Jim
Fielder of Tyler, Texas, has been a bass guitar
player in a number of bands, including Buffalo
Springfield, Blood Sweat & Tears, and
for Neil Sedaka. His work with Blood Sweat
& Tears included the hit singles, “You’ve
Made Me So Very Happy,” “Spinning Wheel,”
and “And When I Die.”
Now
his 79‑year‑old mother has been
going through late‑stage Alzheimer’s
disease. The National Institute on Aging Web
site estimates that 4.5 million Americans
have Alzheimer’s, a “brain disorder seriously
affecting a person’s ability to carry out
daily activities.” Starting with mild memory
problems, it evolves into severe brain damage.
Scientists today don’t know what causes Alzheimer’s
and no cure exists.
“The
first sign in my mother was her inability
to remember where she’d left her wallet and
keys,” said 59‑year‑old Fielder
in a telephone interview, talking about five
years ago. “In one instance, she went out
for the evening and couldn’t remember what
she’d done with her wallet. So we called the
credit card companies to cancel her accounts.
Days later we found the wallet at home in
a dresser drawer. After more incidents like
that, we realized something bigger was going
on.”
Fielder’s
mother and stepfather eventually moved from
their home to a condo because of her slipping
mental faculties and his slowing physical
abilities. She quit driving because of her
risk of driving off and forgetting the way
home.
Said
Fielder, “The change of environment (of moving
to the condo) confused my mom. She had been
losing mental grasp of day‑to‑day
things anyway and suddenly was in a brand
new home. They tried making the condo familiar
to her by using her old furniture and hanging
familiar pictures on the walls. Still, she
began going downhill from there.”
Less
than a year ago, the couple decided to move
to Salt Lake City to be near other relatives,
and where she could live in a special Alzheimer’s
unit and he in a nearby assistance‑by‑request
apartment. “Now she needs assistance for virtually
everything,” Fielder said. “The disease has
progressed aggressively the last two years.”
As
for his personal feelings, Fielder said, “I
knew it would be like this going in. You have
this checklist of what is going to happen
and then you see it happen. I believe many
people dealing with (Alzheimer’s in the family)
are in denial.”
For
more, see danieljvance.com
. This column made is possible by a grant
from Blue Valley Sod, bluevalleysod.com.