People with Alzheimer’s disease often act as if their minds are caught in an endless tape loop. They may ask the same question 20 times in an afternoon, pace a stretch of floor for hours, or hum a tune that never seems to run out of verses. Many have a condition called echolalia, in which the patient repeats words endlessly or echoes a phrase. If you’re caring for someone with the disease, this sort of thing may make you feel like crying or tearing your hair.

It’s important to know that your loved one isn’t trying to annoy you or push you to the breaking point. A continually repeated question, for instance, doesn’t mean that he or she isn’t listening to the answer. The 36-Hour Day, an excellent handbook for families coping with Alzheimer’s, explains that this repetition may be a sign of the insecurity and uncertainty caused by memory loss. In the later stages of the disease, damage to the memory may be so severe that the sufferer will not even remember asking the question.

Through these words and actions, the person with Alzheimer’s may also be expressing a specific concern, asking for help, or coping with frustration in the only way he or she knows. By understanding the reasons behind repetitive behavior, you can help provide comfort while preserving your own sanity.

How to reassure them while preserving your equilibrium

“Reassurance is an excellent tool to use in managing difficult behavior,” says family-outreach specialist Jan Oringer of the Family Caregiver Alliance in San Francisco. “Often that behavior is due to anxiety or fear, and you need to be sensitive to your loved one’s emotions. Be aware of your touch, tone of voice, not rushing or being too anxious.”

If your loved one constantly asks who you are or keeps asking for a long-dead friend or spouse, it may be out of worry that there’s nobody to care for him or her. By the same token, repeated questions about the next doctor’s appointment may mean that he or she has health concerns or is afraid of the doctor.

Instead of answering such questions every time they’re asked, reply with words of comfort. When your loved one wants to know who you are, say in a calm, soothing voice that everything is fine, that you’re there and will take care of him. Add that there will be plenty of food tonight, and that he or she is fortunate to have such a great doctor. If words don’t help, you may be able to ease his fears by putting on music, giving a shoulder massage, taking a walk outside, or another pleasant diversion.

Your loved one might have other reasons for saying the same things over and over. Some people with dementia may use repetition as a way to keep a conversation going when they know they’re not holding up their end, says Dr. William Molloy, a professor of medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, and director of the university’s Memory Clinic. Again, a few reassuring words or a little redirection might help.

Sometimes, of course, repeated questions may not stop despite your best efforts. In a memoir about caring for her elderly husband who had Alzheimer’s, Lela Knox Shanks recalls, “In the beginning, when Hughes asked the same thing over and over again, I wanted to scream and sometimes did — but that was not a satisfactory solution. I learned … to write notes to Hughes during that stressful period. Since he asked the same questions every day, I accumulated a set of stock answers that I flashed to his questions. By keeping silent I was better able to remain calm, [and] Hughes never questioned why I was communicating with him through signs.”

Other forms of repetitive behavior are often just as frustrating as nonstop questions. Indeed, it can be heart-wrenching to see a formerly gifted, accomplished person spend the afternoon pacing the kitchen or folding the same towel. He or she may even walk into a corner, and, unable to turn around, keep marching in place. But with gentle reassurance and guidance, you can help break this pattern of behavior.

Instead of saying, “Quit walking around the kitchen,” you might ask if he or she would like to sit down and look at pictures in the living room. Or you might also suggest that the two of you walk outdoors. But — very important — you should also ask yourself if the behavior really needs to be stopped. Your loved one may feel competent and helpful when he or she is folding that towel 50 times, and the towel won’t mind, either.

Here are other strategies from the Alzheimer’s Association and Family Caregiver Alliance to help you cope with repetitive behavior:

  • Look for patterns. Keep a log to determine if the behavior occurs at a certain time of day or night, or whether particular people or events seem to trigger it.
  • Keep track so you can tell whether your loved one might be hungry, cold, tired, in pain, or in need of a trip to the bathroom.
  • Check with the doctor to make sure your loved one isn’t suffering from pain or the side effects of medication.
  • Speak slowly and wait for your loved one to respond.
  • Don’t point out that he or she just asked the same question.
  • Distract him or her with a favorite activity.
  • Use signs, notes, and calendars to help decrease anxiety and uncertainty. In the early stages of Alzheimer’s, when your loved one can still read, he or she may not need to ask about dinner if a note on the table says, “Dinner is at 6:30 p.m.”

Talking with friends, a counselor, or a support group about your grief and frustration at the damage caused by Alzheimer’s also leaves you free to cope with its reality and to cherish your loved one as he or she is. “So many times we talk about caregiving in a somewhat negative fashion,” says Oringer, of the Family Caregiver Alliance. “But I see a lot of families where this has been an opportunity to grow, and to find more adaptive ways of solving difficulties. These aren’t just caregiver skills, but life skills all of us need.”

This article originally appeared at www.mylifepath.com

Beth Witrogen McLeod

Author

  • Beth Witrogen McLeod is an author, journalist, speaker and consultant on caregiving, end-of-life issues and renewal at midlife, especially for women. She is a double Pulitzer Prize nominee, and has won many national and regional awards for her work. She has written for Good Housekeeping, SELF, Family Circle, and The Wall Street Journal, among others. Her latest book is Caregiving: The Spiritual Journey of Love, Loss, and Renewal

    Her expertise grew out of personal experience caring for her parents who were simultaneously terminally ill 1,200 miles away. With a father dying of a rare form of cancer and a mother with Lou Gehrig's disease and dementia, McLeod learned firsthand about the traumas and blessings of this mid-life rite of passage. She turned her experiences into a passion for public service, first writing and producing an award-winning newspaper series, "The Caregivers," for The San Francisco Examiner in 1995. It was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. She developed a weekly column for The Examiner that often appeared on the New York Times Syndicate Web site. Honors for the series included National Hospice Organization, Pew Charitable Trusts, American Legion Auxiliary, Society of Professional Journalists, and many regional and local social service organizations.

    Beth is an Empowering Caregivers featured expert: learn more about Beth