Seeing the Hidden Grace of Alzheimer's

Ever since my father was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease during my senior year in college, I have paid close attention to news of potential cures. So I was riveted one morning this fall when I read about the team of American and Chinese researchers who had used a pair of anti-cancer drugs already on the market to treat Alzheimer's in fruit flies and mice. Their drug cocktail had a startling effect on the demented animals: It reversed their memory loss.
News of their discovery made me think back to my father and all that he had suffered since that frigid January night in 1996 when my parents called me to announce his diagnosis. I remember staring at the cross on my stark white bedroom wall as my father assured me that God would take care of him. "Remember," he had said, quoting his favorite verse from Romans, "everything works together for good for those who love God."
Understanding how Paul's words applied to Alzheimer's was not always easy. Every stage on my father's 12-year journey through dementia was a difficult one, from the early days when my mother and I would search frantically for him as he wandered lost in the neighborhood he no longer knew to the middle years when I would arrive at their home to find him rumpled and confused, his once-neat salt-and-pepper hair mussed and wild as he wandered aimlessly from room to room. Then there was the last stage, when the plaques and tangles of Alzheimer's had choked off Dad's memories not only of old stories and friends but of how to talk, how to swallow, and finally, how to breathe.
What if we could have given Dad a drug to reverse all that, to rewind his 12-year deterioration and restore him to the man he was before Alzheimer's struck? Such a cure would have been a glorious thing for him and for us, and for the 5.4 million Americans still battling Alzheimer's.
In reflecting on the prospect of erasing Dad's Alzheimer's experience, though, I find myself pondering all that would be erased along with it. I think of the hundreds of grace-filled moments I knew while accompanying my father on the dark road of dementia: the side-splitting laughter we enjoyed at the silliest things that caught his fancy; the sight of him tenderly stroking my mother's hair on days when his dependence left her especially exhausted; the light I saw in his eyes when I would tuck him into his nursing home bed at night and he would tell me, for the umpteenth time that day, how much he loved me.
Back when I first heard Dad's diagnosis, if you had told me that I would someday reflect with gratitude on any part of my father losing his mind, I would have said you had lost yours. We live in a culture that exalts rationality, autonomy and productivity above all else. What good could there be in a disease that robs its victims of all three?
It's a tough question even for many Christians to answer. We look at our demented loved ones, no longer sure of where they are or even who they are, and we wonder if the world may be right when it tells us that their suffering has no meaning, that Alzheimer's has stolen not only their memories but their dignity, perhaps even their very souls.
Yet Scripture tells us otherwise. Its passages about God's special love for those who appear weak and foolish in the eyes of the world suggest that Alzheimer's patients can be powerful conduits of grace in our lives, if we have eyes to see.
My own eyes were opened to that truth by one of my father's favorite spiritual writers, Thérèse of Lisieux. A 19th-century French nun whose posthumously published Story of a Soul became a worldwide bestseller, Thérèse is famous for her spirituality of childlike trust based on Jesus' command in the Gospel of Matthew: "Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these." (Matt 19:14) Thérèse's "little way of spiritual childhood," as it became known, helped her cope with a trial I knew well: the agony of watching a beloved parent's descent into dementia.
Star Trek Into Darkness

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B J
My mother in law once a vital glowing Christian can no longer speak. She sits in a chair and stares. At one point in the disease she responded positively to Scripture or hymns, but for the past 2 years she remains locked inside her body with no way to communicate. Does she remember God? I do not know. I find comfort in the fact that God remembers her.
John Holmes
Having watched my father body die at 100 and having watched his mind, personality and abilities evaporate with Alzheimer's over the previous 10-15 years, I do not wish that on any other person to watch. Nor do I wish it on any person to be so afflicted, apart from the fact that you will not remember much after 30 sec to 2-3 minutes. Yes there are shards of the person that once was. Watching my father still being able to translate for a Mandarin speaker at the nursing home was amazing, then he was asking me if He has my shirt on 2 minutes later. We can celebrate those highlights. Yet observing the complete dissolution of personality leaves one immensely saddened. Sure some of the family will not go and see the afflicted person, preferring to remember them as they were. That is a cop out, we are all mortal. When does a human die? An elderly Indian Christian suggested to me that he has seen many miracles, but never a complete reversal Alzheimer's. Not easy!
Kathi Vande Guchte
My dad has dementia and there isn't any laughter in it, but a whole lot of heartache as we watch this man continue to deteriorate. It's painful watching my mom who visits her husband day after day. It's painful as their child and caretaker. Your story has not been our experience with dementia.