Alzheimer's in the African-American community.
Keys Bags Names Words
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
Keys Bags Names Words is a quirky and inspiring lens portraying stories of the personal and global impacts of Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia.
It follows a cohort of young scientists and artists from around the world as they harness every aspect of creativity, humor and compassion to lead the way towards hope and resilience.
"Keys Bags Names Words is a powerful teaching tool that brings evidence-informed dementia care to life through real-world interactions grounded in dignity, agency, and human connection. Its strengths-based approach empowers clinicians with practical, immediately applicable skills to deliver care that is both clinically excellent and deeply compassionate. By reshaping how acute care professionals understand and engage with patients, it elevates patient-centered care into everyday practice." - Malini K. Singh, MD,MPH, MBA, Professor of Emergency Medicine at UCSF School of Medicine
Credits and citation support are not available for this title yet.
A MARC record for this title is not available yet.
Distributor subjects
Aging and Geriatrics,Alzheimer's Disease / Dementia,Longterm Care,Healthcare,Medicine and Nursing,Health Care CostsKeywords
00:00:14.723 --> 00:00:17.350
[music]
00:00:24.441 --> 00:00:26.151
LENNY WHITE: It's all
the small little things...
00:00:26.317 --> 00:00:27.736
that make a massive difference.
00:00:28.028 --> 00:00:30.280
- Whoa!
- Yeah!
00:00:30.864 --> 00:00:32.657
KARIN DIAMOND:
Palm to palm, breathe in.
00:00:33.074 --> 00:00:34.784
[inhales deeply]
00:00:38.663 --> 00:00:40.123
Mr. MacDonald?
00:00:40.248 --> 00:00:42.542
We know that dementia
is not part of old age...
00:00:42.667 --> 00:00:44.252
dementia is a disease.
00:00:46.212 --> 00:00:49.507
There are ways to improve
symptoms around dementia.
00:00:50.341 --> 00:00:52.886
There are ways to target
risk factors...
00:00:53.011 --> 00:00:54.846
before developing symptoms.
00:00:55.013 --> 00:00:56.598
[laughter]
00:00:56.723 --> 00:00:59.768
I think we have a tendency
to look at older people...
00:00:59.893 --> 00:01:01.728
with what they cannot do.
00:01:01.853 --> 00:01:03.354
[woman exclaiming,
all cheering]
00:01:04.022 --> 00:01:08.443
What we want to change
is this negative narrative...
00:01:08.568 --> 00:01:09.569
change our mindset.
00:01:09.694 --> 00:01:11.237
ALL: Yes!
00:01:11.362 --> 00:01:14.199
(piano music)
00:01:32.592 --> 00:01:35.887
KARIN: Every one of us
has a story to tell...
00:01:36.054 --> 00:01:39.390
and some of us
need our story heard.
00:02:00.537 --> 00:02:03.206
[people chattering]
00:02:14.425 --> 00:02:17.804
WALTER DAWSON: My dad and I,
we were very close.
00:02:19.180 --> 00:02:21.599
What we kinda did together,
is he read a lot to me...
00:02:21.724 --> 00:02:25.770
as a child, and that
was a real happy memory...
00:02:25.895 --> 00:02:27.856
that I think about a lot.
00:02:29.107 --> 00:02:30.567
- How old was I here?
- CLARA: Three.
00:02:30.692 --> 00:02:33.111
Oh, wow.
[laughing]
00:02:34.237 --> 00:02:35.488
CLARA: Walter as a little boy...
00:02:35.613 --> 00:02:37.907
was the apple
of his father's eye.
00:02:38.908 --> 00:02:41.244
We enjoyed a lot
of things together.
00:02:45.623 --> 00:02:47.542
WALTER: I felt quite lucky
in the sense...
00:02:47.667 --> 00:02:49.460
that since he was older,
00:02:49.586 --> 00:02:52.338
he was retired
and he was kind of around.
00:02:52.463 --> 00:02:54.465
Not every child
is fortunate enough
00:02:54.591 --> 00:02:58.219
to have both their parents
there constantly.
00:02:59.053 --> 00:03:02.390
Books were his, like,
biggest interest...
00:03:02.515 --> 00:03:04.809
and kind of passion...
00:03:04.934 --> 00:03:06.978
both in terms
of collecting them...
00:03:07.145 --> 00:03:09.105
but also in terms
of the knowledge
00:03:09.230 --> 00:03:11.149
that they contained, right?
00:03:14.819 --> 00:03:16.905
The changes were subtle.
00:03:17.030 --> 00:03:18.198
You know,
he would say things like...
00:03:18.323 --> 00:03:19.657
"Oh, you know,
that one person.
00:03:19.824 --> 00:03:20.950
What's her name,
what's his name?"
00:03:21.075 --> 00:03:22.785
You know, and struggling...
00:03:22.911 --> 00:03:25.455
with some words
and sentences.
00:03:27.415 --> 00:03:29.250
CLARA: He'd drive into town,
and then he...
00:03:29.375 --> 00:03:31.461
he would tell me
that he got lost.
00:03:33.463 --> 00:03:34.839
[sighs]
00:03:34.964 --> 00:03:37.342
I really began to think...
00:03:37.467 --> 00:03:40.511
there might be something
the matter.
00:03:42.013 --> 00:03:44.641
[kids screaming playfully]
00:03:48.186 --> 00:03:50.313
WOMAN: Get ready!
00:03:50.438 --> 00:03:52.273
WALTER:
When I was eight years old...
00:03:52.398 --> 00:03:55.026
we had planned a family trip
to Disneyland...
00:03:55.193 --> 00:03:56.861
in Southern California.
00:03:58.029 --> 00:04:02.700
My dad would wander a lot,
and he got lost pretty quickly.
00:04:04.244 --> 00:04:07.163
And we couldn't find him again
for several hours.
00:04:08.957 --> 00:04:10.375
[fireworks whistling]
00:04:10.541 --> 00:04:13.127
And then that evening,
we returned to our hotel...
00:04:13.253 --> 00:04:16.047
and that was kind of where
things really got quite...
00:04:16.172 --> 00:04:18.216
really bad
really fast.
00:04:20.468 --> 00:04:23.888
My dad became
extremely agitated...
00:04:24.013 --> 00:04:26.849
and was convinced
there was something...
00:04:26.975 --> 00:04:31.771
really terrible about to happen
to everybody in the hotel.
00:04:31.896 --> 00:04:33.064
[fireworks booming]
00:04:33.189 --> 00:04:34.357
He left the room...
00:04:34.482 --> 00:04:36.317
and was running
down the halls...
00:04:36.442 --> 00:04:38.486
yelling, banging on doors...
00:04:38.611 --> 00:04:40.655
trying to get
people's attention...
00:04:40.780 --> 00:04:42.115
that they needed to get out.
00:04:42.240 --> 00:04:44.534
[fireworks continue whistling,
booming]
00:04:45.743 --> 00:04:48.329
It was that moment
that really kind of....
00:04:48.454 --> 00:04:50.915
we knew, and I knew
that things...
00:04:51.040 --> 00:04:52.750
were not ever
gonna be the same.
00:04:56.337 --> 00:04:58.798
He was not maybe the one
to choose.
00:04:58.923 --> 00:05:02.510
- He-- he crushed Joey.
- He did?
00:05:06.431 --> 00:05:09.475
WALT’S DAD: Hello, look here!
- Hi.
00:05:09.600 --> 00:05:12.937
I’ll spoil you. All the legs
I’ve got...[nonsensical speech]
00:05:13.062 --> 00:05:14.939
CLARA: He worried about us.
00:05:15.106 --> 00:05:17.650
One time, he told me
that he knew...
00:05:17.775 --> 00:05:19.736
that he wasn't right.
00:05:19.861 --> 00:05:22.613
So what are you now,
five and a half?
00:05:22.739 --> 00:05:24.449
Mm, eleven.
00:05:24.615 --> 00:05:27.118
- Yesterday was my birthday.
- 11 years!
00:05:27.285 --> 00:05:28.619
CLARA: He was so worried
about it.
00:05:28.786 --> 00:05:30.538
- How's the little fella?
- CLARA: He said he felt...
00:05:30.663 --> 00:05:32.999
like we were on the edge
of a cliff.
00:05:35.585 --> 00:05:37.086
Throw-- throw your ball, Cecil.
00:05:37.211 --> 00:05:39.297
Here, Cecil.
No.
00:05:39.464 --> 00:05:41.883
- Don't push me.
- No, no, I'm not.
00:05:42.925 --> 00:05:45.053
CLARA: The decision
to place Cecil in care...
00:05:45.178 --> 00:05:47.638
was really hard.
00:05:47.805 --> 00:05:49.557
Throw it to him.
00:05:49.682 --> 00:05:51.017
YOUNG WALTER: Thank you.
00:05:51.142 --> 00:05:54.687
He just seems
to be fading away...
00:05:54.812 --> 00:05:57.231
and it's really sad.
00:06:01.527 --> 00:06:02.695
Bye.
00:06:02.820 --> 00:06:06.699
All these good for nothing
[nonsensical speech]
00:06:06.824 --> 00:06:08.659
YOUNG WALTER: It's sad to see
him in a different place...
00:06:08.826 --> 00:06:13.331
and that he's not at home,
and he wants to come home.
00:06:13.456 --> 00:06:16.209
And we want him to come home,
but he can't.
00:06:16.334 --> 00:06:18.544
- We better go.
- Well, see you.
00:06:20.421 --> 00:06:22.298
- We'll be seeing you.
- Won't be that long now.
00:06:22.423 --> 00:06:24.967
- Okay.
- See you soon, okay?
00:06:25.093 --> 00:06:27.512
- Gotta close the door.
- Okay.
00:06:29.764 --> 00:06:32.392
[music]
00:06:41.150 --> 00:06:43.694
WALTER:
We don't have a cure...
00:06:43.861 --> 00:06:47.407
or a real disease-modifying
drug or treatment.
00:06:50.368 --> 00:06:51.994
It's very scary.
00:06:52.954 --> 00:06:56.290
I think it's also scary 'cause
it's about our brain, right?
00:06:56.416 --> 00:06:59.335
It's about our-- our identity,
and ourself.
00:07:01.212 --> 00:07:03.297
[dog barking]
00:07:13.891 --> 00:07:15.518
JILL HARMON: Look at this!
00:07:18.312 --> 00:07:20.022
Yeah.
00:07:20.148 --> 00:07:23.401
For a long time,
I did not tell people...
00:07:23.568 --> 00:07:26.571
that Don had dementia...
00:07:26.696 --> 00:07:30.408
because I felt that
it would discredit him.
00:07:31.951 --> 00:07:35.746
And in truth, I think it was
also me being uncomfortable.
00:07:35.913 --> 00:07:37.582
Here we go.
00:07:37.748 --> 00:07:42.587
Don's voice and ability
to speak has been affected.
00:07:43.588 --> 00:07:45.631
But then, as time went on...
00:07:45.756 --> 00:07:48.551
and we've been in
a long, long journey...
00:07:48.676 --> 00:07:51.929
I found the ability
to share that with people...
00:07:52.054 --> 00:07:55.057
and just said it was a--
it's like-- was a part of him...
00:07:55.183 --> 00:07:57.894
that it wasn't just who he is.
00:08:04.025 --> 00:08:06.277
He was always so active.
00:08:08.112 --> 00:08:09.739
Who painted that?
00:08:10.656 --> 00:08:13.409
I'll take this off
so you can see better.
00:08:13.534 --> 00:08:17.455
The Sierras.
Blayney Meadows.
00:08:37.642 --> 00:08:39.644
It's your chaps you made.
00:08:39.977 --> 00:08:43.397
Feel it?
How's that feel?
00:08:43.898 --> 00:08:45.316
Soft?
00:08:50.821 --> 00:08:53.282
A point that I really
want to strongly make...
00:08:53.407 --> 00:08:55.785
is that the person
is still there.
00:08:56.827 --> 00:09:00.331
The context can be different,
the behavior can be different...
00:09:00.498 --> 00:09:02.166
but there's a human being
there.
00:09:02.333 --> 00:09:04.377
There is still a person there.
00:09:12.009 --> 00:09:14.470
HELEN ROCHFORD-BRENNAN:
It's like waking up...
00:09:14.595 --> 00:09:18.641
with this fog, gray fog
that is never going to lift.
00:09:19.976 --> 00:09:22.687
It's like a heavy weight that
you're trying to remember...
00:09:22.812 --> 00:09:25.022
and you can't remember,
and you're trying to remember...
00:09:25.189 --> 00:09:27.275
and you can't remember.
00:09:27.400 --> 00:09:29.068
You think, "I just wish
it would lift...
00:09:29.193 --> 00:09:33.531
for just one-- five minutes,
that I could just remember."
00:09:35.575 --> 00:09:38.411
[water softly lapping]
00:09:40.371 --> 00:09:42.373
In rural Ireland,
one of the things...
00:09:42.540 --> 00:09:46.419
that we have to be
very careful of is loneliness.
00:09:47.545 --> 00:09:50.715
I isolated myself.
I didn't tell anybody.
00:09:51.549 --> 00:09:53.551
I didn't talk about it,
because I was afraid...
00:09:53.676 --> 00:09:55.094
to talk about it,
because I thought everybody...
00:09:55.219 --> 00:09:57.597
would think I was mentally ill,
I was nuts.
00:09:58.889 --> 00:10:01.892
My diagnosis
was 65 miles from here.
00:10:03.644 --> 00:10:05.563
Got out into the car,
and I just cried and cried...
00:10:05.688 --> 00:10:07.106
because I thought,
how am I gonna go home...
00:10:07.231 --> 00:10:08.566
and tell Sean?
00:10:08.691 --> 00:10:10.443
How am I going to tell him
about, you know...
00:10:10.568 --> 00:10:12.445
all the memories
we've banked along the way...
00:10:12.570 --> 00:10:15.656
and all the plans we had
for the future are gone?
00:10:18.159 --> 00:10:20.578
I talked to Sean,
and it was very devastating.
00:10:20.703 --> 00:10:23.539
It was devastating,
and then I had to talk to...
00:10:23.664 --> 00:10:25.291
Martin came home,
and we talked...
00:10:25.416 --> 00:10:26.667
I talked to Martin myself.
00:10:26.792 --> 00:10:28.961
We sat at
the kitchen table and...
00:10:32.590 --> 00:10:34.300
[clicks tongue]
00:10:35.509 --> 00:10:38.346
I don't remember
the conversation...
00:10:38.471 --> 00:10:41.057
but I certainly remember
the pain of it.
00:10:44.310 --> 00:10:46.312
There was nobody
for me to talk to.
00:10:47.647 --> 00:10:49.273
If there was just
somebody there...
00:10:49.398 --> 00:10:50.775
that could have said to me...
00:10:50.941 --> 00:10:52.777
"This is how you tell
your children...
00:10:52.943 --> 00:10:54.654
This is how
you tell your husband...
00:10:54.779 --> 00:10:56.614
We are here to support you."
00:10:56.739 --> 00:11:00.242
There was no sign posting,
there was no pathway of care.
00:11:17.760 --> 00:11:21.263
WALTER: People who have worked
their entire lives...
00:11:21.514 --> 00:11:23.724
and have saved
and bought a home...
00:11:25.434 --> 00:11:28.145
all that kind of goes
out the window really fast.
00:11:31.982 --> 00:11:35.111
CLARA: We worked really hard
to save for Walter's education.
00:11:36.529 --> 00:11:37.863
You know who that is?
00:11:37.988 --> 00:11:40.449
CECIL: Did you come back
from tomorrow?
00:11:41.909 --> 00:11:45.705
CLARA: We had to spend it down,
spend down his savings.
00:11:48.040 --> 00:11:50.167
WALTER: You know,
after three months...
00:11:50.334 --> 00:11:53.295
we were basically broke, right?
00:11:57.925 --> 00:12:01.011
There was this really, like,
massive change to our life...
00:12:01.137 --> 00:12:04.014
and you know,
it felt incredibly helpless.
00:12:07.017 --> 00:12:09.687
And then there's a huge segment
of the population...
00:12:09.812 --> 00:12:13.858
that doesn't have
any resources, right?
00:12:14.900 --> 00:12:17.695
[siren wailing
in distance]
00:12:18.696 --> 00:12:21.115
When you have
a population aging...
00:12:21.240 --> 00:12:24.660
not just the United States,
but in all countries...
00:12:24.785 --> 00:12:27.580
you also have a rapid increase
in the number of people...
00:12:27.705 --> 00:12:30.040
who will be living
with dementia.
00:12:31.375 --> 00:12:35.212
So, this is going
to truly be a global problem.
00:12:36.213 --> 00:12:39.008
How do you think about
those future needs?
00:12:42.261 --> 00:12:44.305
JORGE LLIBRE GUERRA: What we
are seeing in Latin America
00:12:44.430 --> 00:12:46.515
is actually that the rates of...
00:12:46.640 --> 00:12:48.142
I mean, the prevalence
for dementia...
00:12:48.267 --> 00:12:49.435
and incidents from dementia...
00:12:49.560 --> 00:12:51.061
it's increasing
in our countries.
00:12:53.314 --> 00:12:57.860
Pakistan has 12 million people
who are over 65 years of age...
00:12:57.985 --> 00:13:02.239
and it is going to be around
45 million in 2050.
00:13:03.324 --> 00:13:06.202
Even if you conduct a research
about some kind of a drug...
00:13:06.327 --> 00:13:08.579
how many people can afford
that drug in Pakistan...
00:13:08.704 --> 00:13:10.956
even after the research
is successful?
00:13:13.542 --> 00:13:15.753
Our healthcare systems
are not read...
00:13:15.878 --> 00:13:17.505
to deal with these populations.
00:13:17.630 --> 00:13:20.299
So, that will have
a huge impact...
00:13:20.424 --> 00:13:21.926
in our economy.
00:13:22.885 --> 00:13:24.595
CLARA: Throw it to him.
00:13:25.429 --> 00:13:26.847
WALTER: Thank you.
00:13:26.972 --> 00:13:30.601
Financially, it absolutely
devastates a family.
00:13:32.812 --> 00:13:36.106
I wrote a lot of letters
to different senators.
00:13:38.859 --> 00:13:41.487
I asked my mom, I said,
"Can I write a letter?"
00:13:44.657 --> 00:13:46.867
I wrote to President
Bill Clinton...
00:13:47.076 --> 00:13:51.497
to Hillary Clinton,
to Senator Edward Kennedy...
00:13:51.622 --> 00:13:54.124
to magazines, and newspapers...
00:13:54.250 --> 00:13:57.002
and authors,
and movie stars too.
00:13:58.462 --> 00:14:01.215
YOUNG WALTER: [on recording]
Dear National Public Radio...
00:14:01.340 --> 00:14:03.634
my name is Walter Dawson.
00:14:03.759 --> 00:14:05.886
I am 10 years old.
00:14:06.011 --> 00:14:09.014
My father
has Alzheimer's disease.
00:14:09.139 --> 00:14:12.685
"I hope more will be done
to fight Alzheimer's disease.
00:14:12.810 --> 00:14:14.687
"It has been really hard
for my mother and me
00:14:14.812 --> 00:14:18.440
"the past eight months
since my father got sick.
00:14:18.566 --> 00:14:20.818
"I miss my father very much.
00:14:20.943 --> 00:14:23.571
[with young Walter]
Sincerely, Walter Dawson."
00:14:23.696 --> 00:14:26.532
[music]
00:14:33.289 --> 00:14:37.751
My letter on air was almost
like a-- a light switch...
00:14:37.877 --> 00:14:40.004
being flipped,
where there was a real change...
00:14:40.170 --> 00:14:43.007
in interest and attention
to what I was trying to do.
00:14:44.008 --> 00:14:47.052
You know, a year or so
after I wrote my first letter...
00:14:47.177 --> 00:14:50.222
I found myself on a plane
to Washington, D.C.
00:14:56.604 --> 00:14:58.063
CLARA: Speak up clearly,
these people...
00:14:58.188 --> 00:14:59.940
the people want to hear
what you've got to say.
00:15:00.065 --> 00:15:00.816
Okay.
00:15:00.941 --> 00:15:02.026
- Okay?
- Okay.
00:15:02.151 --> 00:15:03.611
- Be brave.
- All right.
00:15:03.736 --> 00:15:04.904
WALTER:
I just remember walking in,
00:15:05.029 --> 00:15:06.572
and all these cameras,
you know,
00:15:06.697 --> 00:15:08.073
the pictures being taken.
[cameras clicking]
00:15:08.198 --> 00:15:09.950
MAN: Walter Dawson,
we appreciate you...
00:15:10.075 --> 00:15:12.036
- being here this morning.
- Thank you.
00:15:12.202 --> 00:15:15.372
WALTER: Health reform
and long-term service...
00:15:15.497 --> 00:15:18.250
and support system
was all on the agenda.
00:15:18.375 --> 00:15:20.878
That's what everybody in
the country was talking about.
00:15:21.003 --> 00:15:23.672
There should be a program
for the whole country...
00:15:23.797 --> 00:15:24.965
that covers everyone.
00:15:25.090 --> 00:15:26.717
MAN: Walter, thank you.
00:15:26.884 --> 00:15:30.054
[applause]
00:15:30.179 --> 00:15:32.806
[music]
00:15:34.433 --> 00:15:37.603
WALTER: That was a really,
like, amazing moment.
00:15:38.729 --> 00:15:40.731
Now, people are hearing
our story.
00:15:40.856 --> 00:15:43.108
It's gonna happen.
I was convinced, I think,
00:15:43.233 --> 00:15:47.655
that there was gonna be
a real radical change.
00:15:51.492 --> 00:15:56.580
The health reform process
kind of fell apart...
00:15:56.747 --> 00:15:58.040
a few months after that...
00:15:58.999 --> 00:16:02.586
and there was not
any significant change...
00:16:02.836 --> 00:16:04.755
in this country.
00:16:14.515 --> 00:16:15.975
JILL: There you go.
00:16:16.642 --> 00:16:19.478
Roll over here,
baby doll, okay?
00:16:21.981 --> 00:16:24.274
I've gotta test
your blood sugar.
00:16:25.526 --> 00:16:27.111
[beeping]
00:16:34.994 --> 00:16:38.539
God bless you, pop-pops.
God bless you.
00:16:39.164 --> 00:16:41.041
From one day to the other...
00:16:41.375 --> 00:16:44.128
you don't know what
they're gonna be like...
00:16:44.253 --> 00:16:46.714
or what changes
are gonna take place.
00:16:46.839 --> 00:16:48.382
Okay, buddy.
00:16:50.759 --> 00:16:52.302
I have a counselor.
00:16:52.428 --> 00:16:56.348
I would say to her,
"It's not gonna go away, is it?
00:16:56.473 --> 00:16:59.893
I can't fix it, can I?"
She'd say no.
00:17:00.019 --> 00:17:01.979
I had-- that's what
I had to come to terms with...
00:17:02.146 --> 00:17:04.523
is I couldn't fix it.
00:17:04.648 --> 00:17:06.900
[clock ticking]
00:17:08.027 --> 00:17:10.029
I have had some
of the lowest points...
00:17:10.154 --> 00:17:12.448
I've ever felt in my life.
00:17:13.991 --> 00:17:15.159
I can't stay there...
00:17:15.325 --> 00:17:17.119
because how can I
be there for him...
00:17:17.244 --> 00:17:19.621
and how can I take care
of myself?
00:17:20.414 --> 00:17:24.418
You've gotta rest,
'cause tomorrow we start again.
00:17:32.092 --> 00:17:34.219
It's only been eight months
since he couldn't...
00:17:34.762 --> 00:17:36.180
couldn't walk.
00:17:37.264 --> 00:17:40.517
It’s been very hard
because I was so used...
00:17:40.684 --> 00:17:43.604
to putting him in the car,
and we'd go to the mountains...
00:17:43.729 --> 00:17:46.732
and we'd enjoy the mountains,
and we'd get in the kayak.
00:17:47.858 --> 00:17:51.403
And we'd climb up the stairs
to our bedroom at the cabin.
00:17:54.740 --> 00:17:56.700
We've been together 39 years.
00:17:56.825 --> 00:17:59.328
It'll be 40 years
Valentine's Day.
00:18:00.370 --> 00:18:03.207
We met as teenagers at a dance.
00:18:04.249 --> 00:18:06.794
I'm like foolishly in love
with him.
00:18:06.919 --> 00:18:09.755
[music]
00:18:28.065 --> 00:18:29.942
[birds chirping]
00:18:30.067 --> 00:18:32.903
I don't dwell on it,
but I really miss him.
00:18:36.740 --> 00:18:38.242
To lose some part
of your heart...
00:18:38.408 --> 00:18:41.453
which he is to me,
is really hard.
00:18:51.588 --> 00:18:53.423
Good morning.
00:18:57.427 --> 00:18:59.930
It takes other people
to help me as well.
00:19:00.764 --> 00:19:04.268
You know, I couldn't just keep
going and going and going.
00:19:04.393 --> 00:19:07.938
Thank you for always eating
everything I make for you.
00:19:08.063 --> 00:19:10.440
JILL:
We've been in this 13 years.
00:19:18.115 --> 00:19:22.161
- That is...
- Oh, you wanted my other hand.
00:19:24.037 --> 00:19:26.707
Oh, you're squeezing 'em.
00:19:26.832 --> 00:19:29.042
- Mm-hmm.
- Mm-hmm.
00:19:29.168 --> 00:19:31.545
You're squeezing 'em
'cause you love me.
00:19:34.715 --> 00:19:36.633
I know how that gets.
00:19:36.800 --> 00:19:37.968
You know how that is.
00:19:38.093 --> 00:19:40.220
Some-- some...
00:19:41.597 --> 00:19:45.309
[stammering indistinctly]
00:19:45.475 --> 00:19:47.561
- Actually...
- Actually!
00:19:47.686 --> 00:19:51.607
- That is...
- You said "actually?"
00:19:51.732 --> 00:19:54.484
You said "actually."
00:19:57.279 --> 00:19:59.740
I'm going to lose him.
00:20:01.825 --> 00:20:03.493
I can't save him.
00:20:06.997 --> 00:20:09.041
And so, what I really
have to do...
00:20:09.166 --> 00:20:13.670
is just focus
on what we can do.
00:20:14.296 --> 00:20:16.840
Appreciate him, enjoy him...
00:20:17.674 --> 00:20:23.222
and just continue life
as long-- long as we can.
00:20:25.849 --> 00:20:28.518
[music]
00:20:40.280 --> 00:20:43.742
LEA GRINBERG: Our brain
is very resistant to disease...
00:20:44.576 --> 00:20:46.370
so it takes many years...
00:20:46.536 --> 00:20:49.456
for these neurodegenerative
diseases...
00:20:49.581 --> 00:20:54.378
to accumulate in the brain
and to spread up to a point...
00:20:54.544 --> 00:20:56.505
that people will start
to have symptoms...
00:20:56.630 --> 00:20:57.923
like memory problems.
00:20:58.757 --> 00:21:00.884
This is an amyloid plaque.
00:21:01.009 --> 00:21:04.012
This is the plaques that we see
in Alzheimer's disease.
00:21:05.013 --> 00:21:06.515
LAWLOR: The toxic protein
called amyloid...
00:21:06.640 --> 00:21:09.601
is progressively deposited
in the brains of people...
00:21:09.726 --> 00:21:11.770
and this leads
to nerve cell damage...
00:21:11.895 --> 00:21:13.272
and disconnections.
00:21:13.397 --> 00:21:16.233
And later on,
the symptoms of dementia...
00:21:16.400 --> 00:21:18.652
where there's functional loss.
00:21:18.777 --> 00:21:22.155
[MILLER]: So, cardiovascular
disease, hypertension...
00:21:22.281 --> 00:21:25.409
diabetes, obesity...
00:21:25.534 --> 00:21:28.620
head trauma,
lack of literacy...
00:21:28.745 --> 00:21:31.415
these are all very potent
risk factors...
00:21:31.540 --> 00:21:34.584
for degenerative disease
in elders.
00:21:35.544 --> 00:21:37.629
BRIAN:
Now, that's the bad news.
00:21:37.754 --> 00:21:39.339
However, there is good news.
00:21:40.424 --> 00:21:44.094
[MILLER]: We began to realize
that about 30-40%...
00:21:44.469 --> 00:21:47.597
of dementia in elders
could have been prevented.
00:21:49.641 --> 00:21:52.185
[ROBERTSON]: Brain health
is quite a new concept.
00:21:52.311 --> 00:21:55.105
The idea-- we know
what heart health is.
00:21:55.355 --> 00:21:59.484
So, we know that we have
about 40% of the rate...
00:21:59.609 --> 00:22:03.196
of heart attacks now
than we did 50 years ago...
00:22:03.739 --> 00:22:07.117
not largely because of advances
in high tech medicine...
00:22:07.534 --> 00:22:11.413
but because they worked out
what the risk factors were...
00:22:11.788 --> 00:22:14.416
and they got people
to change their behavior.
00:22:16.835 --> 00:22:18.962
[DR.]: What can we do to prevent
How can we make sure people...
00:22:19.087 --> 00:22:20.630
are getting access to care?
00:22:20.756 --> 00:22:22.924
That we have stroke prevention,
hypertension is treated...
00:22:23.050 --> 00:22:26.720
people are active, both
physically and cognitively.
00:22:26.845 --> 00:22:29.473
[people chattering]
00:22:30.807 --> 00:22:32.642
[LAWLOR]: I think the problem
up until now...
00:22:32.809 --> 00:22:34.144
and I've been
working as a doctor...
00:22:34.811 --> 00:22:37.397
dealing with patients--
is that we haven't...
00:22:37.522 --> 00:22:39.649
really been able
to translate this evidence...
00:22:39.816 --> 00:22:41.485
into policy and practice.
00:22:43.487 --> 00:22:45.197
We really believe
that one of the big gaps...
00:22:45.322 --> 00:22:47.741
in terms of brain health
and dementia prevention...
00:22:47.866 --> 00:22:50.160
is the lack of leadership.
00:22:50.327 --> 00:22:52.621
[people chattering]
00:22:58.168 --> 00:22:59.628
[LAWLOR]: The Global
Brain Health Institute...
00:22:59.753 --> 00:23:02.798
was formed to tackle
the problem of brain health...
00:23:02.923 --> 00:23:06.343
and lead dementia prevention
worldwide.
00:23:07.386 --> 00:23:09.971
JORGE:
If we want to find a solution...
00:23:10.097 --> 00:23:12.182
we have to work
in collaboration.
00:23:12.307 --> 00:23:14.309
So, having multiple
collaborations...
00:23:14.434 --> 00:23:17.270
with multiple researchers,
multiple countries...
00:23:17.396 --> 00:23:20.690
I think that's the only
thruway to find a solution...
00:23:20.816 --> 00:23:22.192
to find a cure.
00:23:22.317 --> 00:23:24.403
Like, it would be important
for someone...
00:23:24.528 --> 00:23:26.696
someone like me
as a neuropsychologist...
00:23:26.822 --> 00:23:29.825
to collaborate with someone who
works with health economics...
00:23:29.950 --> 00:23:33.578
so that we can convince
policy makers...
00:23:33.703 --> 00:23:38.542
about the need to--
to invest in dementia care...
00:23:38.708 --> 00:23:40.710
within-- within our countries.
00:23:40.877 --> 00:23:43.505
[music]
00:23:45.424 --> 00:23:47.384
My name is Shamiel McFarlane.
00:23:47.551 --> 00:23:51.721
I'm an Atlantic Fellow
for Equity in Brain Health.
00:23:51.888 --> 00:23:53.807
Mr. McDonald?
00:23:53.932 --> 00:23:56.810
I want to start
the first home-based...
00:23:56.935 --> 00:23:59.563
primary care program
specifically tailored...
00:23:59.729 --> 00:24:02.732
for cognitively-impaired
isolated older adults...
00:24:02.899 --> 00:24:04.651
in Jamaica.
00:24:04.776 --> 00:24:07.571
The memory never so good.
- No.
00:24:07.737 --> 00:24:10.699
I always blame it
on maybe the old age.
00:24:10.824 --> 00:24:14.369
- Not the best. Not the best.
- Yeah. All right.
00:24:14.494 --> 00:24:16.413
[SHAMIEL]: Dementia
and cognitive impairment...
00:24:16.580 --> 00:24:19.332
aren't really in the forefront.
00:24:19.458 --> 00:24:22.043
Having this program
will teach doctors...
00:24:22.169 --> 00:24:25.255
that this is something
that we need to check for.
00:24:26.298 --> 00:24:28.550
A physician
and a social worker...
00:24:28.675 --> 00:24:31.344
visiting every four weeks...
00:24:31.470 --> 00:24:33.763
and seeing
if this makes a difference...
00:24:33.930 --> 00:24:37.476
with their quality of life
indicators.
00:24:40.770 --> 00:24:43.815
One thing we wanted was
a family album, so here it is.
00:24:43.940 --> 00:24:46.443
SHAMIEL: My grandmother
had dementia.
00:24:47.277 --> 00:24:49.738
She was-- she was,
you know, the matriarch.
00:24:49.863 --> 00:24:51.781
MAN:
Here is your grandmother here.
00:24:51.907 --> 00:24:53.450
This is when she actually
lived in Jamaica.
00:24:53.617 --> 00:24:54.951
Grandma in her nurse's uniform.
00:24:55.619 --> 00:24:57.746
And this is Mom
in her nurse's uniform.
00:24:58.246 --> 00:25:01.750
She definitely had
an impact on me.
00:25:01.875 --> 00:25:03.752
She passed
when I was in med school.
00:25:08.131 --> 00:25:09.633
Anything else going on?
00:25:09.758 --> 00:25:11.593
SHAMIEL: For those persons
who are isolated...
00:25:11.718 --> 00:25:16.389
who do not have benefit
of family, social support...
00:25:16.515 --> 00:25:18.433
they'll be able to get
the help that they need.
00:25:24.397 --> 00:25:26.107
[DR. LAWLOR]: The idea is that
if you can develop...
00:25:26.233 --> 00:25:28.485
these interventions
on a pilot basis...
00:25:28.610 --> 00:25:31.821
and if they're effective,
then they could be scaled up.
00:25:36.743 --> 00:25:39.162
DR. VALCOUR: We know that
the largest number...
00:25:39.329 --> 00:25:41.373
of dementia cases
around the world...
00:25:41.498 --> 00:25:43.500
will be occurring
in low-middle-income countries..
00:25:43.625 --> 00:25:46.169
because those populations
are aging.
00:25:46.294 --> 00:25:47.837
It's critically important
for us to address...
00:25:48.004 --> 00:25:50.048
a public health approach
to preventing dementia...
00:25:50.173 --> 00:25:51.633
in any way we can.
00:25:54.803 --> 00:25:58.640
We were able to go into
the Za'atari refugee camp...
00:25:58.765 --> 00:26:02.852
in Jordan, about 10 kilometers
away from Syria...
00:26:03.019 --> 00:26:05.188
to try to understand
psychological health...
00:26:05.313 --> 00:26:06.982
and risk for dementia.
00:26:14.072 --> 00:26:18.910
There was food insecurity.
There was family insecurity.
00:26:20.579 --> 00:26:22.872
There were financial
insecurities.
00:26:23.832 --> 00:26:26.918
Stress is not good
for the brain.
00:26:28.044 --> 00:26:30.046
Even early-life stressors...
00:26:30.171 --> 00:26:34.551
all of these things
have to have a terrible toll.
00:26:40.473 --> 00:26:42.726
[DR. VALCOUR]: The development
of a resilient brain...
00:26:42.851 --> 00:26:44.728
which is what we think
is necessary...
00:26:44.894 --> 00:26:47.897
to prevent dementia--
is so tightly linked...
00:26:48.023 --> 00:26:50.692
to the social determinants
of health.
00:26:52.193 --> 00:26:56.698
Where you're born,
what communities you live in...
00:26:58.742 --> 00:27:01.328
it's a very tight link
to equity.
00:27:02.996 --> 00:27:06.082
And it's a bit
of a humanitarian crisis.
00:27:06.958 --> 00:27:09.794
[people chattering,
bell tolling]
00:27:11.171 --> 00:27:12.922
[people chattering]
00:27:13.048 --> 00:27:14.924
Good morning,
everyone in San Francisco...
00:27:15.050 --> 00:27:17.427
and good afternoon,
everyone in Dublin.
00:27:17.552 --> 00:27:19.971
[DR. MILLER]: Leaders at UCSF
work with leaders...
00:27:20.096 --> 00:27:22.682
at Trinity College,
two of the places...
00:27:22.807 --> 00:27:25.894
focused on brain health
across the world.
00:27:26.019 --> 00:27:27.479
Lingani.
00:27:27.604 --> 00:27:29.689
[DR. MILLER]: We don't just
want to train physicians.
00:27:29.814 --> 00:27:31.608
We don't think
that will be adequate.
00:27:31.733 --> 00:27:34.569
We want to change societies.
00:27:36.946 --> 00:27:38.948
I know in Botswana
there's a lot of stigma...
00:27:39.074 --> 00:27:40.992
against dementia
because it's not recognized.
00:27:41.117 --> 00:27:43.578
People don't have knowledge
about what it is.
00:27:45.622 --> 00:27:48.583
People might say
this person was a witch...
00:27:48.708 --> 00:27:50.543
or practiced witchcraft...
00:27:50.669 --> 00:27:53.672
which is why they are acting
the way they are.
00:27:55.965 --> 00:27:58.134
LORINA NACI: All of our
fellows, when they go back...
00:27:58.301 --> 00:28:01.388
they can help communities
use their existing resources...
00:28:01.513 --> 00:28:03.431
to support people
with dementia.
00:28:04.808 --> 00:28:06.810
How can people with dementia
have a voice...
00:28:06.976 --> 00:28:09.646
and be represented,
and not be stigmatized...
00:28:09.771 --> 00:28:12.857
and also how to push
science forward?
00:28:12.982 --> 00:28:15.652
[music]
00:28:23.785 --> 00:28:25.912
[DR. VALCOUR]: We are coming up
with new solutions...
00:28:26.037 --> 00:28:28.373
by mixing people
from various disciplines...
00:28:28.498 --> 00:28:30.542
and regions from around
the world....
00:28:30.667 --> 00:28:32.502
to think outside of the box.
00:28:32.627 --> 00:28:34.504
[all growling]
00:28:34.629 --> 00:28:35.839
[laughter]
00:28:36.005 --> 00:28:38.258
It cannot be a pure
biomedical model.
00:28:38.383 --> 00:28:39.759
We need to involve arts.
00:28:39.884 --> 00:28:42.762
We need to involve theater,
drama, music.
00:28:42.887 --> 00:28:44.848
Not many people
can read in Pakistan...
00:28:45.014 --> 00:28:47.559
if you go to the far-flung
rural areas.
00:28:47.684 --> 00:28:49.519
I've been working
about 15 years...
00:28:49.644 --> 00:28:51.688
with people with dementia
and music.
00:28:51.813 --> 00:28:55.024
♪ Well, it's one for the money,
two for the show ♪
00:28:55.191 --> 00:28:57.819
I remember this man
who was in a chair...
00:28:57.944 --> 00:29:00.989
and the staff said he hasn't
spoken to anybody for months.
00:29:01.114 --> 00:29:02.866
So, I bring him
some drumsticks...
00:29:02.991 --> 00:29:04.617
and then suddenly, it's like...
[imitating drumbeat]
00:29:04.743 --> 00:29:07.537
This incredibly
complex drum solo.
00:29:07.662 --> 00:29:09.080
You know, my jaw dropped.
00:29:09.205 --> 00:29:13.752
♪ Step on my blue suede shoes ♪
Woo-hoo!
00:29:13.877 --> 00:29:17.130
You could almost talk
about the powers of music...
00:29:17.255 --> 00:29:20.008
that it can act
on so many different levels.
00:29:20.133 --> 00:29:23.219
So, it could be a motivator
for physical activity.
00:29:24.095 --> 00:29:27.557
It could be
an inducer of memory...
00:29:27.682 --> 00:29:30.560
a real powerful recollection
of self-identity.
00:29:30.727 --> 00:29:33.062
[chuckles]
Nice to see you!
00:29:33.188 --> 00:29:35.064
[piano playing]
00:29:35.190 --> 00:29:36.524
[CATHERINE JORDAN]:
I'm a neuroscientist...
00:29:36.649 --> 00:29:38.234
as well as a pianist.
00:29:39.736 --> 00:29:41.780
I was really fascinated
by the effect music...
00:29:41.905 --> 00:29:43.406
how music changes the brain.
00:29:44.282 --> 00:29:46.034
As someone that's listening
to the piece of music...
00:29:46.159 --> 00:29:47.786
that's really
meaningful to them...
00:29:47.911 --> 00:29:50.163
it can trigger
autobiographical memories.
00:29:51.247 --> 00:29:54.918
This lifeline can help
their anxiety, depression...
00:29:55.043 --> 00:29:56.753
and in some cases,
it's more effective...
00:29:56.878 --> 00:29:58.296
than drug treatment.
00:29:58.963 --> 00:30:00.548
Then, why isn't this made
available to people?
00:30:00.673 --> 00:30:02.091
Why don't people know about it?
00:30:03.301 --> 00:30:04.928
The reason a lot of people
don't know about it...
00:30:05.053 --> 00:30:07.430
is that there's a lack
of scientific evidence.
00:30:08.306 --> 00:30:10.225
Why is this having
such a huge effect...
00:30:10.350 --> 00:30:11.768
on someone with dementia?
00:30:11.893 --> 00:30:13.686
And so, that's what I'm doing
in my fellowship.
00:30:15.939 --> 00:30:17.982
[DAVID LOUGHREY]:
I'm a research psychologist...
00:30:18.107 --> 00:30:19.442
looking at age-related
hearing loss...
00:30:19.609 --> 00:30:21.152
as a risk factor for dementia.
00:30:22.362 --> 00:30:23.780
As people lose their hearing...
00:30:23.947 --> 00:30:25.573
in order to compensate
for their hearing loss...
00:30:25.698 --> 00:30:27.951
they have to pay more attention
to what people are saying.
00:30:28.076 --> 00:30:29.786
And this appears
to draw resources...
00:30:29.911 --> 00:30:31.329
away from other parts
of the brain...
00:30:31.454 --> 00:30:33.748
which are important
for things such as memory.
00:30:35.458 --> 00:30:36.626
That makes sense.
This is something...
00:30:36.793 --> 00:30:38.044
I've experienced every day.
00:30:38.169 --> 00:30:40.755
[DAVID]: I was born with
a profound hearing loss...
00:30:40.880 --> 00:30:44.259
and I was very interested
to research this more.
00:30:44.384 --> 00:30:46.553
- You wanna give it a go?
- [MAN]: We'll give it a go.
00:30:46.678 --> 00:30:49.138
DAVID:
So, this EEG experiment is...
00:30:49.264 --> 00:30:51.182
it's an EEG memory test.
00:30:53.351 --> 00:30:55.019
[exhales sharply]
00:30:55.144 --> 00:30:57.313
If we can figure out
why hearing loss...
00:30:57.438 --> 00:30:58.857
is associated with dementia...
00:30:58.982 --> 00:31:01.442
and treating hearing loss
can provide a pathway...
00:31:01.568 --> 00:31:03.236
to reducing the risk
of dementia...
00:31:03.361 --> 00:31:05.154
then it could be enormous.
00:31:05.738 --> 00:31:07.574
[overlapping chatter]
00:31:07.991 --> 00:31:10.535
[DR. LAWLOR]:
This community of fellows...
00:31:10.660 --> 00:31:12.036
we hope that over
the next 15 years...
00:31:12.161 --> 00:31:14.080
we will have up
to 600 fellows.
00:31:14.205 --> 00:31:18.042
They will be able to impact not
only in their own countries...
00:31:18.167 --> 00:31:20.837
but also, because they
are networked together...
00:31:20.962 --> 00:31:24.007
they would be able to have
an effect globally.
00:31:25.091 --> 00:31:26.593
And that's really
the theory of change.
00:31:27.260 --> 00:31:29.888
[music]
00:31:32.265 --> 00:31:35.518
They said in five more years,
they might have a cure.
00:31:35.685 --> 00:31:37.353
[WALTER]:
Everything that happened...
00:31:37.478 --> 00:31:40.189
and the experience of seeing
the political...
00:31:40.315 --> 00:31:44.861
and policy process firsthand,
has very much shaped my life.
00:31:47.155 --> 00:31:48.781
Pretty much from that point
forward...
00:31:48.907 --> 00:31:51.618
I wanted to do
something in my life...
00:31:51.743 --> 00:31:55.705
to work on health policy
and aging issues.
00:31:55.872 --> 00:31:58.374
Alzheimer's starts in the
memory area, the hippocampus.
00:31:58.583 --> 00:32:01.085
[WALTER]: I'm a fellow with the
Global Brain Health Institute...
00:32:01.210 --> 00:32:05.131
with a focus on public policy
and health policy.
00:32:05.256 --> 00:32:07.300
[people chattering]
00:32:08.760 --> 00:32:10.887
[WALTER]: We had the chance
to go to the brain bank...
00:32:11.012 --> 00:32:13.264
at the hospital
in Sao Paolo, Brazil...
00:32:13.389 --> 00:32:16.142
which was a really powerful
experience.
00:32:19.020 --> 00:32:21.689
So, after we process all
the brains and we put this...
00:32:21.814 --> 00:32:24.192
[DR. GRINBERG]: I was born
and raised in Brazil.
00:32:24.317 --> 00:32:26.110
Actually, Brazil is one
of the only countries...
00:32:26.235 --> 00:32:28.780
in which autopsy
is still mandatory.
00:32:29.364 --> 00:32:32.075
So, we have one of the largest
brain banks...
00:32:32.200 --> 00:32:35.411
for these kind of studies
around the world.
00:32:36.496 --> 00:32:38.998
You can do research
in the very early stages...
00:32:39.123 --> 00:32:43.211
of the disease, as opposed
to donors from memory clinics...
00:32:43.336 --> 00:32:46.464
so they're already very sick
by the time they die.
00:32:47.215 --> 00:32:49.759
In Alzheimer's disease,
we find very early changes...
00:32:49.884 --> 00:32:51.260
in this region.
00:32:52.804 --> 00:32:54.722
[DR. GRINBERG]: This is why I
could make my findings...
00:32:54.847 --> 00:32:57.350
that Alzheimer's disease
changes...
00:32:57.475 --> 00:33:00.770
actually start developing
in a part of the brain...
00:33:00.895 --> 00:33:03.690
called brain stem,
that it's here in our neck.
00:33:04.482 --> 00:33:08.111
So, the question is,
what if we can detect...
00:33:08.277 --> 00:33:10.613
these very early changes
in the brain...
00:33:10.780 --> 00:33:13.116
and stop the process
right there?
00:33:13.282 --> 00:33:17.453
To test drugs, and see if they
can really halt...
00:33:17.578 --> 00:33:19.706
the disease spread.
00:33:22.625 --> 00:33:24.293
[DR. VALCOUR]: While others
are doing fantastic work...
00:33:24.419 --> 00:33:28.965
in trying to find cures,
we must address the issues now.
00:33:30.800 --> 00:33:32.093
[DR. ROBERTSON]: And we hope
that that can happen...
00:33:32.218 --> 00:33:34.721
with prevention,
that people are not stuck...
00:33:34.846 --> 00:33:37.306
in a pessimistic mindset.
00:33:37.432 --> 00:33:38.975
[music]
00:33:39.142 --> 00:33:41.060
[DR. LAWLOR]: I think we have
to change the narrative...
00:33:41.185 --> 00:33:43.479
and create a framework of hope
around dementia...
00:33:43.604 --> 00:33:46.274
because there are a lot
of things that we can do.
00:33:46.399 --> 00:33:48.443
[laughter]
00:33:49.569 --> 00:33:53.948
Perception about aging is not
very positive in general.
00:33:54.073 --> 00:33:55.992
And there's like the stigma.
00:33:56.159 --> 00:34:00.747
There's so much, uh, fear.
00:34:00.872 --> 00:34:03.458
I think that wisdom
and experience...
00:34:03.583 --> 00:34:06.377
is something that
they have more than we do.
00:34:06.753 --> 00:34:10.173
Somehow, society has not found
a way to share that wisdom.
00:34:10.339 --> 00:34:11.841
Most people think
that old people...
00:34:12.008 --> 00:34:15.303
are not intelligent somehow.
00:34:15.428 --> 00:34:17.597
We need to explain-- you know,
we want to explain things...
00:34:17.722 --> 00:34:19.390
we think that they're weak.
00:34:19.515 --> 00:34:21.100
[grunting]
00:34:23.686 --> 00:34:25.271
Let's go!
00:34:25.396 --> 00:34:27.940
[music]
00:34:41.829 --> 00:34:43.206
Whoo!
00:34:54.842 --> 00:34:56.302
ALEX: Hopefully,
we’re all going to be old...
00:34:56.427 --> 00:34:58.596
we're all going to get old,
and it's something...
00:34:58.721 --> 00:35:00.223
we don't want to think about.
00:35:01.390 --> 00:35:04.393
And I think it's good that
we not only think about it...
00:35:04.560 --> 00:35:07.897
but that we have a lot
of examples to look forward to.
00:35:09.982 --> 00:35:14.403
I've been surfing since 1960.
00:35:14.529 --> 00:35:15.905
He's not groaning today.
00:35:16.030 --> 00:35:18.157
I groan a lot.
[groaning]
00:35:20.118 --> 00:35:22.203
[people chattering]
00:35:23.663 --> 00:35:25.623
My name is Alex Kornhuber.
00:35:25.748 --> 00:35:28.501
I'm a photographer
from Lima, Peru.
00:35:28.626 --> 00:35:32.046
I'm photographing
a lot of aging surfers.
00:35:33.172 --> 00:35:35.133
I'm an aging surfer myself.
00:35:37.135 --> 00:35:40.054
There's an exercise part to it.
00:35:40.888 --> 00:35:42.974
There's also
a knowledge part to it.
00:35:44.433 --> 00:35:46.561
All surfers, they look
at the sea, and immediately...
00:35:46.686 --> 00:35:49.397
we can tell where the swell
is coming from.
00:35:49.522 --> 00:35:53.609
We understand tides,
wind, swell directions.
00:35:55.611 --> 00:35:58.489
You have to make decisions
very quickly.
00:35:58.614 --> 00:35:59.991
You don't doubt.
00:36:01.284 --> 00:36:04.120
And that's something
that gets better with time.
00:36:04.245 --> 00:36:07.248
As we age, we learn more
about the ocean.
00:36:09.625 --> 00:36:14.130
It gives you this feeling
of maybe awe, extreme awe.
00:36:15.381 --> 00:36:17.800
So, I think that knowledge
keeps our brain engaged.
00:36:18.134 --> 00:36:20.094
[laughter and chatter]
00:36:20.219 --> 00:36:22.972
It's not just
about surfing, is it?
00:36:23.139 --> 00:36:27.602
It's about having something
that turns you on...
00:36:27.727 --> 00:36:30.646
later in life,
or just keeping you going.
00:36:32.064 --> 00:36:36.444
Whether it's hiking,
walking, golf, swimming...
00:36:36.569 --> 00:36:39.488
whatever it is,
you don't ever wanna stop.
00:36:39.614 --> 00:36:42.158
You know?
[laughing]
00:36:43.117 --> 00:36:43.910
[dog barking]
00:36:44.535 --> 00:36:46.871
[GREG]: You know, it's a way
of life, really.
00:36:46.996 --> 00:36:49.165
It's more than just a sport.
00:36:51.459 --> 00:36:53.836
[ALEX]: There's a huge
community aspect, yeah.
00:36:54.629 --> 00:36:57.298
I think it's centered
around the good feelings...
00:36:57.423 --> 00:36:59.926
the feeling that you get
from riding waves.
00:37:02.887 --> 00:37:06.474
You sort of have this, like,
ecstatic feeling...
00:37:06.599 --> 00:37:09.227
like you're just
bursting with joy.
00:37:12.480 --> 00:37:15.650
I still see it,
I see it in elder surfers.
00:37:17.693 --> 00:37:19.403
We call it "stoke."
00:37:21.364 --> 00:37:24.075
It's changing my narrative
of life...
00:37:24.659 --> 00:37:26.911
to look forward to aging.
00:37:29.580 --> 00:37:31.999
I think the more you see it,
the more you embrace it.
00:37:32.124 --> 00:37:34.961
[music]
00:37:48.099 --> 00:37:49.767
[MAN]:
Go. Move it up yourself, go.
00:37:49.892 --> 00:37:50.935
Yeah, yeah.
00:37:51.060 --> 00:37:52.812
That makes the muscles.
00:37:52.937 --> 00:37:55.064
Eight, seven, six...
00:37:55.189 --> 00:37:58.025
[chatter and applause]
00:38:00.736 --> 00:38:02.238
[DR. SEAN KENNELLY]:
What's good for your heart...
00:38:02.363 --> 00:38:04.323
is what's good for your brain.
00:38:04.448 --> 00:38:07.159
You want to get people thinking,
you know, on a wellness basis...
00:38:07.285 --> 00:38:09.078
rather than reflecting too much
on the illness...
00:38:09.245 --> 00:38:11.747
that got them into ExWell.
00:38:13.749 --> 00:38:15.459
[DON BYRNE]:
You're always doing something...
00:38:15.584 --> 00:38:19.422
something different,
so you're not bored.
00:38:19.547 --> 00:38:21.132
[laughing]
00:38:21.257 --> 00:38:24.343
Giving out leaflets,
and telling people to go walk...
00:38:24.468 --> 00:38:26.971
was not going to be
impactful enough.
00:38:27.096 --> 00:38:29.598
We needed to present them
with a program.
00:38:29.724 --> 00:38:33.060
I can see the benefits that
would have accrued to me...
00:38:33.185 --> 00:38:34.895
had I started 10 years ago.
00:38:35.021 --> 00:38:36.314
Yeah, but by the same token...
00:38:36.439 --> 00:38:37.940
there's nothing you did
to cause this.
00:38:38.107 --> 00:38:40.318
In your dad's case,
we checked to see...
00:38:40.443 --> 00:38:42.320
what might be causing
memory loss. It’s...
00:38:42.445 --> 00:38:44.155
mild cognitive impairment...
00:38:44.280 --> 00:38:46.115
where somebody
has a memory nuisance...
00:38:46.240 --> 00:38:47.825
- that's kind of persisting.
- Yeah.
00:38:47.950 --> 00:38:51.037
Our main focus then
is to get the very best...
00:38:51.162 --> 00:38:52.788
out of the memory that's there.
00:38:54.123 --> 00:38:55.291
So, Don, remember when
we were talking...
00:38:55.416 --> 00:38:57.126
about the diet, the nutrition...
00:38:57.293 --> 00:38:59.170
about what we could reduce
and stuff like that.
00:38:59.295 --> 00:39:01.172
SEAN: It’s medically supervised.
00:39:01.297 --> 00:39:03.424
I am prescribing this
as I would their medication.
00:39:03.549 --> 00:39:05.009
Okay, I know it's quite hard...
00:39:05.134 --> 00:39:06.427
for the first few days
because...
00:39:06.552 --> 00:39:08.346
Especially giving up chocolate.
00:39:08.471 --> 00:39:10.723
[SEAN]: Being in the community,
as opposed to the hospital...
00:39:10.848 --> 00:39:13.559
kinda takes away a bit
of the stigma attached to it.
00:39:14.477 --> 00:39:16.145
A lot of the times when
we talk about dementia...
00:39:16.270 --> 00:39:17.897
we talk about memory,
but in reality...
00:39:18.022 --> 00:39:19.440
- it's about functioning.
- Yeah.
00:39:19.565 --> 00:39:21.776
Have you noticed any change
in Don's ability...
00:39:21.901 --> 00:39:23.235
to do his day-to-day things.
00:39:23.361 --> 00:39:26.655
Well, I know my mum
will tell us things...
00:39:26.781 --> 00:39:29.075
because he might ring her
from the supermarket...
00:39:29.200 --> 00:39:30.993
where he rang
and he had to ask her...
00:39:31.118 --> 00:39:32.703
what kitchen rolls were.
00:39:32.828 --> 00:39:34.330
- Were you looking at a list?
- I made the list.
00:39:34.497 --> 00:39:37.625
I'm looking at the words
"kitchen rolls..."
00:39:37.750 --> 00:39:40.211
and I'm absolutely blank.
00:39:40.336 --> 00:39:41.962
I have to phone...
00:39:42.088 --> 00:39:43.297
and say,
"What are kitchen rolls?"
00:39:43.422 --> 00:39:44.757
- Mm.
- And then she says...
00:39:44.882 --> 00:39:47.051
what they are and,
oh, for God's sake.
00:39:47.176 --> 00:39:49.845
But on the plus side,
you knew how to work around it.
00:39:50.012 --> 00:39:51.347
- Oh yeah, yeah.
- And I think...
00:39:51.514 --> 00:39:52.890
I would be reassured by that.
00:39:53.015 --> 00:39:54.934
So, you knew who to ring,
and you knew how to ring...
00:39:55.059 --> 00:39:57.478
- and you knew what to ask.
- Sure, yes, yeah.
00:39:57.603 --> 00:40:00.773
So, you-- you came up
and you got to the solution.
00:40:00.898 --> 00:40:02.316
[music playing]
00:40:02.441 --> 00:40:03.734
LAURI MCDERMOTT:
Keep going.
00:40:03.859 --> 00:40:05.986
[indistinct chatter]
00:40:06.112 --> 00:40:08.989
If you're out of breath,
keep your hands on your hips.
00:40:09.115 --> 00:40:10.658
[LAURI]: For brain health,
by exercising...
00:40:10.783 --> 00:40:13.369
we're reducing
the risk of dementia...
00:40:13.536 --> 00:40:15.371
we're reducing how quickly
it will progress.
00:40:15.496 --> 00:40:16.705
And punching forward.
00:40:16.831 --> 00:40:18.249
Let's everybody
pick up the pace!
00:40:18.374 --> 00:40:20.334
This is for five, four...
00:40:20.459 --> 00:40:22.420
And for quality of life,
of being around other people...
00:40:22.545 --> 00:40:25.005
suffering from illness,
but in a positive way.
00:40:25.131 --> 00:40:26.465
So, everybody is fighting back.
00:40:26.590 --> 00:40:28.801
Everybody's trying
to better themselves.
00:40:30.553 --> 00:40:32.888
WOMAN: This sort of brings you
out of yourself...
00:40:33.013 --> 00:40:34.807
and makes you do
a little bit more...
00:40:34.932 --> 00:40:36.642
than you think you can.
00:40:36.767 --> 00:40:40.396
LAURI: Punch for five,
four, three, two...
00:40:40.563 --> 00:40:42.523
and one, brilliant.
00:40:42.648 --> 00:40:44.400
SEAN: So, even if we come up
with a medicine...
00:40:44.525 --> 00:40:48.112
these will all be very, very
important paradigms...
00:40:48.237 --> 00:40:49.947
in the management and care
for somebody...
00:40:50.072 --> 00:40:51.991
who's living with dementia.
00:40:52.116 --> 00:40:53.409
So, ExWell is bringing
the body...
00:40:53.576 --> 00:40:55.619
and your heart
to the gym, okay?
00:40:55.744 --> 00:40:58.706
Meeting new people,
that's the ultimate workout.
00:41:01.041 --> 00:41:03.252
[people chattering]
00:41:04.253 --> 00:41:06.881
[laughing, muttering]
00:41:07.006 --> 00:41:09.800
It's an exercise in trying
to remember people's names.
00:41:09.925 --> 00:41:12.678
You meet 'em on a Tuesday,
and the next thing, on Friday...
00:41:12.803 --> 00:41:14.763
you're saying hello and you're
trying to remember their names.
00:41:14.889 --> 00:41:16.265
But eventually, we're getting
through, aren't we?
00:41:16.432 --> 00:41:17.308
Yes, yeah.
00:41:17.433 --> 00:41:19.310
[people chattering]
00:41:19.435 --> 00:41:21.020
[LAURI]:
We're here to facilitate it...
00:41:21.145 --> 00:41:22.313
but it's the participants
themselves...
00:41:22.438 --> 00:41:24.940
that give
each other the support.
00:41:25.065 --> 00:41:26.901
We find that a lot of people
aren't actually well enough...
00:41:27.026 --> 00:41:28.861
to take part,
but they're coming on anyway...
00:41:28.986 --> 00:41:31.197
just to get out of the house
and see their friends...
00:41:31.322 --> 00:41:33.115
and have a cup of tea
at the end.
00:41:33.240 --> 00:41:35.868
[applause]
00:41:39.371 --> 00:41:41.790
Good man.
Good man.
00:41:42.833 --> 00:41:44.460
KENNELLEY: So, I’m gonna write
up your prescription...
00:41:44.585 --> 00:41:46.504
just for another
six months of ExWell.
00:41:47.463 --> 00:41:48.839
When people come
into the office...
00:41:48.964 --> 00:41:50.758
there is that sense
of fear and futility...
00:41:50.883 --> 00:41:53.761
and we hope that we give them
a sense of empowerment.
00:41:53.886 --> 00:41:56.847
That is living with dementia.
That’s not being, you know...
00:41:56.972 --> 00:41:59.058
- imprisoned by it.
- Ah, thank you so much.
00:41:59.183 --> 00:42:00.893
SEAN: Kind of retreating
into your shell...
00:42:01.018 --> 00:42:02.770
trying to hide away.
00:42:02.895 --> 00:42:04.480
She slept and everything.
00:42:04.647 --> 00:42:06.148
[DR. KENNELLEY]: The most
important intervention...
00:42:06.315 --> 00:42:10.569
that we need to make isn't on
people who have dementia.
00:42:10.694 --> 00:42:12.988
It's on us.
It's on society.
00:42:13.781 --> 00:42:15.616
We've become such
a liberal society...
00:42:15.741 --> 00:42:17.034
in so many ways...
00:42:17.159 --> 00:42:18.619
but when it comes
to older people...
00:42:18.744 --> 00:42:20.329
and when it comes to
people living with dementia...
00:42:20.496 --> 00:42:21.705
if they start acting
a little bit different...
00:42:21.830 --> 00:42:24.667
often society
cannot be very tolerant.
00:42:26.794 --> 00:42:29.421
[music]
00:42:36.345 --> 00:42:37.888
I'm Lenny White.
00:42:38.013 --> 00:42:41.433
I'm a mobile barber
for those living with dementia.
00:42:41.559 --> 00:42:44.353
And I will travel all around
the north of Ireland...
00:42:44.478 --> 00:42:46.689
and it's basically
a pop-up barbershop.
00:42:46.855 --> 00:42:50.526
So, I'll bring in the barbershop
experience to these men.
00:42:54.572 --> 00:42:56.031
It's all the small little
things...
00:42:56.198 --> 00:42:58.284
that make a massive difference.
00:42:58.409 --> 00:43:00.369
I really enjoy
going into their world...
00:43:00.536 --> 00:43:02.871
getting that person to open up.
00:43:03.038 --> 00:43:04.248
[hair clippers buzzing]
00:43:04.373 --> 00:43:07.876
Oh!
[cheering]
00:43:08.043 --> 00:43:09.753
[LENNY]: It's a very
familiar setting.
00:43:09.878 --> 00:43:13.549
They recognize, you know,
the signs, the smells.
00:43:13.674 --> 00:43:16.260
It's a feeling of being
in an old-time barbershop.
00:43:16.385 --> 00:43:18.178
[music playing]
00:43:18.304 --> 00:43:19.847
Shh, the lady's singing.
[chuckles]
00:43:19.972 --> 00:43:21.640
[LENNY]:
They're hearing the music...
00:43:21.765 --> 00:43:24.518
that they would have heard
when they were my age.
00:43:26.520 --> 00:43:28.689
- Right, give me your glasses.
- All together.
00:43:28.814 --> 00:43:30.899
[singing]
00:43:32.359 --> 00:43:33.902
[LENNY]: I'm trying to make
that person...
00:43:34.028 --> 00:43:36.155
feel good for that day,
and that will actually have...
00:43:36.280 --> 00:43:37.906
a lasting impact
on that person.
00:43:38.073 --> 00:43:39.617
You know, because then the rest
of the day, they'll feel...
00:43:39.742 --> 00:43:41.076
they'll know
they're looking good...
00:43:41.201 --> 00:43:42.244
and they're feeling good.
00:43:42.369 --> 00:43:44.121
Close your wee eyes for me.
00:43:44.246 --> 00:43:46.248
Oh, that's lovely, me eyebrows
are now getting done.
00:43:46.415 --> 00:43:48.917
[laughing]
00:43:49.084 --> 00:43:50.628
- [LENNY]: Will he get a date?
- [WOMAN]: Oh, he is lovely.
00:43:50.753 --> 00:43:53.380
[WOMAN]: Hunky Chunky!
[LENNY]: Who wants him?
00:43:53.505 --> 00:43:56.675
[LENNY]: Oh, there you go.
You get two dates, at least.
00:43:57.760 --> 00:43:59.637
[LENNY]: That's what the day's
like. We have a laugh.
00:43:59.762 --> 00:44:02.473
Like, it's all about just,
you know, a bit of craic.
00:44:02.598 --> 00:44:03.974
And they know
it's a bit of craic, you know?
00:44:04.099 --> 00:44:05.476
That's the main thing.
00:44:06.143 --> 00:44:08.479
[MAN]: What do you call it?
The Scottish Mist?
00:44:09.438 --> 00:44:10.606
Can't remember.
00:44:10.773 --> 00:44:12.608
Over in the islands
of Scotland?
00:44:12.733 --> 00:44:15.944
I'm having a bit of trouble
with the...
00:44:16.070 --> 00:44:19.323
I don't know whether
it's the brain, or what it is.
00:44:19.448 --> 00:44:20.908
- Right.
- But...
00:44:21.033 --> 00:44:23.661
I'm the same.
I'm the same.
00:44:23.786 --> 00:44:26.121
I see them as how they were.
00:44:26.288 --> 00:44:28.540
Were you chasing
all the Belfast girls?
00:44:28.666 --> 00:44:30.626
Oh, yes.
[laughing]
00:44:30.751 --> 00:44:33.796
[LENNY]: When they start
speaking and remembering...
00:44:33.962 --> 00:44:35.631
and the images are
coming into their mind...
00:44:35.798 --> 00:44:37.466
their memories are coming back.
00:44:37.591 --> 00:44:39.718
Oh no, we had some
great times.
00:44:39.843 --> 00:44:42.471
[LENNY]: It's memories that
would make them feel good...
00:44:42.596 --> 00:44:43.764
'cause it was their past.
00:44:43.889 --> 00:44:45.391
You know,
it was their passion.
00:44:46.183 --> 00:44:49.395
Oh, hey!
That's not bad for a beginner.
00:44:49.520 --> 00:44:50.813
[LENNY]: It's nice though,
isn't it?
00:44:50.938 --> 00:44:52.147
[laughing]
00:44:52.272 --> 00:44:53.440
Oh, that was great.
00:44:53.565 --> 00:44:55.401
Good, no worries, all right?
00:45:00.239 --> 00:45:02.866
[women speaking in Japanese]
00:45:07.788 --> 00:45:10.833
[EMI]: Everybody
wants to be useful to others.
00:45:10.958 --> 00:45:13.544
Everyone has something
to offer.
00:45:13.669 --> 00:45:15.879
That's the reason
why I started Ibasho.
00:45:18.424 --> 00:45:21.301
So, Ibasho is a Japanese term.
00:45:21.427 --> 00:45:25.097
It is a place where you feel
at home being yourself.
00:45:25.222 --> 00:45:26.473
[women laughing]
00:45:26.598 --> 00:45:30.352
Ibasho is a community,
and also a space...
00:45:30.477 --> 00:45:33.355
where people can
congregate physically.
00:45:33.480 --> 00:45:35.441
[exclaiming,
people laughing]
00:45:35.566 --> 00:45:39.361
Where older people
actually run everything.
00:45:39.778 --> 00:45:42.197
[people chattering]
00:45:43.532 --> 00:45:45.451
[Emi]: They needed income...
00:45:45.576 --> 00:45:47.786
so they started
organic gardens...
00:45:49.204 --> 00:45:51.165
a farmers market...
00:45:52.249 --> 00:45:55.127
And then, they have a café.
00:45:59.214 --> 00:46:01.925
[Emi]: The very first Ibasho
was built in Japan...
00:46:02.050 --> 00:46:06.555
and then we developed Ibasho
in the Philippines...
00:46:08.056 --> 00:46:10.100
and also in Nepal.
00:46:11.560 --> 00:46:13.687
[Speaking in native language]
00:46:13.812 --> 00:46:18.525
[EMI]: Ibasho is really a place
where older people...
00:46:18.650 --> 00:46:22.613
find opportunity
to be useful to others.
00:46:22.738 --> 00:46:25.574
[music playing]
00:46:27.367 --> 00:46:30.370
[Emi]: When you think about
the concept of community...
00:46:30.496 --> 00:46:34.958
it is very strange to have
age-segregated space, you know?
00:46:35.083 --> 00:46:37.920
[people singing in Nepali]
00:46:39.213 --> 00:46:42.925
[EMI]: What we want to change
is this negative narrative of...
00:46:43.050 --> 00:46:47.054
older people being helpless...
00:46:47.179 --> 00:46:51.809
to you know, older people
with capacity and strength.
00:46:53.936 --> 00:46:57.981
With some physical and
cognitive challenges...
00:46:58.106 --> 00:47:01.693
but just capable
human beings first.
00:47:02.653 --> 00:47:04.655
[speaking native language]
00:47:07.616 --> 00:47:10.118
[dog barking]
00:47:13.831 --> 00:47:16.500
[DANA]: I live out
in the country in Vermont...
00:47:16.625 --> 00:47:19.503
and so we're driving
down Route 15...
00:47:19.628 --> 00:47:21.338
and my mother turns to me
and she says...
00:47:21.463 --> 00:47:27.761
"Dana, I just got my period.
It's the first time, you know."
00:47:29.638 --> 00:47:32.516
And I said,
"You're growing up."
00:47:32.641 --> 00:47:35.018
[laughing]
I said, "That's wonderful.
00:47:35.143 --> 00:47:37.229
What should we do
to celebrate?"
00:47:43.443 --> 00:47:46.071
And as she was feeling young
like that...
00:47:46.280 --> 00:47:48.991
then she started talking about
going to Armenian school...
00:47:49.116 --> 00:47:50.325
in New York City.
00:47:50.492 --> 00:47:53.287
She started to tell me
about the Armenian boys.
00:47:53.412 --> 00:47:56.540
I would never date one of them,
they're way too hairy.
00:47:56.665 --> 00:47:59.001
[laughing]
00:47:59.126 --> 00:48:02.796
I met all sorts of characters
that I never had known before...
00:48:02.921 --> 00:48:05.632
as she kind of traveled
through time.
00:48:10.846 --> 00:48:12.639
My mother's name is Alice.
00:48:12.764 --> 00:48:17.185
I'm working on a graphic memoir
about my mother and dementia.
00:48:19.062 --> 00:48:22.190
My mother and I were not close.
00:48:23.483 --> 00:48:25.819
I was the daughter who
got on her nerves...
00:48:25.944 --> 00:48:28.822
and I mean,
the feeling was mutual.
00:48:28.947 --> 00:48:30.532
I remember her
hugging me goodbye once...
00:48:30.657 --> 00:48:33.785
and saying, "I don't know
what I would do without you.
00:48:33.911 --> 00:48:36.371
And you used to be
so annoying!"
00:48:36.538 --> 00:48:38.206
[laughing]
00:48:49.092 --> 00:48:52.971
Her bathrobe is made
of cut text...
00:48:53.096 --> 00:48:56.391
from Lewis Carroll's
"Alice in Wonderland."
00:49:01.313 --> 00:49:03.982
We have to think
about how the person...
00:49:04.107 --> 00:49:06.109
even when they lose their
short-term memory...
00:49:06.234 --> 00:49:07.945
even when they
lose their ability...
00:49:08.070 --> 00:49:10.197
to communicate using words...
00:49:10.322 --> 00:49:13.575
we can still really connect
with them.
00:49:13.700 --> 00:49:15.911
And often, it's not through,
you know...
00:49:16.036 --> 00:49:17.496
straightforward conversation.
00:49:17.621 --> 00:49:21.583
It's through-- through touch,
through sounds.
00:49:21.708 --> 00:49:25.712
It's through, you know,
very gentle kinds of things.
00:49:30.342 --> 00:49:31.510
I was losing her...
00:49:31.635 --> 00:49:33.971
but gaining her
at the same time.
00:49:41.395 --> 00:49:43.230
Whenever we were outside
walking around...
00:49:43.355 --> 00:49:45.607
she would say, "Oh, look,
there's Dave in a tree."
00:49:45.774 --> 00:49:47.275
Dave was my father.
00:49:51.363 --> 00:49:53.573
"Alice in Wonderland"
really captured...
00:49:53.699 --> 00:49:56.326
how we lived through dementia.
00:50:02.207 --> 00:50:04.501
Occasionally, it was scary,
but most of the time...
00:50:04.876 --> 00:50:08.338
if you just went with
whatever was going on...
00:50:08.463 --> 00:50:09.923
it was an adventure.
00:50:11.758 --> 00:50:13.844
And so, the pun
was irresistible...
00:50:13.969 --> 00:50:16.138
to call the book
"Aliceheimer's."
00:50:19.975 --> 00:50:23.186
I got more compliments
and more kindness...
00:50:23.311 --> 00:50:27.441
during the years of dementia,
that it was lovely.
00:50:29.317 --> 00:50:31.153
One day,
I was brushing her hair...
00:50:31.319 --> 00:50:34.072
and she said to me,
as she often did...
00:50:34.197 --> 00:50:36.700
she said, "Dana, why are you
so good to me?"
00:50:36.825 --> 00:50:38.577
And I said,
"Because you're my mother."
00:50:38.702 --> 00:50:40.829
She said, "Ah, yes,
I remember."
00:50:40.996 --> 00:50:42.664
And I kept brushing her hair...
00:50:42.789 --> 00:50:45.000
and our eyes then met
in the mirror...
00:50:45.167 --> 00:50:47.169
and she looked at me and said...
00:50:47.294 --> 00:50:50.797
"I wasn't very good to you.
I'm sorry."
00:50:56.386 --> 00:50:59.181
That's what I felt like
dementia really allowed.
00:50:59.306 --> 00:51:02.768
We were able to meet in a way
that we couldn't meet...
00:51:02.893 --> 00:51:06.354
before dementia
entered into our lives.
00:51:11.651 --> 00:51:14.321
[tambourine playing]
00:51:15.906 --> 00:51:18.784
[singing in Portuguese]
00:51:25.874 --> 00:51:28.543
[people speaking in Portuguese]
00:51:32.631 --> 00:51:35.258
[music playing]
00:51:36.676 --> 00:51:40.847
[ALEX]: I know I will be
documenting aging as I age.
00:51:42.390 --> 00:51:45.102
Photography's just an excuse
to come close to people, right?
00:51:45.227 --> 00:51:46.895
I'm fascinated by people.
00:51:47.020 --> 00:51:49.856
[rhythmic clapping]
00:51:53.443 --> 00:51:55.737
I put myself in the shoes
of that person.
00:51:55.904 --> 00:51:57.823
I try to feel,
I want to be close.
00:51:57.948 --> 00:52:00.283
I want to smell,
I want to touch.
00:52:02.994 --> 00:52:04.579
[music ends]
00:52:04.746 --> 00:52:07.249
[cheers and applause]
00:52:07.415 --> 00:52:10.377
It's like an empathy tool,
photography.
00:52:18.552 --> 00:52:20.929
Would you let me take a picture
of those glasses of yours?
00:52:21.054 --> 00:52:22.264
- Sure.
- Yeah?
00:52:22.430 --> 00:52:25.433
[camera clicking]
That is classic!
00:52:25.600 --> 00:52:26.893
Where did you get that?
00:52:27.018 --> 00:52:28.687
My daughter bought them for me.
00:52:28.812 --> 00:52:30.772
Whoa, I love the style!
00:52:30.897 --> 00:52:32.440
[man muttering]
00:52:32.607 --> 00:52:34.067
- Oh, thank you so much, man.
- All right.
00:52:34.192 --> 00:52:36.278
You take care, okay?
Have a great day.
00:52:36.444 --> 00:52:39.072
[music]
00:52:40.448 --> 00:52:42.993
[ALEX]: Through photography,
we can create awareness...
00:52:43.118 --> 00:52:46.246
in ways that scientists can't.
00:52:47.914 --> 00:52:50.208
We do it with images.
00:52:51.293 --> 00:52:53.420
We do it in a language
that is universal.
00:52:54.212 --> 00:52:57.048
[people chattering]
00:53:00.969 --> 00:53:02.637
[ALEX]: I would like to show
through my pictures...
00:53:02.804 --> 00:53:06.057
that you can do
so many things as you age.
00:53:07.309 --> 00:53:09.936
[music]
00:53:16.943 --> 00:53:18.361
There's so much we can do.
00:53:18.486 --> 00:53:20.614
You don't have
to sit around and wait.
00:53:20.739 --> 00:53:22.157
Yeah.
00:53:29.539 --> 00:53:33.126
HELEN: When I got the diagnosis
of early onset Alzheimer's...
00:53:33.251 --> 00:53:35.253
I just thought
this was the end.
00:53:36.504 --> 00:53:39.841
I spent 10 months
just absolutely...
00:53:39.966 --> 00:53:41.843
completely in the darkest hole..
00:53:42.010 --> 00:53:43.970
you could ever believe
of depression.
00:53:44.804 --> 00:53:47.140
A year before that,
I was involved in so much...
00:53:47.265 --> 00:53:48.475
and then there was nothing.
00:53:48.600 --> 00:53:51.186
[coffee pot bubbling]
00:53:52.229 --> 00:53:54.522
I wish somebody had been there
to tell me...
00:53:54.689 --> 00:53:56.775
"Don't stay in the house."
00:53:56.900 --> 00:53:59.027
[birdsong]
00:53:59.152 --> 00:54:02.656
And then, I was at
our local hospital...
00:54:02.781 --> 00:54:05.659
and the nurse said to me
she heard on the radio...
00:54:05.784 --> 00:54:08.161
about research at Trinity.
00:54:08.286 --> 00:54:10.038
I mean, that was the...
00:54:10.205 --> 00:54:12.207
that was the turning point
in my life.
00:54:13.708 --> 00:54:15.252
[car starting]
00:54:15.377 --> 00:54:17.045
One of the lecturers
talked about Cognitive...
00:54:17.212 --> 00:54:19.881
Rehabilitative Therapy.
00:54:20.048 --> 00:54:22.550
I am going to do something...
00:54:22.717 --> 00:54:26.554
like turn left and left,
as a strategy.
00:54:27.806 --> 00:54:30.558
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy is
about giving you strategies...
00:54:30.684 --> 00:54:34.688
and about how we can make
our lives a lot easier.
00:54:35.480 --> 00:54:39.985
Labels on your cupboards,
sticky notes, lights.
00:54:40.110 --> 00:54:41.653
"Have you turned off
the cooker?"
00:54:43.113 --> 00:54:45.073
Okay, they don't look great,
but who cares?
00:54:45.240 --> 00:54:47.492
Yeah, who, yeah, yeah.
00:54:48.910 --> 00:54:50.412
I write everything down...
00:54:50.578 --> 00:54:53.123
you know, who called you,
who didn't call you.
00:54:54.874 --> 00:54:58.920
If anxiety sets in,
I try and use mindfulness...
00:54:59.087 --> 00:55:01.089
to stay in the moment...
00:55:01.256 --> 00:55:04.050
until all the sadness
and badness goes.
00:55:06.094 --> 00:55:08.221
With the strategies,
I think it gave me...
00:55:08.346 --> 00:55:12.100
some sense of empowerment,
and some sense...
00:55:12.267 --> 00:55:14.477
that I can actually
do something again.
00:55:18.440 --> 00:55:20.358
Because once I started
to go out...
00:55:20.483 --> 00:55:22.110
I started to enjoy the garden...
00:55:22.277 --> 00:55:25.030
I started to get my hands
into soil.
00:55:25.155 --> 00:55:28.199
That feeling
of standing in the garden...
00:55:28.325 --> 00:55:30.618
and just listening
to the birds.
00:55:34.205 --> 00:55:36.374
Martin was so excited,
and you know...
00:55:36.499 --> 00:55:39.002
that he could see his mother
being able to do things again.
00:55:39.336 --> 00:55:40.670
...she said,
"What do you think it is?"
00:55:40.795 --> 00:55:43.131
[overlapping chatter]
Sean would go downtown...
00:55:43.256 --> 00:55:46.593
and somebody would say to him,
"I saw Helen, she looks great."
00:55:46.718 --> 00:55:50.221
I said, oh, I'm wondering
how I'm supposed to look.
00:55:50.347 --> 00:55:52.140
So I'm still wondering
after almost eight years...
00:55:52.307 --> 00:55:54.642
what's the Alzheimer's look?
[laughing]
00:55:56.811 --> 00:55:58.646
[HELEN]: We aren't mentally ill.
00:55:58.772 --> 00:56:01.649
We have a brain problem,
but we're not mentally ill.
00:56:02.525 --> 00:56:04.152
We have to break down stigma...
00:56:04.277 --> 00:56:07.322
and back then, it was really,
really difficult.
00:56:07.447 --> 00:56:09.949
[HOST]: Please welcome
Helen Rochford-Brennan...
00:56:10.075 --> 00:56:11.785
and her son Martin.
00:56:11.910 --> 00:56:13.953
[cheers and applause]
00:56:14.871 --> 00:56:18.792
[HELEN]: Nobody in Ireland
was speaking about it.
00:56:18.917 --> 00:56:24.172
I started talking to whomever
wanted to hear my story...
00:56:24.297 --> 00:56:27.133
whoever wanted
to write about my story.
00:56:27.258 --> 00:56:30.512
I think with the illness
of Alzheimer's...
00:56:30.678 --> 00:56:32.972
it's very much
a family illness as well.
00:56:33.098 --> 00:56:35.350
The more I can talk about this..
00:56:35.517 --> 00:56:38.144
the easier it is
for other families.
00:56:38.269 --> 00:56:40.188
[MARTIN]: It's an upsetting
conversation to have...
00:56:40.313 --> 00:56:42.065
and tears are gonna roll.
00:56:42.190 --> 00:56:43.775
And it's best to talk
through things.
00:56:44.692 --> 00:56:46.152
[HELEN]: People don't know
how to talk to you...
00:56:46.277 --> 00:56:47.362
and that’s one
of the hardest things...
00:56:47.529 --> 00:56:48.780
for me to deal with.
00:56:48.905 --> 00:56:50.281
Yeah, and it's...
00:56:50.407 --> 00:56:52.992
[HELEN]: Going on TV,
nerve-wracking as it was...
00:56:53.118 --> 00:56:56.454
was a good opportunity to--
for me to understand...
00:56:56.579 --> 00:56:58.706
that we can speak
for ourselves.
00:56:58.873 --> 00:57:02.710
And today, I'm advocating
for my own rights.
00:57:02.836 --> 00:57:04.212
Our voices
are really important...
00:57:04.379 --> 00:57:05.505
and our voices should be heard.
00:57:06.089 --> 00:57:10.218
GROUP: ♪ Far away from
the cold night air ♪
00:57:10.343 --> 00:57:14.222
- Sorry.
- ♪ With one enormous chair ♪
00:57:14.389 --> 00:57:17.517
♪ Oh, wouldn't it be loverly ♪
00:57:17.642 --> 00:57:20.061
[KARIN DIAMOND]: Every one of us
has a story to tell.
00:57:20.228 --> 00:57:23.815
[people chattering]
00:57:23.940 --> 00:57:27.277
And some of us
need our story heard.
00:57:28.903 --> 00:57:32.907
"I can't lose my bag again.
00:57:33.074 --> 00:57:36.744
Mom, Gareth found your bag
in the garden. Right.
00:57:36.870 --> 00:57:37.996
Do you lose things?”
00:57:38.121 --> 00:57:40.123
My name is Karin Diamond.
00:57:40.331 --> 00:57:44.377
I'm a playwright and Artistic
Director based in Wales.
00:57:51.426 --> 00:57:56.014
I knew that I really wanted
to create...
00:57:56.139 --> 00:57:58.308
a dementia awareness play.
00:57:58.433 --> 00:58:01.519
I don't think he knows
who I am.
00:58:04.105 --> 00:58:05.690
I've lost him.
00:58:07.901 --> 00:58:10.528
Oh, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry, I'm so sorry.
00:58:10.653 --> 00:58:13.948
Not at all, Mags, not at all.
00:58:14.115 --> 00:58:15.909
- Not at all.
- Mags!
00:58:16.034 --> 00:58:17.827
[gasps]
00:58:19.579 --> 00:58:23.249
[KARIN]: The power of the
family's story of dementia...
00:58:23.374 --> 00:58:27.295
can start building compassion
and understanding...
00:58:27.420 --> 00:58:29.797
for what families
are going through.
00:58:33.176 --> 00:58:35.428
[whimpering]
00:58:35.553 --> 00:58:38.973
My great-grandmother
had vascular dementia.
00:58:39.140 --> 00:58:40.558
I-- we as a family...
00:58:40.683 --> 00:58:42.393
really did not know that
at the time.
00:58:42.519 --> 00:58:44.771
It was called,
you know, memory problems.
00:58:44.896 --> 00:58:48.733
So yeah, that was-- that was
my maybe first experience...
00:58:48.858 --> 00:58:50.818
of dementia.
00:58:51.861 --> 00:58:54.989
[KARIN]: Where you are just
connecting with me, okay?
00:58:55.114 --> 00:58:57.242
♪ La-la-la, la-la-la,
la-la-la-la ♪
00:58:57.367 --> 00:58:58.660
[ALL]: ♪ La-la-la,
la-la-la, la-la-la-la ♪
00:58:58.826 --> 00:59:01.913
[KARIN]:
Memoria is a group of people...
00:59:02.038 --> 00:59:03.373
who are living with dementia.
00:59:03.498 --> 00:59:06.292
- [KARIN]: Yes!
- [ALL]: Yes!
00:59:06.417 --> 00:59:09.837
[KARIN]: Family members
and a care-home manager.
00:59:10.004 --> 00:59:12.966
- Bugger off.
- [ALL]: Bugger off.
00:59:13.091 --> 00:59:14.759
[laughter]
00:59:14.884 --> 00:59:20.181
[KARIN]: Who come together,
and they're able to express...
00:59:20.306 --> 00:59:21.808
what they would like to.
00:59:23.059 --> 00:59:26.854
And an audience
bears witness to the story.
00:59:29.107 --> 00:59:32.527
There are good days
and there are bad days.
00:59:34.028 --> 00:59:39.576
There's a continuous search
for things that you have lost.
00:59:41.953 --> 00:59:45.623
- WOMAN: [whispering] Keys.
- [MAN]: Keys...
00:59:48.459 --> 00:59:54.299
- [whispering] Bags.
- Bags. Names.
00:59:56.718 --> 00:59:58.344
Words.
01:00:00.054 --> 01:00:03.891
Jill, you look exhausted.
You haven't slept.
01:00:04.058 --> 01:00:08.521
Why don't you give some thought
to Chris going to a day center?
01:00:08.646 --> 01:00:12.900
A day center?
What, have him go away from me?
01:00:13.860 --> 01:00:17.238
How-- how would they know
how to look after him?
01:00:17.363 --> 01:00:19.574
How would they know
his funny ways?
01:00:19.699 --> 01:00:22.285
At the moment, I'm the only one
who can manage with him...
01:00:22.410 --> 01:00:24.912
because I know what he's like.
01:00:25.038 --> 01:00:26.497
But thank you.
01:00:27.915 --> 01:00:31.252
And finally, I thought
to myself, she's right.
01:00:31.377 --> 01:00:32.920
I've got to get help here.
01:00:33.087 --> 01:00:36.758
So, I said,
"Chris, I've got you a job."
01:00:36.924 --> 01:00:39.594
[audience laughing]
"A job?"
01:00:39.761 --> 01:00:41.679
One time, apparently--
I can’t remember...
01:00:41.804 --> 01:00:43.848
but apparently, I made gravy...
01:00:43.973 --> 01:00:48.353
and I gave it to my husband,
and he ate it.
01:00:48.478 --> 01:00:49.896
He didn't say a word,
but apparently...
01:00:50.021 --> 01:00:52.065
I used soy sauce
instead of gravy browning.
01:00:52.190 --> 01:00:53.775
[laughter]
01:00:53.900 --> 01:00:55.902
And he's here
in the audience, isn't he?
01:00:56.027 --> 01:00:59.030
- How was it, Jason?
- [JASON]: Tasty.
01:00:59.155 --> 01:01:01.449
[laughter]
Brilliant.
01:01:02.533 --> 01:01:04.952
I'm counting--
counting my blessings...
01:01:05.119 --> 01:01:06.746
I've got Jan, my wife.
01:01:06.871 --> 01:01:09.666
Yeah.
How long have you been married?
01:01:09.791 --> 01:01:13.961
- Fifty-five years.
- Wow, 55.
01:01:14.087 --> 01:01:16.172
[applause]
01:01:16.297 --> 01:01:21.511
So, I’m a local politician,
and I’m determined...
01:01:21.636 --> 01:01:24.931
to drive through
and make a difference.
01:01:25.056 --> 01:01:27.141
[applause]
01:01:28.309 --> 01:01:31.354
[WOMAN]: I relate a lot,
'cause my nan's had dementia...
01:01:31.479 --> 01:01:33.147
for about...
[whimpering]
01:01:33.314 --> 01:01:35.942
[KARIN]: Mm. Mm.
01:01:36.901 --> 01:01:39.570
As a society,
we sometimes feel embarrassed...
01:01:39.696 --> 01:01:43.366
about crying and emotion,
but we're not, are we?
01:01:43.491 --> 01:01:44.742
[people agreeing]
No.
01:01:44.867 --> 01:01:48.162
So, just tell it
through the tears.
01:01:51.499 --> 01:01:54.168
[KARIN]: I know, but don't worry
about it.
01:01:54.335 --> 01:01:55.837
Just come in.
Hi, Amanda.
01:01:56.003 --> 01:01:58.965
- You okay?
- Lovely to see you.
01:01:59.090 --> 01:02:00.633
[overlapping chatter]
01:02:00.758 --> 01:02:03.010
[KARIN]: Palm to palm,
breathe in. [inhales deeply]
01:02:03.136 --> 01:02:06.055
For people living with dementia
and their families...
01:02:06.180 --> 01:02:12.228
that sense of group belonging,
and connection becomes vital.
01:02:12.353 --> 01:02:15.606
What happened on that day
was that it was me and my mum...
01:02:15.732 --> 01:02:18.609
left the hospital
with two things...
01:02:18.735 --> 01:02:21.904
a prescription
and a leaflet.
01:02:22.029 --> 01:02:25.658
And I just remember
feeling so alone.
01:02:26.534 --> 01:02:29.078
This is an invisible condition.
01:02:29.203 --> 01:02:33.040
It completely turns
your life upside-down...
01:02:33.166 --> 01:02:35.460
and yet nobody really
talks about it.
01:02:35.585 --> 01:02:37.962
People are frightened
to a certain extent.
01:02:38.087 --> 01:02:39.213
[people chattering]
01:02:39.380 --> 01:02:41.215
[KARIN]:
The diagnosis of dementia...
01:02:41.340 --> 01:02:44.469
is a life-changing moment.
01:02:44.594 --> 01:02:46.721
And when you get
life-changing moments...
01:02:46.888 --> 01:02:51.934
if you're not processing that,
you're stuck.
01:02:52.059 --> 01:02:54.395
Come on-- come on up.
Come on up for a moment.
01:02:54.562 --> 01:02:55.730
Come on up.
01:02:55.897 --> 01:02:57.899
It is, it's a tough one,
that, because...
01:02:58.065 --> 01:03:00.276
When we start to shift
the trauma
01:03:00.401 --> 01:03:04.155
and we start to shift
the fear of what's to come...
01:03:04.280 --> 01:03:05.907
it can really help.
01:03:06.073 --> 01:03:09.911
I can't sing though.
[laughter and chatter]
01:03:10.077 --> 01:03:11.579
You didn't go through all that..
01:03:11.704 --> 01:03:13.080
just to get out of the song,
did you?
01:03:13.247 --> 01:03:14.165
Yeah.
[laughter]
01:03:15.291 --> 01:03:17.919
[music]
01:03:22.673 --> 01:03:24.467
[WALTER]:
I met Sarah, my wife...
01:03:24.634 --> 01:03:28.930
because we were both working
in issues in aging and health.
01:03:29.931 --> 01:03:31.933
In the last couple years,
I learned...
01:03:32.099 --> 01:03:34.769
that both my older half-brother
and older half-sister...
01:03:34.936 --> 01:03:38.731
were living with dementia.
01:03:39.732 --> 01:03:40.983
It just never even
occurred to me...
01:03:41.150 --> 01:03:42.819
that there would be
a chance for me...
01:03:42.985 --> 01:03:44.904
to have Alzheimer's disease.
01:03:46.322 --> 01:03:48.407
I think I realized at one point
that this is something...
01:03:48.574 --> 01:03:51.369
that's going to continue to
be part of my family's story.
01:03:51.536 --> 01:03:54.205
This is not just
my dad's experience.
01:03:54.997 --> 01:03:56.833
You wanna go for 14?
01:03:57.333 --> 01:03:59.377
Um, why not just an even 15?
01:03:59.627 --> 01:04:01.838
All right, fundraising goal,
$15,000.
01:04:02.004 --> 01:04:03.381
- Yeah.
- What will that take...
01:04:03.548 --> 01:04:04.966
your lifetime
fundraising goal up to?
01:04:05.132 --> 01:04:06.384
I don't know, that's a good...
01:04:06.551 --> 01:04:09.095
[WALTER]: This year is the 29th
01:04:09.262 --> 01:04:11.806
since I first went on...
01:04:11.973 --> 01:04:13.641
the Walk to End
Alzheimer's Disease.
01:04:13.808 --> 01:04:15.935
[cheers and applause]
01:04:16.143 --> 01:04:18.813
[WOMAN]: Also, congrats to
our top friends and family...
01:04:18.980 --> 01:04:22.859
[WALTER]: We don't really have
a system that provides...
01:04:23.568 --> 01:04:26.320
long-term services
and supports in this country.
01:04:26.737 --> 01:04:29.615
I felt at that age, that
that was not right...
01:04:29.782 --> 01:04:32.201
that we could and should
do better.
01:04:32.368 --> 01:04:36.205
And I still
believe that today, right?
01:04:36.372 --> 01:04:39.000
[music]
01:04:40.835 --> 01:04:43.671
[DANA]: My mother had gotten
kicked out of memory care....
01:04:43.880 --> 01:04:45.756
down in New York City.
01:04:47.633 --> 01:04:49.176
She started going like this...
[slapping leg]
01:04:49.594 --> 01:04:52.680
So, they put her more and more
on her own...
01:04:52.847 --> 01:04:55.516
and she got more
and more disruptive.
01:04:56.350 --> 01:04:58.936
And I remember saying,
she's just telling us...
01:04:59.103 --> 01:05:01.856
this isn't working
to live with strangers.
01:05:05.776 --> 01:05:07.695
I think being a medical
anthropologist...
01:05:07.945 --> 01:05:12.867
gave me the tools to live
the sickness differently.
01:05:13.868 --> 01:05:15.286
As a medical anthropologist...
01:05:15.828 --> 01:05:18.789
I look at medical systems
as cultural systems.
01:05:19.290 --> 01:05:22.543
I look at all of the beliefs
and the practices...
01:05:22.877 --> 01:05:25.755
surrounding sickness and health.
01:05:28.049 --> 01:05:31.844
Biomedicine focuses in
just on the one sick person...
01:05:32.303 --> 01:05:33.721
whereas other medical systems...
01:05:33.888 --> 01:05:35.932
recognize that it's the whole
family unit...
01:05:36.098 --> 01:05:38.017
that's experiencing something.
01:05:39.143 --> 01:05:41.771
Family members know things
that other people don’t know...
01:05:41.938 --> 01:05:43.898
so they are the ideal carers.
01:05:44.065 --> 01:05:46.734
But they need absolute support.
01:05:48.277 --> 01:05:50.237
When I found where
she would go next...
01:05:50.446 --> 01:05:52.281
and I explained, you’re
going to go to a school...
01:05:52.490 --> 01:05:55.159
for people with
Alzheimer's disease...
01:05:55.326 --> 01:05:58.079
she said, "Oh, good,
I love school."
01:05:58.245 --> 01:06:03.709
And then-- yeah-- and then
all those behaviors evaporated.
01:06:09.298 --> 01:06:12.843
So many people get
antipsychotics thrown at them...
01:06:13.177 --> 01:06:18.015
instead of the rest of us
first trying to figure out...
01:06:18.349 --> 01:06:20.601
how we can meet them
where they are.
01:06:20.810 --> 01:06:23.437
[music]
01:06:36.117 --> 01:06:40.413
The last place my mother lived,
there was an art therapist.
01:06:41.288 --> 01:06:43.791
She said that when
someone's very agitated...
01:06:44.000 --> 01:06:48.087
the thing to do is to help them
paint stripes across a page...
01:06:48.254 --> 01:06:52.341
using blues,
and magentas, and violets.
01:06:57.346 --> 01:06:59.140
I wouldn't have believed
that it would have made...
01:06:59.306 --> 01:07:01.767
that much of a difference,
but sure enough...
01:07:01.934 --> 01:07:05.062
after about five minutes
of me helping her...
01:07:05.229 --> 01:07:07.481
go from left to right,
left to right...
01:07:07.690 --> 01:07:09.650
my mother turned up
and looked at me and said...
01:07:09.859 --> 01:07:13.404
"That's very relaxing."
[laughing]
01:07:18.242 --> 01:07:21.078
She made nice artwork
before dementia.
01:07:21.245 --> 01:07:24.707
But during dementia,
she made gorgeous artwork.
01:07:30.504 --> 01:07:32.590
The usual pattern is
to be brokenhearted...
01:07:32.757 --> 01:07:34.133
about what's lost.
01:07:34.300 --> 01:07:39.013
You can still mourn that,
but keep yourself open...
01:07:39.180 --> 01:07:41.098
to what's arriving anew.
01:07:43.601 --> 01:07:46.228
That's what this
particular piece is about.
01:07:46.395 --> 01:07:49.065
It's based on a poem
by a friend of mine...
01:07:49.231 --> 01:07:51.901
Julie Larios, called
"Frontotemporal Dementia."
01:07:52.902 --> 01:07:54.987
So, the epigraph
to the poem says...
01:07:55.279 --> 01:07:58.157
"John began to tell his friends
of his new ability...
01:07:58.365 --> 01:08:01.243
"to see not only colors,
but sounds.
01:08:01.410 --> 01:08:03.871
"About the same time, he
began to have troubles...
01:08:04.038 --> 01:08:06.040
"remembering words.
01:08:08.167 --> 01:08:10.503
"There were
tall fronds swaying...
01:08:10.669 --> 01:08:12.254
"like yellow always does...
01:08:12.421 --> 01:08:15.549
"but down an octave,
and people moaning.
01:08:15.716 --> 01:08:19.095
"When I'm open, everything
goes from green to gold.
01:08:19.261 --> 01:08:22.264
"I feel rain two days off
come closer.
01:08:22.431 --> 01:08:24.183
"If that barking--
But when I drew it...
01:08:24.350 --> 01:08:26.102
"the way it sounded, luminous...
01:08:26.268 --> 01:08:28.229
"people who say they
know me understood...
01:08:28.896 --> 01:08:30.564
"and they took me to my bed.
01:08:31.941 --> 01:08:35.069
That was an opera.
That was purple."
01:08:40.783 --> 01:08:42.910
[paper tearing]
01:08:45.204 --> 01:08:49.333
Typically, we always think
of dementia...
01:08:49.500 --> 01:08:53.045
in terms of the holes,
the deficits.
01:08:54.839 --> 01:08:59.468
So, I'm gonna fill the holes
with gorgeous colors.
01:09:03.347 --> 01:09:05.057
I mean, the peom’s
heartbreaking...
01:09:05.224 --> 01:09:07.518
and gorgeous at the same time.
01:09:07.685 --> 01:09:13.274
And I think that if we look
at dementia that way too...
01:09:13.440 --> 01:09:15.818
we can find both the beauty
and the heart...
01:09:15.985 --> 01:09:17.444
You know, the heartbreak,
I don't think...
01:09:17.611 --> 01:09:19.822
we have to just deny it, but
I think what we want to do...
01:09:19.989 --> 01:09:22.283
is transform it
into something else.
01:09:23.159 --> 01:09:25.578
[music]
01:09:51.145 --> 01:09:53.230
What I'm doing right now
is called a monoprint.
01:09:53.397 --> 01:09:56.233
When you're making a print,
you're applying paint...
01:09:56.400 --> 01:10:00.070
on this other surface,
and then it gets transferred.
01:10:02.156 --> 01:10:05.910
And as it transfers,
some magic happens.
01:10:10.039 --> 01:10:11.457
A thing about printmaking...
01:10:11.665 --> 01:10:13.959
is that you're working
backwards.
01:10:14.460 --> 01:10:17.087
Whatever you're making gets
printed onto a sheet of paper...
01:10:17.254 --> 01:10:19.006
it will be flipped over.
01:10:19.173 --> 01:10:22.218
You've got to use
your brain differently.
01:10:22.384 --> 01:10:24.762
I have to write words backwards.
01:10:26.013 --> 01:10:28.515
So, again,
that brings in magic...
01:10:28.682 --> 01:10:31.602
and maybe that's part of why
I look at dementia as magic.
01:10:31.769 --> 01:10:34.521
I'm used to sort of knowing
that the magic...
01:10:34.688 --> 01:10:37.566
is in the unexpected, and
the magic is in the thing...
01:10:37.733 --> 01:10:39.985
that's outside of our control.
01:10:43.739 --> 01:10:45.658
[sighs]
01:10:55.084 --> 01:10:57.920
[water softly lapping]
01:11:07.263 --> 01:11:09.640
[KARIN]: The creative work
enables people...
01:11:09.765 --> 01:11:12.601
to sometimes reconnect
to themselves.
01:11:15.229 --> 01:11:17.731
Ideally, you know,
I would be setting up groups...
01:11:17.856 --> 01:11:20.234
around the world for people
post-diagnosis...
01:11:20.401 --> 01:11:22.903
in the early stages...
01:11:23.028 --> 01:11:25.281
that are able to
start to process....
01:11:25.406 --> 01:11:28.617
through a life-story prism,
their experience.
01:11:29.743 --> 01:11:33.455
Well, my situation is,
I've got it.
01:11:33.580 --> 01:11:36.041
I'm like my father,
I don't give up.
01:11:36.917 --> 01:11:38.585
Nothing will beat me.
01:11:38.711 --> 01:11:42.881
[KARIN]: The group do want to
talk about living with dementia.
01:11:43.007 --> 01:11:45.634
But they're also
very passionate advocates...
01:11:45.759 --> 01:11:48.929
for the rights of people
living with dementia.
01:11:49.763 --> 01:11:53.434
We need people to educate,
to be educated.
01:11:54.685 --> 01:11:56.312
We need funding.
01:11:57.271 --> 01:11:59.648
But nothing happens.
01:12:01.108 --> 01:12:03.277
In general wards,
they cannot sleep.
01:12:03.444 --> 01:12:07.197
"Why don't those damn dementia
patients just shut up?"
01:12:09.033 --> 01:12:10.659
And nothing happens.
01:12:12.411 --> 01:12:15.122
This man said,
"People like you...
01:12:15.247 --> 01:12:17.666
"shouldn't be allowed
out in society.
01:12:18.751 --> 01:12:21.795
People like you are dangerous
to the likes of us."
01:12:21.920 --> 01:12:26.467
Not one person helped us.
Everybody else joined in.
01:12:30.971 --> 01:12:36.310
Nick faces every day with all
the perseverance he can muster.
01:12:37.436 --> 01:12:39.188
Nick goes on very long
long walks, don't you?
01:12:39.313 --> 01:12:41.648
Yes. Hours.
01:12:42.983 --> 01:12:44.818
Keeps him fit.
01:12:44.985 --> 01:12:45.986
And...
01:12:46.153 --> 01:12:48.697
[laughter]
01:12:48.822 --> 01:12:53.827
We are Nick and Karen,
Mum and Dad...
01:12:53.994 --> 01:12:55.788
Nana and Grandpa.
01:12:56.955 --> 01:12:59.208
We're in this together.
01:12:59.333 --> 01:13:03.045
So, we might be
a new Nick and Karen...
01:13:03.170 --> 01:13:07.549
but we are Nick and Karen
nonetheless.
01:13:09.343 --> 01:13:12.179
[applause]
01:13:15.182 --> 01:13:18.018
[KARIN]: Some of the worst
sort of traumas...
01:13:18.143 --> 01:13:21.021
are silenced,
and not intentionally.
01:13:21.188 --> 01:13:23.357
It's just, we find it
as a society...
01:13:23.524 --> 01:13:27.236
sometimes a little bit
difficult and scary because...
01:13:27.361 --> 01:13:29.196
there's so much stigma...
01:13:29.321 --> 01:13:32.741
to actually just stop
and listen.
01:13:36.370 --> 01:13:38.497
[HELEN]:
All my beautiful memories.
01:13:44.211 --> 01:13:46.213
I have a job to do
to make life better...
01:13:46.380 --> 01:13:47.881
for people with dementia.
01:13:48.924 --> 01:13:52.344
I certainly have challenged
every politician I can find.
01:13:52.469 --> 01:13:55.180
I've addressed all kinds
of conferences.
01:14:02.187 --> 01:14:03.605
Ah.
01:14:06.191 --> 01:14:07.901
There's something else missing.
01:14:08.026 --> 01:14:09.862
With the Alzheimer's Society
of Ireland...
01:14:09.987 --> 01:14:13.407
the opportunity came up for me
to represent them in Europe.
01:14:16.076 --> 01:14:18.912
We have lots of people
that talk about us...
01:14:19.037 --> 01:14:23.542
so I suppose it goes back to--
nothing about us without us.
01:14:27.713 --> 01:14:29.506
I could go on for hours
about traveling...
01:14:29.631 --> 01:14:31.091
and the difficulties at
airports...
01:14:31.258 --> 01:14:33.260
and the difficulties
we experience.
01:14:35.095 --> 01:14:36.513
I am going to get lost.
01:14:36.638 --> 01:14:39.600
I am going to get
an anxiety attack, for a start.
01:14:41.935 --> 01:14:43.437
Many airports
only give you assistance...
01:14:43.604 --> 01:14:44.771
if you're in a wheelchair.
01:14:44.897 --> 01:14:46.106
And where do I get
assistance?
01:14:46.231 --> 01:14:47.441
So, for the assistance...
01:14:47.566 --> 01:14:48.609
[HELEN]: So, I can be
rest assured...
01:14:48.775 --> 01:14:50.277
that when I get off that plane..
01:14:50.402 --> 01:14:53.155
at the end of the steps
waiting for me is my chair.
01:14:53.447 --> 01:14:54.907
All right, thank you very much.
01:14:55.032 --> 01:14:56.575
Thank you, bye-bye.
01:14:56.700 --> 01:15:00.120
I can walk,
I can see, I can talk.
01:15:00.245 --> 01:15:01.788
I just can't remember.
01:15:03.790 --> 01:15:04.917
I'm sorry, I walk.
01:15:05.042 --> 01:15:06.126
Huh? Oh, you can walk?
01:15:06.293 --> 01:15:07.794
Yes, thank you.
01:15:07.961 --> 01:15:09.338
Thank you.
01:15:10.464 --> 01:15:12.299
We just want people
to be aware...
01:15:12.466 --> 01:15:14.343
that we have
a hidden disability.
01:15:15.594 --> 01:15:18.472
Jesus, did I take it with me?
Hold on, did I?
01:15:19.806 --> 01:15:20.682
Yes.
01:15:20.807 --> 01:15:22.309
And that our hidden disability..
01:15:22.476 --> 01:15:24.561
can create anxiety,
when all we need...
01:15:24.686 --> 01:15:26.939
is somebody
to walk us through an airport.
01:15:27.064 --> 01:15:28.649
Are you working here long?
01:15:28.815 --> 01:15:31.818
It's just about
making life simple.
01:15:31.944 --> 01:15:34.947
All I want to see is inclusion,
that we are fully included...
01:15:35.072 --> 01:15:37.366
and fully integrated
into our communities.
01:15:39.451 --> 01:15:41.662
Twenty years ago,
the idea of having a person...
01:15:41.828 --> 01:15:44.581
living with dementia
speak at conference...
01:15:44.706 --> 01:15:46.875
would have been unimaginable.
01:15:47.668 --> 01:15:49.670
Our role in the European
Working Group...
01:15:49.836 --> 01:15:52.256
of People With Dementia,
it's about changing policy.
01:15:52.381 --> 01:15:54.091
It's about looking at research.
01:15:54.216 --> 01:15:58.554
Stephan will speak about
his desire to be independent.
01:15:59.721 --> 01:16:01.974
[applause]
01:16:07.396 --> 01:16:10.023
[music]
01:16:14.069 --> 01:16:15.571
Today has been really hard...
01:16:15.696 --> 01:16:20.492
because it's so much harder
when you see the pain...
01:16:20.617 --> 01:16:22.869
that others are going through.
01:16:23.036 --> 01:16:25.706
I feel my own pain,
but you know...
01:16:25.872 --> 01:16:28.875
the struggles they have, and
when we have these sessions...
01:16:29.042 --> 01:16:32.254
when we're all speaking,
it's much more difficult.
01:16:32.379 --> 01:16:34.590
[people chattering]
01:16:34.715 --> 01:16:36.925
I meet different people...
01:16:37.050 --> 01:16:39.720
at different levels
of progression.
01:16:40.679 --> 01:16:43.307
And you think that's you.
01:16:43.432 --> 01:16:44.474
That's gonna be me.
01:16:44.600 --> 01:16:46.893
[people chattering]
01:16:47.060 --> 01:16:48.895
You know, you're faced
with your own mortality.
01:16:49.062 --> 01:16:52.899
But my mortality
is maybe not about my death.
01:16:53.025 --> 01:16:55.402
It's the death-- it's the death
of my brain.
01:16:55.569 --> 01:16:57.279
It's the dying brain.
01:16:58.405 --> 01:17:00.407
I will go home
and I will be tired.
01:17:00.574 --> 01:17:02.242
[Helen thanks participants]
01:17:02.367 --> 01:17:04.578
Thank you.
[laughter]
01:17:04.745 --> 01:17:06.413
I'll pick myself up again
next week...
01:17:06.538 --> 01:17:07.789
and I'll start all over.
01:17:07.914 --> 01:17:12.878
But I know from Twitter
and social media...
01:17:13.003 --> 01:17:16.965
that I have made an impact.
01:17:18.508 --> 01:17:20.093
[music]
01:17:20.260 --> 01:17:22.095
[BOY]: Hello, Helen.
01:17:22.220 --> 01:17:24.765
Oh my God Almighty!
01:17:24.931 --> 01:17:26.141
Hello!
01:17:26.266 --> 01:17:28.101
What's your name?
01:17:28.226 --> 01:17:30.395
- Erin.
- And?
01:17:32.147 --> 01:17:33.482
How are you?
01:17:33.607 --> 01:17:35.275
What are you doing around
all these boys?
01:17:35.442 --> 01:17:36.943
Hello.
How are you?
01:17:37.069 --> 01:17:40.113
A sense of purpose
I think has a major impact...
01:17:40.238 --> 01:17:41.823
on our health.
01:17:43.533 --> 01:17:48.080
Honestly, it just gives me such
a great sense of well-being...
01:17:48.205 --> 01:17:52.459
and such a great sense
of the person that I am...
01:17:52.626 --> 01:17:53.919
the person that I always was...
01:17:54.044 --> 01:17:55.712
that I thought
was taken away from me.
01:18:08.016 --> 01:18:11.978
[JILL]: I love you, Don,
with all my heart.
01:18:13.188 --> 01:18:15.023
With all my heart.
01:18:15.941 --> 01:18:19.027
You stay here as long
as it's good for you.
01:18:20.237 --> 01:18:23.824
You stay here as long
as it's good for you...
01:18:23.949 --> 01:18:26.785
and you're comfortable,
and not in pain.
01:18:28.995 --> 01:18:30.831
And I'll be okay...
01:18:30.956 --> 01:18:33.458
'cause you'll always be with me.
01:18:43.844 --> 01:18:45.053
Mm.
01:18:46.346 --> 01:18:48.348
I like this.
01:18:48.515 --> 01:18:50.142
I'm happy.
01:18:51.852 --> 01:18:52.936
I'm here.
01:18:58.400 --> 01:19:01.194
[KARIN]: [inhales deeply]
And let it out.
01:19:01.361 --> 01:19:03.822
[all breathing out]
01:19:04.698 --> 01:19:06.533
Lovely, Jeannette,
that's amazing.
01:19:06.658 --> 01:19:07.951
Let's do that one more time.
01:19:08.076 --> 01:19:10.537
Jeannette,
I absolutely love Jeannette.
01:19:10.662 --> 01:19:13.498
Um... yeah.
01:19:13.623 --> 01:19:15.876
Yeah, it's quite emotional,
actually.
01:19:18.336 --> 01:19:20.213
GROUP:
♪ Then it starts a-rocking... ♪
01:19:20.338 --> 01:19:21.590
Yeah.
01:19:21.715 --> 01:19:23.550
♪ Like a motorboat♪
01:19:23.717 --> 01:19:26.052
♪ Oh, whoa ♪
01:19:26.219 --> 01:19:32.851
♪ I never knew
anyone like you ♪♪
01:19:32.976 --> 01:19:35.437
- Ah.
- Well done, well done.
01:19:35.562 --> 01:19:38.732
[KARIN]: Words are now becoming
very difficult for her.
01:19:40.066 --> 01:19:44.237
And people were just
gutted for her, just sad.
01:19:44.362 --> 01:19:48.617
But there was this drive to,
how do we help her?
01:19:48.742 --> 01:19:50.076
What can we do?
01:19:50.243 --> 01:19:53.455
And so, we started to do
some movement exercises...
01:19:53.580 --> 01:19:56.166
and I realized that
within the movement...
01:19:56.291 --> 01:20:01.087
Jeannette was finding a real
joy and a confidence.
01:20:01.463 --> 01:20:04.466
[applause]
01:20:06.843 --> 01:20:09.721
[MAN]: What a fantastic turnout
for the walk this year.
01:20:10.388 --> 01:20:12.974
[people cheering]
01:20:15.060 --> 01:20:18.814
[CLARA]: Oh, it makes me feel
good. Proud.
01:20:23.610 --> 01:20:24.820
[WALTER]:
What would I want to say...
01:20:24.986 --> 01:20:27.113
to that eight-year-old boy...
01:20:27.239 --> 01:20:29.491
after everything
that I've gone through?
01:20:31.326 --> 01:20:36.289
Don't give up hope,
and keep up the fight.
01:20:38.208 --> 01:20:39.793
That's what I would say.
01:20:43.630 --> 01:20:45.131
I want to find solutions...
01:20:45.298 --> 01:20:47.133
to a better quality of life
for all.
01:20:48.218 --> 01:20:49.761
This is the world
I want to live in...
01:20:49.886 --> 01:20:51.179
ladies and gentlemen.
01:20:52.138 --> 01:20:53.932
Until that great,
great cure comes...
01:20:54.057 --> 01:20:55.684
you can have a quality
of life.
01:20:55.809 --> 01:20:58.186
Thank you for listening to me,
it means a lot.
01:20:58.311 --> 01:21:00.564
[applause]
01:21:01.439 --> 01:21:02.649
I think with knowledge...
01:21:02.774 --> 01:21:05.151
we become more empowered,
you know?
01:21:05.277 --> 01:21:09.948
When people start to understand
some of the causes of dementia.
01:21:10.073 --> 01:21:12.659
When people start to
understand what to expect...
01:21:12.826 --> 01:21:14.703
when someone has dementia.
01:21:14.828 --> 01:21:16.538
When people start to know
how to care...
01:21:16.663 --> 01:21:20.709
for someone with dementia,
this will change perceptions.
01:21:21.334 --> 01:21:24.045
[piano music playing]
01:21:25.672 --> 01:21:27.883
[KARIN]: If I could wave
a magic wand...
01:21:28.008 --> 01:21:29.676
I would be dancing
with Jeannette...
01:21:29.801 --> 01:21:33.889
every hour of every day
for the rest of her life...
01:21:33.889 --> 01:21:36.224
until she wanted
to stop dancing.
01:21:36.349 --> 01:21:38.977
[music continues]
01:21:43.148 --> 01:21:44.733
That's what she needs
right now...
01:21:44.900 --> 01:21:47.277
is she needs
to continue to dance.
01:21:51.740 --> 01:21:54.242
There are things
you can experience...
01:21:54.367 --> 01:21:58.830
that are brilliant
after diagnosis.
01:22:07.672 --> 01:22:09.591
With the right support...
01:22:09.758 --> 01:22:12.802
with the right set
of ingredients...
01:22:12.928 --> 01:22:15.889
that allow you to thrive.
01:22:19.601 --> 01:22:21.645
Can we find the key?
01:22:21.770 --> 01:22:23.855
Can we find that moment...
01:22:23.980 --> 01:22:29.361
that key to unlock them,
to unlock the door to them.
01:22:32.572 --> 01:22:34.824
[applause]
01:22:34.950 --> 01:22:37.786
[music continues]
01:22:42.582 --> 01:22:45.460
[cheers and applause]
01:22:58.431 --> 01:23:01.101
[piano music playing]
Distributor: Collective Eye Films
Length: 84 minutes
Date: 2023
Genre: Expository
Language: English
Grade: 10-12, College, Adults
Color/BW:
Closed Captioning: Available
Existing customers, please log in to view this film.
New to Docuseek? Register to request a quote.
Related Films
Complaints of a Dutiful Daughter
With profound insight and a healthy dose of levity, COMPLAINTS OF A DUTIFUL…