
Rosalys Peel Writes Memoir With Support for All Spouse Caregivers in Her Book Mike and Me
By Rosalys Peel Every two minutes someone in America is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. Most will face this discouraging

By Rosalys Peel Every two minutes someone in America is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. Most will face this discouraging

By Barbara Smith I am an occupational therapist, specializing in developmental disabilities. I had never planned to work

By Richard Creighton Why would a 78-year-old grandfather who doesn’t like to write become a blogger? The answer

By Malia Kline When our mama was diagnosed with infiltrating pancreatic cancer and given three-to-six months to live,

By Heidi Hess Saxton When the Unthinkable Becomes Inevitable: The Awful Dawn of Dementia Up to this point

By Bobbi Carducci “What’s going to happen to Rodger?’ was the first thing most people asked upon hearing

By S. R. Karfelt Writing about memory loss wasn’t something I’d planned to do. I’m a fiction writer.

Silent Storm: What We Remember, What We Forget, What We Discover A Novelist Meditates on Writing about Alzheimer’s

By Philip D. Sloane, MD I was six years into my medical training – a second year resident

By Judy Cornish, Idaho, USA Over a decade ago, I left my law practice in Portland, Oregon, in

By Gela-Marie Williams I remember the evening my youngest son came through to me in my bedroom holding

By Marie Marley I took care of my beloved Romanian 30-year life partner when he developed Alzheimer’s. The

By Sandra Bullock Smith When I first started caring for my mother, I had no apprehension over how

By Tanya Ward Goodman I grew up in in the mountains of New Mexico in a roadside attraction

By Gary Joseph LeBlanc Becoming a caregiver started as far back as my earliest childhood memories. My oldest