Skip to main content

https://disabilityunit.blog.gov.uk/2022/05/18/emmas-story-caring-for-my-grandma-with-dementia/

Emma's story: caring for my Grandma with dementia

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: Raising Awareness

The theme for this year's Dementia Action Week is diagnosis. Alzheimer's Society research shows that the misconception around memory loss being a sign of normal ageing is the biggest barrier to people seeking a dementia diagnosis. We hear from Emma about her Grandma's experience:

Emma and her Grandma

I didn’t know I was a carer until an amazing manager helped me realise. It was just our life. My Grandma is my idol. She’s kind, funny, artistic, and, despite being shy, a massive glamourpuss. 

I lived next door to my grandparents when my Grandma started developing Alzheimer’s Disease in her sixties. Initially, it was small things like getting confused with our names, forgetting to pick me up from my part-time job at a call centre or putting things in the wrong place, like putting the milk in a cupboard. 

When I moved into my Grandparents house after university, my caring responsibilities increased, along with my 85-year-old grandfather’s. My Grandma would think her Mum and Dad were alive and she would worry she hadn't picked me up from school.

She had no idea anything was wrong, with no awareness that she was losing her memory. We all dismissed it as part of getting older.

I used to drive back from work, help cook dinner, do any cleaning or washing needed and watch my Grandma until she went to bed. As her dementia progressed, she needed constant attention and care, with no concept of day or night, time or even danger. Most of the time she didn’t know where she was and who we were.

Often, in the evenings, she would often want to go back to her parents. She would get angry a lot, frustrated, and sometimes aggressive, which was incredibly upsetting. She needed someone with her 24/7 to stop her walking off or getting lost. She went missing a couple of times and was found by the police. A few years ago, my Grandad slipped over while trying to follow her and broke his shoulder. 

Emma's Grandparents
Emma's grandparents on their wedding day, and recreating their wedding photo years later.

It was difficult holding down my first ever job while doing the right thing by my grandparents. I often took calls at work when she disappeared and I was using my annual leave to give my Grandad a break so he could have a couple of days with his friends. I loved spending time with my Grandma in the evenings and weekends helping her and watching TV, but being a carer was so isolating and lonely. It was hard when my friends were carefree, going clubbing and I was left behind. By contrast, my Grandma was not aware of what was happening with her dementia. She often got upset, confused and felt misunderstood. 

Initially, I was anxious about telling anyone I was a carer at work in case it negatively impacted my career or colleagues' view of me.

I was so lucky to have such great support from my line manager. He gently helped me realise that I was a carer and that my grandparents and I needed support. He boosted my confidence in being a carer, showing me it had given me valuable skills and experiences of patience, problem solving and communication. He challenged HR when they said I could not work from home one day a week. His support changed my world and career. This support from my manager gave me the confidence to set up a carers network at my organisation, which helped me connect with others in similar situations. It also helped me build my CV, which led me to a job at the Alzheimer’s Society.

By helping others and running events for the network, I found out more about local support and the benefits my grandparents were entitled to. We successfully got respite care, introduced equipment at home to help and other family members began to understand and support more. This increased my independence and helped me to move out of my grandparents’ house. This support meant I could support my grandparents on weekends and holidays instead.

It has taken nearly 12 years to get my family to acknowledge that what was happening was not a normal part of ageing and to start the diagnosis process to help my Grandma get  the right medication and receive respite care.

My Grandma now has advanced dementia, but is happily living with my aunt and Grandad in the New Forest. Her and my Grandad recently celebrated their 60th Diamond Wedding Anniversary and received a card from the Queen. Her mobility is reduced and she finds it challenging to communicate, needing quiet surroundings and patience to allow her to formulate what she wants to say. She loves music, watching bands or singers in the local pubs. My family try to make sure she does the things she enjoys in different ways, whether that's helping her paint with a water painting book, helping my grandparents go on holiday, doing her makeup and hair or putting on old musicals that she can sing and tap along to.

My Grandfather now has support in a properly adapted home, with my Grandma attending a specialist service a couple of days a week. 

My current manager is just as supportive as my first, helping me work a condensed working pattern which lets me drive down on weekends to visit my grandparents. This has made helping clean the house, taking my Grandma to her day centre and just sit together, watching birds in the garden, so much easier. 

During this year’s Carers Week (6 to 12 June) the Civil Service Carers Network is holding an awareness session on dementia and Alzheimer’s Disease for Civil Servants with caring responsibilities or an interest in dementia. Please contact emma.bould@cabinetoffice.gov.uk if you would like to attend.

Sharing and comments

Share this page

7 comments

  1. Comment by Cynthia Matharu posted on

    I’ve known Emma since she was a small child. What an amazing woman she has turned out to be! Congratulations to you Emma! So very proud of you and how you have helped your grandmother!

    Reply
  2. Comment by Sam Lassen posted on

    Love this blog, Emma. Your journey as a carer sounds equally heartbreaking and rewarding. Thanks for sharing.

    Reply
  3. Comment by Caroline Eglinton posted on

    This is brilliant to see pop up Emma, we worked together many years ago on employee networks - Caroline Eglinton

    Reply
  4. Comment by Liandra Taylor-Mills posted on

    Emma, I feel incredibly privileged and grateful to have read your story. Thank you so much for sharing and I'm sure this will encourage others.

    Reply
  5. Comment by Lee Pearson posted on

    Thank you for sharing your story, hopefully it will help others in a similar position to find their own support and not try and cope on their own.

    Reply
  6. Comment by Jack Weaver posted on

    Was looking for some takes regarding this topic and I found your article quite informative. It has given me a fresh perspective on the topic tackled Thanks!

    Reply
  7. Comment by jacqui wyatt posted on

    Emma, you are a star, I lost my mum in Jan this year from this terrible disease, I was her carer. It's a hard thing to do and work full time , you are doing such a wonderful thing.

    Reply

Leave a reply to Jack Weaver

Cancel reply

We only ask for your email address so we know you're a real person

By submitting a comment you understand it may be published on this public website. Please read our privacy notice to see how the GOV.UK blogging platform handles your information.