[As I prepare for the talk Ming and I will deliver at TEDx in Bunbury, I wrestle with challenge of being concise when I could talk forever about our experience with Dementia: Anthony’s unawareness that he has Dementia; Ming’s transition from anger to acceptance; and my own attempts to find and create meaning in our interactions. I want this 15 minutes to somehow make a difference in the way people in general respond to people with Dementia. Once again, the following is a draft of a chapter for the book, Dementia Dialogues and any feedback appreciated.]
7. “When do you get your soul back again?”
It was a few months ago and I was already attuned to our cross-purpose-ish conversations, where, for example, Anthony would mention a tractor and I would counter his tractor-anxiety with an exclamation about how sweet potato was in season again.
So, as I switched the television station from Dr Phil to the ABC news, Anthony did the exact same thing with our conversation:
Anthony: When do you get your soul back again?
Me: WHAAAAT?
Anthony: Your soul.
ME: But I haven’t lost my soul, Ants!
Anthony: That’s good.
Anthony is the least spiritual person I have ever known so his mention of my soul was disconcerting as I’m pretty sure I have a reasonably healthy one. Nevertheless it made me realise that inside the mind of a person with Dementia are all sorts of references to all sorts of triggers, both past and present. His mention of soul may have been a bit like me telling him that the power was out at the nursing home one day, i.e. there was no electricity. Hours later, we had this conversation:
Me: Are you angry with me, Ants?
Anthony: Of course not.
Me: Then why do you look so sad?”
Anthony: My power is out.
So maybe Anthony’s casual reference to my soul, as if it were something I’d temporarily misplaced, like a bangle or a scarf (which I lose all the time), was just him using one word, ‘soul’ for another, more tangible thing? After all, I don’t even know what a soul is!
Nevertheless, that soul conversation still resonates, still makes me wonder, and still compels me to keep on trying to continue these dialogues. Sometimes, when Ants is too sleepy, or confused, to answer my ‘yes or no’ questions, and he tries to tell me something that I can’t understand, I just say this:
Me: It’s okay, Ants. I can read your mind!