I am the sole caretaker at this time of my 95 year old mama. I moved her into my home when I lost my husband 3 years ago (could no longer take care of 2 households). Her late onset dementia has really accelerated the past few months. Until she qualifies for Hospice in our state, I am trying my best to take care of her. My mama is a WWII German warbride that came to theU.S. in 1949 and got her citizenship. She spoke English when she met and married my dad. My dad could speak German but could not read or write it. My parents never taught us German except for a few words because they used it for their "private" conversations. My question is has anyone experienced their loved one reverting back to their natural "tongue" as the dementia/alzheimers progresses? She has started using words and sometimes phrases in German and I am struggling to get the meaning because when I ask her to say it in English she can't remember what she said. I have tried to use my Google to tranlate as best I can but that is difficult too.
For you, this is double the trouble because she's losing her short term, or the thing she tried to tell you just moments ago. So she can't even remember what she just said.
iTranslate is an app for iPhones and Google Translate is for Android phone. You might read up about these two and see if there's a way to keep them open all the time so it catches what she says in German as she speaks. That might help to prevent any delay in you asking her to repeat something.
Gerontology practices affiliated with a teaching hospital and a medical school with have testing in different languages as it’s required under federal funding. Likely translators on staff as well.
I see this happening at my dad’s AL with other residents as well.
Best wishes to you as you go through this phase with your loved one.
This is the reason I tought my children the language.
Waiting to hear from you.
Gerda
Where I am, my first port of call would be to find a Club for that culture, even if you do it by phone. I suggested this to a previous poster, also in Oz, who followed through and found a Finnish Association she didn't know existed!
When she was pretty well into dementia she sang little songs in French, because in Belgium next door from her parents home Flemish and French were bilingual and this linguistic heritage was hesrs. Tres interresant?
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2976058/
Perhaps have your loved one speak into a translation program?
They translate to english what she says & translate to german your words.
On one hand, the added difficulty of a language I didn't understand would be so stressful for both of us. On the other, when someone can't remember what they've said from one moment to the next, honestly you might not be able to have enough context even if she spoke only in English (based on my family's experiences recently).
Important things, my mom will come back to them eventually. I guess I'm arguing for patience and very slow, fragmented conversations for both us? And some grace for not understanding, regardless of the language.
Oh, one more thing! I remember reading some research a few years ago that bilingualism and multilingualism may stave off dementia. I hope I'm not in any way diminishing the challenge for you and her, but her bilingualism is now both a communication problem but also may have slowed her cognitive decline.