Anonymous wrote:Ok a few things. She sounds like she is doing a lot. Working, grieving, child living at home, hosting large family gatherings, etc. She also may have some hearing loss and just general getting older issues.
With my mom there were alarming signs like getting lost trying to drive home from church which she had done for 40+ years. Finding her phone in the fridge. Those sorts of things which were eye opening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Based on my experience, I think you’re overreacting. I’m 45 and have pretty severe ADHD and I do stuff like that all the time. I have trouble with keeping track of time or remembering when things happened, so even if I remember where a thing happened, it might feel like it happened at a different time than when it really happened. I’m not in cognitive decline, it’s just something I struggle with. Did I put the item in the microwave 5 minutes ago or 2 hours ago? Who can say? Beeping? Background noise. I tune things out so I can focus on the task at hand, so beeping won’t register with me until I can switch tasks and deal with whatever is beeping.
I’ve often wondered how my family will be able to tell if I ever do develop dementia, at least in the early stages. That’s actually how I found out I have ADHD. I struggled so much with memory and executive functioning so much I thought I was developing dementia and had a screening appointment with my doctor. Thank goodness it wasn’t that.
My brother and I have ADHD (got it from our dad). I do everything you’re saying and need vyvanse to function. , my mother is definitely not adhd.
Again, the fact that my brother called me concerned as well is what really made me worried.
Anonymous wrote:Based on my experience, I think you’re overreacting. I’m 45 and have pretty severe ADHD and I do stuff like that all the time. I have trouble with keeping track of time or remembering when things happened, so even if I remember where a thing happened, it might feel like it happened at a different time than when it really happened. I’m not in cognitive decline, it’s just something I struggle with. Did I put the item in the microwave 5 minutes ago or 2 hours ago? Who can say? Beeping? Background noise. I tune things out so I can focus on the task at hand, so beeping won’t register with me until I can switch tasks and deal with whatever is beeping.
I’ve often wondered how my family will be able to tell if I ever do develop dementia, at least in the early stages. That’s actually how I found out I have ADHD. I struggled so much with memory and executive functioning so much I thought I was developing dementia and had a screening appointment with my doctor. Thank goodness it wasn’t that.
Anonymous wrote:Does she lose things?
Anonymous wrote:Do you live with your mother? Why are you at her house so frequently that the microwave beep bothers you so much?
Anonymous wrote:Stop looking for problems both me and my spouse in our 40s do this. Not a big deal. You are completely overreacting. Wondering if you have any real problems going on in your life right now...
Anonymous wrote:Who doesn’t forget their coffee in the microwave several times a week?
Also, the older you get, the more quickly each year seems to go by, and, the more Thanksgivings (or whatever holiday) you have experienced. It’s possibly not at all odd to get one year mixed up with another at her age.
If she’s teaching online regularly and enjoying political discussions, she must be pretty cognitively with it. What is your main concern about her?