Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My vocabulary is shot and I lose my train of thought when speaking. Not great when you are a trial lawyer. I thought it was early onset of dementia, but a psychiatrist said its perimenopause. Did this happen to you, and if so, did your ability to speak in complete sentences return after you made the transition? This is humiliating.
This is not normal. You should really seek a second opinion vs trusting 1 dr and an internet message board. It really does sound like EOD, which needs treatment right away to at least buy you a little more time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My vocabulary is shot and I lose my train of thought when speaking. Not great when you are a trial lawyer. I thought it was early onset of dementia, but a psychiatrist said its perimenopause. Did this happen to you, and if so, did your ability to speak in complete sentences return after you made the transition? This is humiliating.
This is not normal. You should really seek a second opinion vs trusting 1 dr and an internet message board. It really does sound like EOD, which needs treatment right away to at least buy you a little more time.
Then, I guess I have dementia, too.
The thing that is most frustrating is that I used to be extremely articulate - vocabulary was my thing. Now I find myself looking for alternate ways to describe something when the perfect word I am reaching for eludes me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My vocabulary is shot and I lose my train of thought when speaking. Not great when you are a trial lawyer. I thought it was early onset of dementia, but a psychiatrist said its perimenopause. Did this happen to you, and if so, did your ability to speak in complete sentences return after you made the transition? This is humiliating.
This is not normal. You should really seek a second opinion vs trusting 1 dr and an internet message board. It really does sound like EOD, which needs treatment right away to at least buy you a little more time.
Anonymous wrote:My vocabulary is shot and I lose my train of thought when speaking. Not great when you are a trial lawyer. I thought it was early onset of dementia, but a psychiatrist said its perimenopause. Did this happen to you, and if so, did your ability to speak in complete sentences return after you made the transition? This is humiliating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't find my words or say the wrong word. I can no longer spell either or want to say "that" and type "the" instead, over and over again. My frustration is through the roof since it's harder to express myself. I can totally sympathize op.
I keep misspelling words because I'm mixing up homophones. I never used to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, I started to have a hard time recalling words and names after 46. Currently still in peri but it's stabilized.
Recalling names is so hard now.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, I started to have a hard time recalling words and names after 46. Currently still in peri but it's stabilized.
Anonymous wrote:I can't find my words or say the wrong word. I can no longer spell either or want to say "that" and type "the" instead, over and over again. My frustration is through the roof since it's harder to express myself. I can totally sympathize op.