
#1 Caregiver Guilt Is Nearly Universal (And It's Based On A False Premise)

Dementia affects over 55 million people worldwide, and yet the families living alongside it are often blindsided by everything that follows the diagnosis. The unplanned exits, personality changes, the good days that make the harder ones harder, and the guilt of feeling frustrated with someone who has no control over any of it.
Here's the hard truth most pamphlets won't tell you: a lot of what families "know" about dementia is wrong, because the condition is routinely misrepresented in media, buried in 15-minute doctor's appointments, and misunderstood even by well-meaning people who should know better.
#2 Wandering Isn't "Aimless" – There's Usually A Goal Behind It

#3 Dementia Reorganizes The Entire Family System

#4 Resistance During Personal Care Isn't Defiance – It's Fear

#5 Distress Responses Aren't Personality Changes – They're Usually Unmet Needs

#6 Legal And Financial Planning Cannot Wait

#7 Medication Is Not Always The First Or Best Answer

#8 Sundowning Is Real And Neurological – Routine Alone Won’t Fix It

#9 Repetitive Questions Are Not Intentional; They Don't Remember Asking

#10 Joy And Humor Are Still Possible (And Still Matter)

#11 The Professionals Around You Should Be Dementia-Trained – Not All Of Them Are

#12 Dementia Is Not A Single Disease; The Type Matters

#13 Communication Doesn't End, It Transforms

#14 "It's Just Memory Loss" – The Most Dangerous Oversimplification

#15 "They're Just Trying To Manipulate Me" – They Almost Never Are

#16 They May Not Know Your Name (But They Know How You Make Them Feel)

#17 A "Good Day" Does Not Mean They're Getting Better

#18 Refusing Food Isn't Stubbornness – Swallowing Becomes Neurologically Difficult

#19 Depression And Dementia Are Not The Same Thing (But They Often Coexist)

#20 Memory Care Placement Isn't "Giving Up" – It's A Clinical Decision

Dementia is one of the most demanding journeys a family will ever share with someone they love. In my years of work in this field, much of the suffering I've witnessed has come not from the disease itself, but from misunderstanding it.
The families who navigate this with the most grace aren't the ones who feel it least. They're the ones who knew what to expect, asked hard questions, and surrounded themselves with people who understood what they were dealing with.
That kind of support is worth asking for.
If this helped, pass it along to someone in the middle of it.


