame as the original Mastermind inquisitor – was that he was after her job.

‘She loved words and taught her children to cherish them, too,’ writes her broadcaster daughter, Sally. ‘Then, little by little, she lost them.’

Monday, 20 January 2014

Thinking Differently about Dementia Seminar

The owner of Stanfield Nursing attended another Seminar at the University of Worcester last week organised by Prof Dawn Brooker of the Association of Dementia Studies.

The seminar “Thinking Differently about Dementia” lead by Neil Mapes of Dementia Adventure, and Andy Bradley of Framework 4 Change was invigorating, thought provoking, but most of all it was permission giving.

Congratulations to the Association of Dementia Studies and a big thank you to both speakers.

Stanfield Nursing Home