Dec 19, 2024

How To Plan Ahead For A Festive Christmas For A Loved One With Dementia

19_12_24_HC_xmas
Cathy is excitedly preparing for Christmas with her husband Leo, who lives with dementia. [Supplied]

Christmas is often a time for tradition, whether it’s returning to your hometown for family dinner, waking up at 6am to unwrap presents or spending the afternoon at the beach.

Change can be tough when it comes to traditions.

For carer Cathy Lillyman, the toughest change has involved her husband Leo, who lives with dementia.

Cathy is excitedly preparing for another wonderful Christmas Day where she and Leo will welcome their extended family.

Unfortunately, she admits there is no escaping the grief of what has changed.

“Putting up the Christmas tree alone, with Leo not seeming to notice, hammers home the sadness,” Cathy, 76, said.

Cathy and Leo’s large extended family of four children and most of their 13 grandchildren living in Australia will converge at the Lillyman home at Bathurst in New South Wales’ Central West for the Christmas period.

But this will be a different Christmas as their usual traditions and expectations have to be adapted, routines managed and family helped to understand new circumstances.

Leo, 77, is a former bank manager with Westpac. The turning point in his life came in late 2022.

Previously a can-do, healthy man, Leo suffered from radiation therapy recommended to manage his lung cancer. A brain injury that occurred because of the treatment ultimately left him a changed man.

It also led to an agonising journey for Cathy to get help, a journey that included a dementia diagnosis.

Earlier this year, doctors validated family fears the dementia would not get better.

“He’s now a changed man. He’s not the same as he was. He looks the same but he’s not,” Cathy said.

Leo now receives support at home from a HammondCare home care team. This support means Leo can still enjoy Christmas at home with his wife of 55 years and extended family.

The pair have always made Christmas a big deal, too.  It reached a new level when the two took on a mixed business shop with attached house in Burrumbuttock, in the NSW Riverina, for 17 years.

They took seriously leading the town with Christmas festiveness. Leo earned a reputation for over-the-top decorations at their home, including endless festive lights and hand stencilled Santa figures and reindeer.

“Everyone in town and nearby areas joined in,” Cathy said.

Later the couple retired to Bathurst and Christmas as a big event continued, including the extravagant decorations. With his illness, Leo can’t continue that tradition now, but Cathy is doing what she can to ensure the grandchildren always remember great family Christmases with their Pa and Nanny.

Of all challenges, Cathy said the biggest is grandchildren feeling awkward. She fears their feeling are “walking on eggshells” to avoid upsetting Leo.

With those fears in mind, Dementia Support Australia (DSA) Head of Dementia Professional Services Marie Alford said planning ahead for Christmas – and events like Hanukah, Diwali, Ramadan and weddings – to accommodate the needs of a loved one living with dementia will mean a more enjoyable time for everyone.

Suggestions include keeping a quiet place for the person living with dementia to retreat to if needed to escape noise and busyness.

“All of these are celebratory times are great for creating memories – and in doing this we should consider how we can best support people living with dementia,” Ms Alford shared.

Other tips from DSA to make the most of Christmas include:
• Include photos, home videos and other favourite memorabilia to help
with participating or following conversation and share memories
• Remember music is an important inclusive and supportive element
• Start meals in a traditional way, this might be saying grace or with
reflections of the year so people with dementia know what is expected
• Ensuring contrasting colours for food and crockery, smaller portions
sizes, and having finger food options. Keep alcohol to a minimum
• Ensure family and friends are aware ahead of time they will participating
with someone living with dementia

Marie said it was important that carers are remembered by offering to support the person living with dementia during mealtimes or other parts of the day.

Dementia Support Australia services are accessible 24/7 365 days a year on 1800 699 799 and www.dementia.com.au, including through Christmas Day and the holiday season, to provide expert support where behaviours change.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Dementia: “It’s ok, they won’t remember anyway”

There is often a misconception that people with dementia or Alzheimer’s disease have memory loss, and that they are unable to create new memories. But at a lecture from Alzheimer’s Australia last week, Professor Steven Sabat told the crowd that “thinking that people diagnosed with dementia have something called “memory loss” is harmful for a number of... Read More

$30 vaccine that could reverse dementia has scientists “hugely excited”

There is hope for those living with dementia, after a “transformative” drug has been developed by researchers at the University of Leicester and Germany. Costing around $30 (£15), the treatment is a single dose and may prevent the disease. Read More

Physical restraints used for nearly half of hospital patients with dementia

Nearly half of hospital patients diagnosed with dementia were physically restrained to prevent them from harming themselves, according to a new study. Hospital patients in Japan who are living with dementia were physically restrained to prevent them from trying to get out of bed, trying to pull out catheters, and to prevent the risk of falling,... Read More
Advertisement