Dementia with Difficult People: A Virtual Q&A November 8th at 2pm EST
Oct 17, 2022 10:01 am
Please join us for our next Virtual Q&A!
AlzAuthors offers many stories from caregivers who have each lived a unique journey. For some, caregiving came easy, a duty lovingly fulfilled. For others, it involved a complicated choice to reconnect with a parent with whom they'd shared a painful, turbulent past, whether from abuse, abandonment, or estrangement. Or they may have encountered challenges from siblings in denial or predisposed not to help which made their journey harder than it had to be. They chose to overcome these difficulties anyway, to care for a parent who desperately needed them and would eventually forget who they were and the turmoil of their previous relationship. This often led to reconciliation and new memories to comfort the caregiver when their duties ended.
In our next AlzAuthors Live! Virtual Q&A Dementia With Difficult People on November 8th at 2 pm EST you will meet four of our authors who either cared for a parent who had hurt them in the past, or dealt with siblings who made caregiving difficult, or both. A professional mediator will also be on hand to offer advice on how to navigate a dementia journey with a difficult person.
Potential discussion topics:
- Heeding the call to care
- Reckoning with the past
- Setting aside differences
- Problems/issues encountered
- Forgiveness
- Building a support network without family
Registrants are also allowed to ask questions. You may present your questions in the registration form. Of course, we cannot cover all these topics and questions in an hour, but we will pick the most relevant and see how the conversation flows.
Meet Our Panelists
Kimberly Best, RN, MA
Kimberly is the author of How to Live Forever, A Guide to Writing the Final Chapter of Your Life Story. She is a speaker and trainer on conflict management, transitions, and difficult decisions, including end of life issues. She is the owner of Best Conflict Solutions, focusing on Conflict Coaching, Civil, Family, Healthcare, and Elder Mediation in Franklin, Tennessee. She spent most of her career as a Registered Nurse in intensive care, trauma, and emergency medicine, where she cared for people in extreme need and gained valuable experience in the medical system. Kim attended graduate school at the University of North Carolina Charlotte in Clinical/Community Psychology and obtained a master’s degree in Conflict Management from Lipscomb University in Nashville, Tennessee. She also trained in Transformative Mediation at Hofstra University and Healthcare Mediation at the University of South Florida and is a working member of the ACR Elder Mediation Professional Development Group. She also serves on the board of the Tennessee Association of Professional Mediators. She is passionate about helping others resolve conflicts in a productive, non-litigious way, and in finding the optimal solution to problems for all parties involved. Kim draws from her unique and diverse experiences and her love of learning to inform her work in conflict management. Read Kim's AlzAuthors post here.
Malia Kline
Malia is the author of Sisterly Shove, a memoir that tells the story of when she and her sister took on their parents’ care despite their personal differences. She is the younger sister in the book. A copywriter who studied journalism at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, she was formerly a writer/producer at a CBS-affiliate TV station. She was also the scriptwriter on videos in the Duke Family Series. One of them, It’s Potty Time, was named “KidVid of the Year” by Roger Ebert and became available in nearly 700 libraries worldwide. Malia now owns her own copywriting business and shares her word-obsessed perspectives in Malia Mania, a comedic grammar blog. She lives in Charlotte, N.C. with her husband, Steve, and has one daughter who has followed in her sister’s footsteps as an M.D., now completing her pediatric residency. Read Malia's AlzAuthors post here.
Susan Landeis
Susan is a member of the AlzAuthors management team and Board of Directors. She is the author of In Search of Rainbows: a daughter's story of loss, hope, and redemption where she writes about the gifts she found while caring for her mother with whom she'd had a tumultuous relationship. She later penned Optimal Caregiving: A guide for managing senior health and well-being. She is a certified nutritionist and certified senior advocate, studies she took up when becoming her father's caregiver. Prior to this, she spent over twenty years working in the field of Health Information Management. Susan lives in the beautiful state of Oklahoma with her husband and two dogs. She has been blessed with two grown children and three beautiful grandchildren. Read Susan's AlzAuthors post here.
Barbara Ella Milton, Jr. PhD, LCSW
Barbara is the author of Heeding the Caregiver Call: The Story of Barbara Ella Milton, Sr. and Alzheimer's Disease. This tells the tale of her caring for her estranged mother when she was diagnosed with Alzheimer' s disease while Barbara endured treatment for bladder cancer. She is a clinical social worker, clinical supervisor, social work educator, child welfare advocate, activist, social media producer, and resilience expert, and has been an impactful social change agent for the wellness of at-risk youth and families for decades. She was a contributor to the Confessions of a Welfare Mom series, co-authored the book The Great Pause: Blessings and Wisdom from COVID-19 , and penned an Opinion article in the journal, Psychosis. She recently published Inherited Wisdom: Drawing on the Lessons of Formerly Enslaved Ancestors to Lift Up Black Youth with Deborah Brooks Lawrence. She was born in Camden, New Jersey as the only child of Barbara Ella Milton Sr., who died from Alzheimer’s in January 2019. Barbara, now retired, lives in North Jersey with her wife, Kay. They enjoy a life rich with family and friends. Read Barbara's AlzAuthors post here.
Vicki Tapia
Vicki is a co-founder of AlzAuthors and a member of the management team and Board of Directors. She is the author of Somebody Stole My Iron: A family memoir of dementia, which chronicles her story of caring for both parents with dementia. She and her mother shared a difficult relationship, and Vicki found herself without the assistance of her only brother who chose to deny, rather than participate in, the situation. She is a lactation consultant who taught around 10,000 mother/baby pairs the art of breastfeeding before her energies were redirected to the other end of life. A diary written to help her cope with caregiving morphed into Somebody Stole My Iron, which was a finalist in the 2015 High Plains Book Awards. She has subsequently published two historical novels based on her family: Maggie: A Journey of Love, Loss and Survival and Harry & Grace: A Dakota Love Story. When she's not busy writing, you are apt to find this native Montanan out walking her dog or off on an adventure with her husband on their tandem bicycle. Read Vicki's AlzAuthors post here.
Event Details
- This free virtual event is on Tuesday, November 8th at 2 pm EST via Zoom.
- It will last one hour.
- You will receive the link to the event a day or so before.
- The program will be recorded and added to our YouTube channel and podcast.
- The event is free but donations are welcome. Donate here
How to Help
We want to fill the Zoom Room as we believe these inspirational stories have much to offer caregivers regardless of where they live. Any assistance you can bring via your own network and platform is greatly appreciated. Please share our tweets and posts as you see them on social media, and pass this blog post on to your own friends, family, and followers.
Please contact alzauthors@gmail.com with any questions or concerns.
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Your Management Team
L to R: Marianne Sciucco, Jean Lee, Vicki Tapia, Kathryn Harrison,
Ann Campanella, and Susan Landeis
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