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     Special thanks to Michelle Tristani from   essentially means that they aren’t living on
     Benchmark Senior Living             the same linear timeline that we are. It makes
                                         sense, then, that a person with dementia may
     Communicating with people living with
     dementia is never an easy task: for many   talk about events that happened 40 years ago
     families, it’s the hardest thing they do on a   as if they happened yesterday, or mix up a
     regular basis. Concerned with how to answer   loved one with someone else. For someone
     challenging questions from an aging loved   with Timeline Confusion, understanding the
     one (“Where are my parents?”) to coping   effects of COVID-19 is truly impossible—and
     with repetitive phrases or requests, family   making them more concerned or worried isn’t
     caregivers are often unsure of exactly what   going to help matters.
     words to use or even what tone to use.  “For persons with dementia, explain that
                                         there is a bug or flu going around, not that a
     Enter: COVID-19. In a time where our world
     seems overrun by stress and uncertainty,   viral pandemic is shutting the world down,”
     comes even more stress and uncertainty for   Michelle Tristani, Corporate Director of Mem-
     families who have loved ones living with de-  ory Care at Benchmark Senior Living explains.
     mentia. How can you best communicate with   It’s true: sometimes, too much explanation is
     a loved one if their senior care community is   far worse than any explanation at all.
     shut down due to coronavirus concerns? How   So, does it make sense to call your loved
     can you visit? What do you say to a loved one   one with dementia on the phone? The short
     who may be experiencing anxiety, but may   answer is: it depends.
     not be able to understand exactly what’s hap-  Here are my tips for calling a loved one living
     pening around them?
                                         with dementia who lives in a community:
     Put simply, here’s the key: we don’t want to   1. Stay calm. Anxiety is very contagious.
     add our own anxiety into the mix.
                                         When you are visiting or talking with some-
     Many people living with dementia experi-  one living with dementia, do your best not
     ence what I call “timeline confusion,” which   to bring them into your anxiety. Trust me: it
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