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Yesterday I went to NY to visit my apartment where I had lived since 1996, but for the last 3 years I've been living with my 104 year old mother, taking care of her in NJ. I try to go to NY at least once a month to get my mail, see friends, etc. Yesterday I had a dermatologist appointment. I had never been there before. It was on Sullivan Street, next to MacDougal. I live on MacDougal and Prince. For SOME reason, I got it in my head that I just had to go straight up MacDougal. I had it in my head it was Sullivan Street. I wasted 20 minutes calling them trying to find it. Finally, I asked a bike messenger who told me it was the next street over. I was gobsmacked. I was on the wrong street. A street I knew well.


Now I will say I have always been "spacey". I have been very stressed lately taking care of my mom who has dementia and now, my brother who is an alcoholic schizophrenic with a horrible temper. His house burned down Dec. 17. I also am helping a few people with their film projects and am helping another friend with a legal matter.


I think I'm close to burnout.


Is there something wrong with me for thinking I was on Sullivan Street when I was on MacDougal? I know the difference! I just got it in my head that I was on Sullivan. This is very upsetting to me. Is this a sign of dementia? Thanks. Appreciate your thoughts.

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I think that if everyone that got turned around on a street thought they had dementia the Neurologist offices would be filled.
You are stressed
You get to that area 1 time a month.
This was a new dr. A new location.
Give yourself a break.
Now if you truly have concerns do a little deep thinking. Are there other times that you missed a street, did not know that date and were confused when you found out the right date? Were there times when you forgot what a direction in a recipe meant? Forgot what a spatula was? Or if you are not into cooking forgot what a direction was in a particular hobby you enjoy? Did you leave the water on? the stove on?
I have said that pinpointing dementia is like looking at a picture from a distance then as you get closer you realize that picture is made of hundreds of other pictures that make the whole. (I hope that makes sense)
When you go for your Annual Physical...and if you don't have one scheduled please schedule one.. your doctor should be doing a Mini Mental Test. (if you are Medicare age) If it is not part of the exam ask that you be given one. And be open and honest with your doctor about your concerns.
Honestly I think you are burning your candle at both ends. You can not sustain the pace you are.
Please look into either placing mom in Memory Care and/or cutting back on some of the other people you are helping.
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TakeFoxAway Feb 2, 2024
Thank you for your answer. I see my doc in March. Will mention let him know before then I'd like to discuss.
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Take Fox, get thee to a doctor.

I say this because I believe it will bring you peace.
If this is worrying you enough not to just say to yourself "Well, you fouled that one up", and move on, then I think perhaps other things are bothering you as well.

I would say we worry these things much more as we age; I am 81, my partner is 83, and yeah, we get forgetful. We say more often to one another "But don't you REMEMBER! I told you that YESTERDAY".
Then we question is it in our HEAD or in our EARS? Is it normal or is it something to worry about? And on and on and on.

You are so right that dealing with "stuff" makes us spacey. And more so as we age. I told my doctor at my last checkup that the anxiety I can get is worse with age. It can just kind of send me into a freeze-frame in which I don't much compute any thing; at worst I am a bit like one of those silly goats that freeze with any anxiety, and I feel I could be tipped over with a push!

You sound, in your note to us, really quite articulate.
But you are worrying.
And it's my guess that making an appointment with your doc for a check-in would relieve your mind. So just DO it. Meanwhile practice spelling Forum backwards! And other words.
As a retired RN know that I used to tell the doctors when they did neuro exams with that "tell me the last three Presidents business" I couldn't pass their exams on my best days! Just the anxiety of the questions would--well, to be honest--TIP me OVER!

Good luck. Remember to know you can't do it all, and to do some self care now.
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Too much going on in your life , and your mind on other things can make you feel that way. Unless it happens again, or you notice other things I wouldnt worry so much. Watch out for not being able to remember names of things. Like calling sugar, salt instead.

I had 4 boys, one time I was dropping them off at a friend's, and almost dropped them off at school instead.

Also lack of sleep
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You don't disclose your own age, but if your Mom is 104 then you must be very "seasoned" ;-)

I would take advantage of your free Medicare annual wellness physical. At this exam ask them to give you a cognitive and memory test so that there is a baseline measurement in your records. Then every year you can measure how things are going, rather than fretting and guessing.

The more important issue is: do you have all your legal ducks in a row? What's your own plan for care when the day sneaks up on you (or clobbers you) and now your decisions are in someone else's hands? Do you have a facility vetted and chosen, should this be something you'd need?

Who is your PoA? Hopefully you have one, and hopefully it is someone an entire generation younger than you (ie no sibling, spouse or friend, but an adult child or younger relative or other who is capable, willing and local).

If you don't have a PoA please work hard and fast to figure this out. You also need to have a Advance Healthcare Directive, a Pre-need Guardian document, and a Last Will. Someone should also be your Medical Representative (a HIPAA doc you sign at your doctor's office, not with a lawyer).

When I was still in my 50's I twice left my van running in my work parking lot for the entire 8 hours. I wondered whether I had ALZ. It hasn't happened since and I can't explain why it happened then, but now I'm 65 and haven't displayed any other unusual cognitive problems.

No one can control or predict most types of cognitive decline. No one wants to think about themselves getting dementia. But it's a possibility for every one of us and the best we can do is be prepared.

FYI my Mom's family is originally from the Bronx (Paulding Avenue) and my 94-yr old Mom's sister (my Aunt) in FL will turn 105 this May, with no end in sight! I joke with them that they're living long just to spite me...
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TakeFoxAway Feb 1, 2024
Hi Geaton,
Thank you for your answer. I was going to mention that I am 69, but forgot! ha!
Yes I have all of those things but do not yet have POA for me. I have no children. I do have younger friends.

Thanks for telling me about leaving your van running. That sounds like something I would do but have been doing all my life. My mother used to say if your head wasn't attached you'd lose it. I'm amazed I got this far in life. It's amazing your van wasn't stolen!
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The older we are the more things we are able to do on "automatic pilot" without thinking about it. How many times have you been driving and realized you weren't really concentrating but you are on your way to correctly to the grocery store? We come home, put our keys down, it's automatic. We park our cars, get out move on to our destination. We put things away, in the cupboard, in the refrigerator--no problem.
When we are ill or stressed, that process is interrupted, we aren't concentrating and everything is harder. We put milk in the cupboards, a can of soup in the refrigerator. We throw away the papers we intended to file, save the discards for filing.
As we age things do get more difficult and require more focus, attention and concentration, that's normal aging.Worrying about cognitive decline when we do something silly just adds more stress.
Stress makes everything so very difficult and you sound as though you have reached your limits. Take some deep breaths, try to slow down a bit and reassess. See your doctor, get a physical and please take good care.
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TakeFoxAway Feb 2, 2024
Wonderful wonderful response. Thank you. The autopilot makes a lot of sense.
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Draw the face of a clock showing 3pm. If you can do that properly, you're fine.
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TakeFoxAway Feb 1, 2024
I was able to do that. Thank you.
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Might you have adult ADHD? I do. Not diagnosed until my 30s. When I was growing up in the 70s/80s that diagnosis didn’t exist. And you don’t have to be a spazzy sort who can’t stay still for 5 seconds. It has lots of variations. My brain is like a pinball machine, bouncing from one idea or task to the other! I’ve learned to work around my own brain.

Also, if it helps… I had a professor explain Alzheimer’s as this:

If you can’t remember where you put your keys, that’s just being forgetful.

If you can’t remember what keys are FOR, that’s Alzheimer’s.
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TakeFoxAway Feb 2, 2024
Actually LoopyLoo, I do think I HAVE ADD or ADHD. My brain is like a pinball machine as well. I usually have 2 or 3 things going at once. I get distracted easily. I've been that way all my life.
What did you have to do to get diagnosed?

p.s. I'm ALWAYS in a rush; trying to get things done quickly. And trying to get as much done as possible. I suppose before I forget about. I need to keep up that momentum or I feel I'll get stuck in inertia.
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It's probably the stress ur under. It does weird things to the mind and body.
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Get plenty of water. Get plenty of sleep. You may have been dehydrated and simply stressed and exhausted.
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I'm impressed Mom is 104 years old.

OP, if brother is an alcoholic schizophrenic you are under a lot of severe stress.

NYC streets are confusing. Make sure to always get plenty of sleep and drink a lot of water. I find when I am dehydrated my memory is not as good. Take care of yourself.

My uncle had schizophrenia and Dad was a hard core alcoholic. Being around either for more then an hour caused severe stress for me.
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