Anonymous wrote:The reason we find toddlers adorable is hormonal. Hormones keep us from killing our young. If we didn't find them cute and lovable, they would just be annoying little pooping pests who dimish our resources.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a home health caregiver, mostly with dementia patients and the disabled. My current assignment (15 months now) is with a profoundly demented patient who is nonverbal and immobile. He has cognitive capacity similar to an infant - I cared for a lot of infants in my life and the nice thing about them is that they’re cute and they get more able and cognizant with each passing day so there is joy in watching them develop into themselves.
It’s much harder to care for an adult sized elderly infant who will never know you, speak to you, understand what is happening around them. This particular assignment is burning me out pretty hard because it’s the very worst case scenario of how I would never in a million years want to end up. His body is really fairly healthy all things considered so he could be like this for several more years it’s anyone’s guess - the doctors don’t even know what form of dementia he has because it is very atypical and genetic testing has not clarified the picture at all.
Anonymous wrote:Babies have a certain charm about them that makes us want to take care of them. Old people don’t have that charm. They’re not “adorable”, and are therefore, no fun to be around.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure this is the right comparison. The issue is that as people age they are more like toddlers who understand the world around them and have opinions on what they like/don't like and want to do. At the same time, they don't have full control of their physical capacities and they may also have impaired judgment.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure this is the right comparison. The issue is that as people age they are more like toddlers who understand the world around them and have opinions on what they like/don't like and want to do. At the same time, they don't have full control of their physical capacities and they may also have impaired judgment.
Anonymous wrote:My Japanese grandmother was adorable for many decades. She was tiny with a really cute face, always happy to see anyone, particularly children, and she would clap and sing with the neighborhood preschoolers when they came to visit her nursing home.
She lost her memory but was still happy until the last year of her life, when she stopped responding and died of Covid complications before the vaccine could be distributed.
I will always remember her as the happiest, cutest, Grandma ever.