Anonymous wrote:All of this sounds pretty mild, OP.
However, it doesn't mean you should just stand by and do nothing until she gets worse.
If she's a cooperative sort, you could tell her that they make meds these days to stave off memory loss, and that to access them, she has to ask her doctor for a test. The test will be for Mild Cognitive Impairment, which is a relatively new diagnosis, and comes before dementia. You can research it to see whether it fits your mother's profile, and to know exactly what she needs to ask from her doctor. Ideally, you'd accompany her to her appointment. It might turn out she does not yet qualify for a diagnosis, in which case her test will serve as a baseline for future comparisons.
She probably has mild hearing loss and also needs to be tested, to determine if she needs hearing aids. Hearing loss contributes to the development of dementia.
Anonymous wrote:If it's just the coffee thing, I think you are overreacting. I'm 44, have no cognitive decline, and will forget my tea in the microwave multiple times a week because I get busy. If I'm in a part of the house where I can't hear it, I can't hear it.
If you don't have other examples, this seems like a big overreaction (and also mostly just about you being annoyed by it when you are in her house -- why not just go take it out of the microwave after it's been beeping for a few minutes? Can you just take it to her? Why are you allowing it to beep for hours if you can hear it and she can't?
Anonymous wrote:Leaving the drink in the microwave isn’t cause for concern. I’m in my 50s and have been doing this sort of thing for decades.
+1 I've been doing this for years! If you get busy in another room or on a Zoom call, then you can't remove your cup of tea from the microwave. I think you are over-reacting because the beeping is probably irritating to you.Anonymous wrote:If it's just the coffee thing, I think you are overreacting. I'm 44, have no cognitive decline, and will forget my tea in the microwave multiple times a week because I get busy. If I'm in a part of the house where I can't hear it, I can't hear it.
If you don't have other examples, this seems like a big overreaction (and also mostly just about you being annoyed by it when you are in her house -- why not just go take it out of the microwave after it's been beeping for a few minutes? Can you just take it to her? Why are you allowing it to beep for hours if you can hear it and she can't?
Anonymous wrote:Leaving the drink in the microwave isn’t cause for concern. I’m in my 50s and have been doing this sort of thing for decades.
Anonymous wrote:What are you worried about exactly? Are you worried about her hearing (I have hearing loss and couldn't hear the microwave without my hearing aids)? Are you worried that she's forgetful about her coffee? Leaving coffee in the microwave is something that a lot of people do - that's the reason that microwaves beep, to remind people who forget.