art blog(derogatory)

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official daine visual archive
Not today Justin
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if i look back, i am lost
Claire Keane

Janaina Medeiros

oozey mess
Misplaced Lens Cap
ojovivo
almost home
🪼
Stranger Things
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Origami Around
Sweet Seals For You, Always
NASA
YOU ARE THE REASON
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@androogwegory
Peppers are the spicy of the fire, mint is the spicy of the ice, carbonation is the spicy of the air, and vinegar is the spicy of the water.
Stop taking people with dementia to the cemetery
“Oh yeah, every time that dad forgets mom is dead, we head to the cemetery so he can see her gravestone.”
WHAT. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve heard some version of this awful story. Stop taking people with dementia to the cemetery. Seriously. I cringe every single time someone tells me about their “plan” to remind a loved one that their loved one is dead.
I also hear this a lot: “I keep reminding mom that her sister is dead, and sometimes she recalls it once I’ve said it.” That’s still not a good thing. Why are we trying to force people to remember that their loved ones have passed away?
If your loved one with dementia has lost track of their timeline, and forgotten that a loved one is dead, don’t remind them. What’s the point of reintroducing that kind of pain? Here’s the thing: they will forget again, and they will ask again. You’re never, ever, ever, going to “convince” them of something permanently.
Instead, do this:
“Dad, where do you think mom is?”
When he tells you the answer, repeat that answer to him and assert that it sounds correct. For example, if he says, “I think mom is at work,” say, “Yes, that sounds right, I think she must be at work.” If he says, “I think she passed away,” say, “Yes, she passed away.”
People like the answer that they gave you. Also, it takes you off the hook to “come up with something” that satisfies them. Then, twenty minutes later, when they ask where mom is, repeat what they originally told you.
I support this sentiment. Repeatedly reminding someone with faulty memory that a loved one has died isn’t a kindness, it’s a cruelty. They have to relieve the loss every time, even if they don’t remember the grief 15 minutes later.
In other words, don’t try to impose your timeline on them in order to make yourself feel better. Correcting an afflicted dementia patient will not cure them. They won’t magically return to your ‘real world’. No matter how much you might want them to.
It’s a kindness of old age, forgetting. Life can be very painful. Don’t be the one ripping off the bandage every single time.
I used to work as a companion in a nursing home where one of the patients was CONVINCED I was her sister, who’d died 40 years earlier. And every time one of the nurses said “that’s not Janet, Janet is dead, Alice, remember?” Alice would start sobbing.
So finally one day Alice did the whole “JANET IS HERE” and this nurse rather nastily went “Janet is dead” and before it could go any further I said “excuse me??? How dare you say something so horrible to my sister?”
The nurse was pissed, because I was “feeding Alice’s delusions.” Alice didn’t have delusions. Alice had Alzheimer’s.
But I made sure it went into Alice’s chart that she responded positively to being allowed to believe I was Janet. And from that point forward, only my specific patient referred to me as “Nina” in front of Alice—everyone else called me Janet, and when Alice said my name wasn’t Nina I just said “oh, it’s a nickname, that’s all.” It kept her calm and happy and not sobbing every time she saw me.
It costs zero dollars (and maybe a little bit of fast thinking) to not be an asshole to someone with Alzheimer’s or dementia. Be kind.
I wish I had heard this stuff when Grandma was still here.
I read once that you have to treat dementia patients more like it’s improv, like you have to take what they say and say to yourself “ok, and” and give them more of a story to occupy them and not just shut it down with something super harsh.
A nurse I used to work with always told us: “If a man with dementia is trying to get out of bed to go to work, don’t tell him he’s 90 and in a nursing home. Tell him it’s Sunday and he can stay in bed. If a woman with dementia is trying to stand because she wants to get her husband’s dinner out of the oven, don’t tell her he’s been dead for 20 years. Tell her you’ll do it for her and she can sit back down.”
Always remembered that, always did it. Nothing worse than hearing someone with memory loss ask the same question over and over again only to be met with: “We already told you!”
Just tell them again.
I’ve worked with elderly dementia patients, and I agree with all the above. Treat them as you’d like to be treated in the same situation.
Same. I’ve worked with patients like these and even my grandma was convinced for a day that I was my aunt. Just roll with it.
Everyone’s like “those Germans have a word for everything” but English has a word for tricking someone into watching the music video for Rick Astley’s Never Gonna Give You Up.
English has a lot more words created for very specific phenomena! It’s not just rick-rolling. Language is always evolving and it’s super interesting! Here’s a list of hyper-specific/untranslatable words in English.
LOTS OF HELP NEEDED: Do you speak Somali, Farsi, Arabic, Kirundi, Kunama, Karen, Swahili, Nepali, French (Francophone Africa), Tigrinya, Mashi, or Amharic?
I am volunteering with a refugee organization here in my city and one of the problems we are facing is communicating with refugees who speak little to no English while we are doing our volunteer projects. I am going to be creating a video series where native speakers will teach very basic words and phrases to non-native speakers of the previously listed languages. In these videos, native speakers will be saying these phrases at native speed and then slowed down so that non-native speakers can repeat and learn. We will be teaching phrases such as “nice to meet you”, “how are you”, “my name is ___”, etc. This will not be a full teaching course.
I wanted to do this because I feel like the refugees will feel more welcome here if everyone can communicate with each other, even if it’s just saying hello and goodbye to each other in their language every time we work together. :D Plus, it’s always fun to learn a little bit of another language!
If you speak any of these languages, please translate the following phrases and write the phrases with the latin alphabet as well (if you are able to!) as these mini-courses will be geared toward native English speaking volunteers. In addition, if there are any other phrases that you think are fun or culturally relevant or what have you, feel free to add those in as well. :)
Welcome
Hello
Nice to meet you
How are you?
I am fine
What is your name?
My name is ___
Yes
No
Let’s go
Are you okay?
See you later
Goodbye
Okay
Thank you so much for your help, it is much appreciated! If you have more questions, please do not hesitate to leave a message in my ask box.
“When I’m doing work around the house, I give him this educational iPad app to play with, and he’s completely absorbed by it. Then recently we were at the grocery store, and he wanted to tear into some yogurt, and I told him that he had to wait until we paid for it. He said: ‘You mean I need to be patient?’ I thought: ‘Whoa.’”
This is still my favorite comic ever
when the movie is very good
imagine being a totally random dude and all you want to do is catch some fish and then you get stranded in this weird, gigantic foreign kingdom and they make you the utmost authority on your language and literally all you wanted was to catch fish
today i was working in the box office and a man who was walking down the street came up to me as if he was trying to buy a ticket and said “i’m more interested in you than the movie”. first of all, what fucking movie, because you didnt name one, this is a 5 screen cinema, and no shows are starting for the next hour and a half. anyways i turned off the mic and stared off into the distance until he went away
If you die in New England you respawn in the last Dunkin Donuts you went to
The only Meryl Streep meme that matters
he was ready lmao
He a real one
I need me a him