Caregiver Restrest, help, and hope for dementia caregivers
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Toolkit · your bench

Building your circle of help

Paid respite is on the resources page. This page is the other half, turning willing friends and family into helpers who actually help, through a system that makes all three people feel safe: you, the helper, and the person you care for.

Recruiting: the ask that gets a yes

If your family's rule is "we take care of our own"

Bringing in help doesn't break that promise. It's how you keep it. When every hour lands on one daughter, one wife, one son, the caring is what breaks first. A helper, a day program, a paid aide: these keep the family able to care, for years instead of months. Letting others in isn't handing your person to strangers. It's making sure the people who love them don't run out.

Steal these messages: copy, swap the [names], send

Composing the ask is half the reason it never gets sent. Don't compose; copy. Each of these took a hundred caregivers' trial and error to get right: specific, small, warm, and easy to say yes to.

The specific ask: gets a yes where "let me know if you need anything" never does

Hi [name]. Could you take Thursday afternoons with Dad, 2 to 4? Honestly it's just coffee and the game on TV. I'd get two hours for errands, and it would mean the world. I'll be there the first visit to show you everything.

The standing job: a ritual, not a favor

Would you be Dad's ride to the barbershop every second Tuesday at 10? He loves the outing, you two always got along, and a standing thing I never have to arrange again is the most helpful shape help can take.

The distance job: for the far-away sibling

Being far away doesn't put you on the bench. Would you take over Mom's insurance calls and bill-paying? It's hours a week I'd get back, it all happens from your couch, and it would genuinely change my month. I'll send you the folder.

The monthly family update: stops the "how is she REALLY" calls

Team Mom update: The good: she's been singing along to her playlist every evening. The hard: mornings are slower and she needs help dressing now. What would actually help this month: someone to take the second Saturday. Reply here if you can grab it. Thanks for being on the team.

The family-meeting call: before resentment hardens

Can we all get on a call Sunday at 7? Thirty minutes. I want to lay out where Dad's care stands, everything it involves in a month, and split up some pieces so this stays sustainable for all of us. I'll send a short list beforehand so nobody's ambushed.

The church ask: visiting ministries exist for exactly this

Does the church have anyone who visits homebound members? My dad has dementia and absolutely lights up with company. Thirty minutes and a cup of coffee would be gold to him. We'd love a regular visitor, and I'll make it easy on whoever comes.

The neighbor brief: the wandering safety net nobody arms

Hi. A quick heads-up: my dad, [name], has dementia. If you ever see him out walking alone, could you call me at [number]? I'll drop off a recent photo. Thank you. It takes a village, and you're officially part of ours.

The training visit: 45 minutes that makes it real

Most volunteer help dies of vagueness and fear. The helper is scared of "doing it wrong," so they drift away. One structured visit fixes it. (It's a prefilled checklist in My Notebook: "+ Helper training visit.")

The trust ladder: four rungs, no leaps

Trust is built in steps small enough that nobody has to be brave, and each rung is also the test of the one before it:

Making it safe for the person, not just logistically

Running the team, so it doesn't all route through you

Keeping helpers: the part everyone forgets

Send this to a would-be helper who's nervous

You don't need training in dementia. You need three rules and a snack. Never argue or correct (their reality is real to them). Respond to feelings, not facts ("you miss her" beats "she died years ago"). And when in doubt: music, a walk, or ice cream. You cannot break them. Your job isn't nursing. It's being a calm, friendly human for two hours, and it matters more than you can know.

“Carry one another’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ.”

Galatians 6:2