Caregiver Restrest, help, and hope for dementia caregivers
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Chapter six · advanced

Stage Transitions

The disease moves in slow seasons. Knowing roughly where you are, and what tends to come next, turns dreaded surprises into things you'd already half-packed for.

The seasons, roughly

Every person's path is their own; these are tendencies, not schedules.

“To everything there is a season, and a time for every purpose under heaven:”

Ecclesiastes 3:1
Watch Teepa Snow's GEMS® model explains the seasons better than any chart (meet the person where they are): the signs & stages shelf.

How to spot a season changing

Transitions announce themselves as clusters, not single events: several new "can'ts" in a month, a strategy that reliably worked going reliably dead, sleep flipping, falls beginning, weight sliding. Two responses serve you well:

When home may not be enough

The honest checklist. Any two of these means it's time to seriously explore options, not because you failed, but because the job now exceeds one household:

Memory-care placement is a change of address for the care, not a withdrawal of the love. Families who make the move usually report the same surprise: with the labor handed off, they got to be the daughter, the husband, the friend again. The visit becomes presence instead of task triage. Visit facilities before the crisis forces a rushed choice; tour at mealtime; trust smell and staff faces over chandeliers.

Do this one season early

Whatever season you're in, spend one hour preparing for the next: middle-stage caregivers tour a day program and shortlist two memory-care options “just to know”; late-stage caregivers ask about palliative and hospice criteria before anyone needs them. Decisions made calm are twice as good as decisions made at 2am in an ER hallway.