Julia Grace Roscoe Stolen Memories
Julia Grace Roscoe shares a very personal account of what it’s like to lose
We’re just getting old. That’s what my Nan used to say. She denied for so long
that anything was wrong with my Pop. He was forgetting things. Things like the day,
the month, and the year. Sometimes he would forget what he was doing. Sometimes
he would be in the shower and he would forget actually getting in the shower. He
would forget where the toilet in his own home was. Once he even forgot who I was.
Still, Nan insisted they were just getting old. But instead of old meaning wrinkles and
grey hair, for Pop, it meant becoming dependent on someone to look after him. And
the worst part, it meant losing his memories.
Alzheimer’s disease is a disease of the brain, which gradually impairs higher
brain functions such as memory, thinking and personality. It is the most common
form of Dementia, and affects one in 25 Australians over the age of 60. There is no
In the early stages of Alzheimer’s, symptoms may be too subtle to notice.
Depending on the affected areas of the brain, early symptoms include memory lapses,
problems finding the right word for everyday objects, difficulties making decisions,
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I never wanted to leave Brisbane. Growing up, my sister and I were very close
to Nan and Pop. When we moved to Sydney, we would fly up to visit them every
school holidays. I’ve got a picture on my dressing table of my sister and I with Pop.
He is holding both of us over his shoulders and we’re all laughing. My sister and I
have our faces huddled in Pop’s neck. I’m five or six in the photo.
Pop’s initial diagnosis was pretty vague, as with most cases of Alzheimer’s.
Diagnosis is about 90 per cent accurate, but there is no definitive test. The only way to
confirm the presence of the disease is with a post mortem on the brain, which for an
Alzheimer’s patient shows damaged cells called ‘tangles’ and ‘amyloid plaques’ in
the spaces between the cells. The plaques are made up of a protein called ‘A-beta’.
The build up of protein is what is thought to cause the damage as it basically rusts the
brain. Research has shown that the protein converts oxygen to hydrogen peroxide,
which bleaches and corrodes the parts of the brain linked to memory and reasoning. In
Alzheimer’s disease, the brain cells cannot connect and ‘talk’ to each other.
Ultimately, the connectors disappear entirely in the part of the brain where thinking
occurs. Drugs aimed at inhibiting the production and toxic effects of the A-beta
protein are in development, but it will be some time before they are widely available.
Pop was first diagnosed in June 2009. He was 80 years old. The doctor’s report
read: ‘The history is basically one of gradual onset and gradual decline of short-term
memory over about three years or so. I note the CT head, which shows considerable
deep white matter ischemia* and normal full blood count. I have talked to John and
his family about the diagnosis of Mixed Alzheimer’s & Vascular Dementia. He is
interested in trialling Cholinesterase Inhibitor so I have prescribed Reminyl.’
We were told that Reminyl might help to slow down the changes in his memory
but it would not cure him. The doctor asked if he wanted to trial it anyway, and he
agreed, though he had no idea what he was agreeing to. We were willing to try
anything that might help, so he was put on a three-month trial. Reminyl is used to
treat mild to moderately severe cases of Alzheimer’s. It is supposed to increase the
amount of Acetylcholine, a substance which transmits messages between brain cells,
and which patients lack. The aim is to help improve or stabilise the symptoms and
perhaps even slow the progress of the disease. It didn’t help Pop. The doctor didn’t
think it would. The drug comes with some awful side effects, and Pop experienced
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nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, muscle cramps, tingling in his hands and feet and he
became more and more depressed. I was staying with Nan and Pop one night during
the Reminyl trial. When I said goodnight to him he hugged me and said goodbye.
That was the only time I ever saw him cry. He had tears welling in his eyes as he said,
‘I don’t want to wake up in the morning.’
He looked scared. His dressing gown was drowning his frail frame, and I
watched him, hunched over as he shuffled off down the hallway until I couldn’t see
When the doctor told him he had Alzheimer’s she asked if he knew what that
meant. He said he did, but we knew he didn’t. When we left the clinic he couldn’t
even remember why we were there. He was also diagnosed with Vascular Dementia
(VD), which occurs due to problems in the supply of blood to the brain. It is the
second most common form of Dementia after Alzheimer’s. Symptoms between the
two are difficult to differentiate because a large percentage of people with
Alzheimer’s also have VD. Mixed Alzheimer’s is a condition in which abnormalities
characteristic of more than one type of Dementia occur simultaneously. In Pop’s case,
the abnormal protein deposits on the brain associated with Alzheimer’s coexist with
blood vessel problems associated with VD. The main difference between the two is
the progress of the disease. Alzheimer’s patients tend to experience a more consistent
rate of decline in all cognitive abilities. Pop’s symptoms progressed quickly,
consistent with VD. The most common cause of VD is a stroke, which is a type of
vascular disease. Often patients can experience a number of small strokes, which may
go unnoticed. This may have been the case with Pop. The doctor thinks it’s more
likely to be related to his past as a boxer, which is now known to be a risk factor due
to the trauma inflicted on the brain by blows to the head.
About a month after the doctor’s visit he started asking for his mother all the
time. He stopped recognising himself in photos taken in the last 30 years. In
Alzheimer's disease, short-term memory storage is damaged first. Humans have two
types of memories, short-term and long-term. Short-term memory is programmed in a
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part of the brain called the temporal lobe, while long-term memory is stored
throughout extensive nerve cell networks in the temporal and parietal lobes.
Pop would ask for Nan all the time too, but he got agitated because the woman
he remembered was 40. Nan was 80. He was also becoming delusional; he kept
saying that Nan was an imposter. He said there was a strange man sleeping in his bed.
Nan would just shake her head and tell him to stop being daft. He had good days, and
bad, but now the bad started to be more often than the good. He needed help choosing
clothes appropriate for the weather and time of day. Sometimes he would put his
pyjamas over his jeans, or socks over his shoes with his shoes on the wrong feet. He
couldn’t remember where he lived, or where he went to school. He could still
distinguish between familiar and unfamiliar faces, but he was increasingly having
I don’t know how Nan did it. He was almost totally dependent on her at this
stage; she was looking after him full-time. He couldn’t even go the toilet without her
help anymore. I remember once when I was there he started shouting at her, saying he
wanted to be with Jeanie. He was waving his cane stick at her and shaking his head. It
might have been funny, except for the look on his face. It was screwed up and he kept
gasping. He couldn’t work out what was going on. For the first time I noticed the deep
lines etched on his face. The lines of a life lived. His grey wispy hair was thinning,
and so was his face. It was drawn and he had deep purple colouring around his eyes.
‘I’m Jeanie, I’ve changed my hairdo,’ Nan said to him and she gave him a lolly.
It was like watching a mother and her son, not a wife and husband.
‘Come on dear, I’ll make you a cup of tea.’
This scene played out fifteen times that day.
Before Nan could get any help, she had to qualify for respite from the
Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing. Respite Care provides a
chance for both the carer and person being cared for to take a break. Respite can be in
the home with care ranging from a few hours a week to overnight care, in a Day Care
Centre which provides full or half day care, or, in a residential aged care home for two
or three weeks. Nan desperately needed help, though at first she didn’t want any. But
she couldn’t leave him alone anymore, and being there with him all the time was
taking its toll on her. The last time she left him on his own he urinated on the kitchen
floor because he couldn’t remember where the toilet was.
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To qualify for respite, someone from the National Respite for Carers Program
came to assess the situation and determine whether or not Nan needed help. Mum was
there on that morning and she sat with Pop and he read to her.
‘He read the same thing over and over again. He read the same sentence a dozen
times, and then moved onto the next paragraph and did the same thing. He never
turned the page. He had no idea what he was reading, but every now and then he
would throw in the grandchildren’s names,’ she told me.
During the test, the nurse asked Pop his age, birthday, where he was living – he
had no idea. He thought he was 40, and had only just moved to Australia. They
moved here from England in 1961. He couldn’t copy a picture of a cube. He tried
over and over again but couldn’t get it. He was a builder by trade; he could easily
have drawn a cube. He couldn’t name everyday items shown to him, like an apple.
He couldn’t remember how to spell, not even his own name, he wrote ‘Jhon’. But
what he could still do blew the nurse away. When asked to count backwards from 100
in multiples of seven, he rattled the numbers off correctly and without giving it so
Mum and dad had already been researching nursing homes for Alzheimer’s
patients, because we all knew what was inevitable. High-care nursing homes are for
people who need 24 hour nursing care. This may be because they are physically
unable to move around and care for themselves, or because they have a severe
Dementia-type illness or other behavioural problems. Residents in high-level care
receive specified care and services including assistance with daily living. A year or so
earlier Nan and Pop had downsized, and moved into a smaller home across the road
from the hospital. Pop was always in the hospital for some sort of check up – he had
chronic back and knee pain – so it made sense to move there. The hospital also had a
On Boxing Day 2009, just six months after the initial diagnosis, we were left
with no choice but to put Pop into the home. While some families celebrated the
holidays, lazing about in the wringing heat, with bellies full of left over Christmas
turkey, Pop had chased Nan around the house with his walking stick, threatening to
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hit her if she didn’t find his real wife. Mum and dad found Nan hiding under her bed,
terrified. Pop kept demanding to know who she was and what she wanted. He was too
far gone now, there was nothing else we could do. He was on the edge of an abyss,
The home is a large rectangular building. Inside is a maze of rooms, sectioned
depending on the level of care needed by the patients. The high ceilings and wide
corridors are painted stark white, and the smell of disinfectant lingers. The bedrooms
are all the same, a bed in the middle, a desk on one side, and an ensuite. We tried to
make it feel like home for Pop. We put photos of the family around the room and on
the desk. The younger grandchildren drew pictures that we hung on the wall. Nan
brought in blankets and towels, books and music. But he knew it wasn’t home, and he
kept asking when we would take him home.
I used to go and sit with him for hours. I would read to him and feed him. It was
like feeding a baby. He would dribble and I had to wipe his face with his bib.
Sometimes we would go out and sit in the garden. We would bring his dog Princess
over too. He loved her, and she adored him. She would sit beside him for hours. The
garden wasn’t much of a garden, the trees were lean and straggly and there were some
sad looking bush shrubs lining the fence. But the grass was always perfectly
manicured, and was a luscious shade of dark green.
Aphasia is the inability to communicate effectively, and occurs in all
Alzheimer’s patients eventually. Pop couldn’t hold a conversation anymore, so he
would sometimes just mumble or grunt. If I asked him something he would nod, but I
don’t think he even understood what I was saying. Sometimes he wouldn’t say
anything at all. But he would smile at me. I used to wonder if he even knew who I
It’s been just over three years since his initial diagnosis. The Alzheimer’s
Association says that most people with the disease die within four to six years of
diagnosis. However the disease can last up to 20 years. Pop is now bed-ridden and
sleeps most of the time. He cannot bathe himself; he cannot even turn in his bed. He is
into the late stages of the disease, slipping in and out of death. These stages can last
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up to several years. It has him in its grips and there is nothing we can do except make
sure he is comfortable. He no longer recognises any of us. He doesn’t even recognise
himself. He cannot chew or swallow. He is incontinent and has had several urinary
tract infections. His skin is a deep shade of purple, he is frail and his skin bruises so
easily that they only bathe him once or twice a week. There is no dignity in
Pneumonia is often the cause of death in patients. Difficulty swallowing often
causes people with Alzheimer's to inhale food or liquid into their airways and lungs,
which can lead to pneumonia. The doctors say Pop has liquid on his lungs. I have an
aunt who is a nurse in a high-care home. She said pneumonia is the best way to go,
because what is to come is much worse as the body starts shutting down. I feel guilty
for thinking she is right, but grieving for someone with Alzheimer’s is a long process.
My sister has refused to see him since he has been in the home. She says she doesn’t
want to remember him that way. I haven’t seen him in nearly twelve months. I don’t
know if I’ll see him again. Mum asked me the other day how will I remember him? I
want to think that I won’t remember him like this, that I’ll remember all the good
things. But I’m afraid the trauma of the disease may have tainted my memory. I
suppose that's the hardest thing - watching him every day just go, so that now he's
nothing like the Pop I knew. The chaos of the disease has created someone who we
don’t even know anymore, and worse, someone who doesn’t know who we are.
* i Brain ischemia is insufficient blood flow to the brain. Chronic ischemia of the brain may result in a form of Dementia called Vascular Dementia.
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