#family member with dementia
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Swap!BJ needs more love and stat
Love as in crippling trauma
Beatrice getting dementia… god I think that would fuck him up so bad. He and his mother’s relationship… was interesting. It certainly wasn’t as cut-and-dry fucked up as classing Boj, I honestly think that level of grey area makes it so much more interesting to explore.
I feel like even if Bea doesn’t have a Henrietta to project Bojack onto, she still wouldn’t recognize him. Dementia is a bitch like that, it’ll find a way.
Bojack had spent his whole life as this kind, sweet, eager people-pleaser who’s fundamental philosophy that everyone (even his hard to please mother) is truly a good person deep down. This is how he knows to cope with his mother’s sternness and high expectations, by making himself believe that even the roughest people have good in their hearts.
He has built his entire life, his philosophy, his ways of interacting with others, and his career in a way that he thinks would make his mother happy and approve of him. Only for every one of those efforts to be in vein, as she just forgets him anyways.
I feel like Bojack would of course move his mom in with him and Diane. He would try DESPERATELY to make her recognize him even a bit but she just… doesn’t. And furthermore she treats Bojack with the sort of apathy of someone you have no recollection of or feelings about. Gone are the days of Bea’s sternness guidance and expectations that ultimately come from wanting to see her son succeed, all to be replaced with a hollow nothingness.
Bojack would be fucked up over it. Deep cracks would begin to form in his whole personality. He’s lost without having his mother’s expectation to live up to. He thrived only under the iron fist she provided. And now he doesn’t know what to do and where to go.
His wife said he should put her back in the home, that his mental and physical health is suffering too much because of the situation. But he ignores her. He can’t believe she would even suggest abandoning his mother. Now he’s fighting with his wife. He’s lost, and alone, and he just wants his mom back so everything makes sense again.
There’s no quick fix to this. The pain of losing a family member runs deep. But if there’s one thing that Beatrice left him with, it’s the knowledge that through hard work, perseverance, and taking charge of your own destiny, you can handle anything
#reverse!bobutter au#bojack horseman#Losing a family member to dementia isn’t easy#writing this was cathartic#also wanting to live up to your parents expectations#shits hard but we do the thing anyways
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YES I DO THINK. i hc that skully has their own rlly weird music taste however if you play a song one of the many loved they would feel feelings abt it. if you throw a bass at them they could pluck out something.
#in my mind and in the silly little au i have music means a LOT to every character#the human brain will forget so so much before it forgets music#like ppl w rlly bad dementia can still play piano but not remember family members#and since MH (and especially tim) has a lot to do with memories#and also since tim is THE music guy#its definitely a feature of my silly au#tim remembers brians old stuff he liked and also discovers jays burned cds and kinda. unlocks some memories there. some feelings too#even alex's taste made an impression on him#plus like. some of the old stuff's lyrics might ring true for him now#one of the main songs i think of when ruminating on the skully and tim part of the au is rlly ironic#its a song considered very strange but catchy#definitely NOT outwardly emotional or thought provoking at its base but#i MAY reveal it.. maybe
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Unwell 3.5 "Hark" was... oof
#i haven't been in THAT close proximity to a family member with bad dementia#but my parents' neighbor went downhill really quickly and it got pretty bad#they ended up putting her in assisted living and she tried calling all her contacts#including me. they warned us not to pick up#she wanted someone to take her home#kat listens to unwell
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Felt my anxiety go up like crazy + also a sudden spike in intrusive thoughts and what's all that for :(
#to be honest im kinda saturated from getting news of my family and also loves ones who are doing badly#my besties grandma with dementia and also two dif members of my family gettinf neurological symptoms of something wrong in the same week#kinda outs me on edge because thats the type of stuff that gets my health anxiety going#but yeah im either gonna sleep it off or hope i forget about the bad feeling by tomorrow idk
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//ooc rambling. Tw dementia mention
//Another long shift today, I won’t be home until late tonight. From now until late Saturday/Sunday mun may be busier and more afk. I’m scheduled for some long shifts today and Saturday, tomorrow is my all day volunteering. However I’m also helping care for a family member the next several who has a form of dementia. Idk how it’s gonna go, it’s already a rough start. So please bear with me 🙏 I haven’t forgotten my threads, many of them are trimmed and in drafts for me to reply. Along with rp prompts I’ve got in my inbox I haven’t answered yet.
#ooc: alakazam#(Rp has been a heavy escape for me and I’m sure I’ll be needing it bad this weekend)#(my family member has had it for many years now but right now it’s going to be a challenge)#(that stage of taking car keys away and such)#(mun will be okay. it hasn’t really sunk in yet with things cause autism brain is hyperfocused with needing to get to work)#(just um. bear with me please. especially if the angst vibe hits for my muse and writing crave)#(or uh go afk suddenly)#dementia tw#angst tw#delete later
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My dad is burning bridges with anyone who calls him out on his toxic behavior and is saying everyone's abandoning him, and I am tired.
#prayer requests#his dementia is just a horrific spiral of paranoia and anger and it's wearing all of his family members down#please pray for him and for us
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Valvert AU where after Javert and JVJ have been together for at least a couple of years (platonically or romantically… idrc), JVJ develops dementia and eventually time-shifts back to the pre-Seine days where he only knows Javert as he was before.
#for those who don’t know#time shifting is when people with dementia believe they are at an earlier period of their life#the ANGST#currently being a temporary caregiver for a family member with dementia#and I thought of this#someone better at writing than me pls write this#les miserables#jean valjean#valvert#javert
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if life could just Not do that for maybe ten seconds, that'd be great
#personal tag#my great-aunt is in the nursing home for dementia and. yeah.#she's one of the only family members that I felt I could always rely on if I needed to#supported me and my sister unconditionally in a time when it mattered and her own sister was on the opposing side#I'm overwhelmed here#delete later
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There’s a new interaction between Sigma and Mercy where he asks if they’re “still on for lunch after the seminar”, and after a pause, Mercy says gently and sadly, “Siebren…that was years and years ago. But, we had a lovely talk…!”
And it’s making me 😢
#it’s reminding me of my grandma who has dementia and thinks her mother and all her sisters just died this year#it’s so sad 🙁 I keep thinking about it and about poor Sigma too#overwatch#I already liked Sigma before but now having a family member with dementia a lot of his stuff really hits home for me#maybe someday I’ll actually publish that little fic I wrote about Sombra trying to get him to eat and have basic conversations#that was essentially me working through all those feelings
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the wildest part about being fucked up is forgetting the most basic of things like,, how am i gonna forget the letter c exists for like half an hour? anyway ..
#gifted child to below nursery brain capacity as an adult pipeline#that’s so crazy i’m not even gonna think about it#saw family the other day and they were like oh yeah we asked [family member w dementia] the months backwards#and i was like man i don’t even know that#i couldn’t do that if i tried#am i supposed to be able to do that#i don’t even know the months forwards#not anymore at least#at what point is it too late to turn back brain wise question for the scientists#💾
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Into the Light - AC/DC One Shot Fanfiction
So I recently got into writing again - here's an AC/DC one shot.
Please mind the trigger warnings below in the tags!
#tw: angst#tw: death#tw: family member death#tw: dementia#acdc#accadacca#acdc fanfic#acdc fanfiction#angus young#malcolm young#rock and roll#classic rock fandom#classic rock#classic rock fanfiction#accadacca fanfic#accadacca fanfiction
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made myself distressed about my dad again :thumbsup:
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I'm supposed to be resting but I've been writing like a madwoman. Can someone please explain why getting minor TBIs seems to make me write better.
#adventures of a concussed dumbass#confessions of the twice-concussed#Second Concussion#concussions#tbi#my writing#liveblogging my writing#is it the fear of cognitive decline#the memories of dementia-addled family members haunting me#am I compensating for these?
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Really unrefined Genesis brainrot below the cut (packing my bags for an international flight and got INCREDIBLY bored midway through. Not tagging because it's not my best work. dementia mentioned tho)
No bc people write Genesis pre degradation as quoting loveless all the time also. But I feel like it was just a degradation thing for him. The same way that dementia patients cling on to music and specific memories, I think that he was clinging on to Loveless in his increasingly unstable mind to try to retain a sense of self. I don't think he was THAT crazy about it until near the end. If he'd been left to degrade naturally I think at the end he would have just been mumbling loveless lines and then nothing at all
#tw dementia#heart goes out to anyone with family members who have had it#or have it#might write a fic about this because I've lost a lot of family to alzheimer's and dementia and idk it just feels very close to me#wish i could write a more nuanced take on it but thats for later im too tired now
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why did i wake up and randomly start missing my grandma
#her death was kinda difficult to process in the moment#which i think is probably common when u have a family member with dementia#y'know on one hand u miss them and you're mourning but on the other hand it's so hard to watch someone u love suffer through dementia#anyway i was just thinking about an inside joke about toast that she used to make back when i was a kid#and i miss her personality she was rly funny 💔#while im here i also miss my grandpa's cakes#bri babbles
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Writing Profoundly Intellectually Disabled Characters
[Plain Text: Writing Profoundly Intellectually Disabled Characters]
While there is a glaring lack of intellectually disabled characters - except maybe big, physically strong, white men who can’t “tell right from wrong” or have a personality - in all sorts of media, specifically profoundly intellectually disabled characters are next to non-existent, with the existing ones being used more often as plot devices rather than portrayed as human beings.
This does make a degree (and not more) of sense considering that 85% of ID people have it mild, 10% moderate, 3.5% severe and only 1.5% has profound ID, the larger group inevitably gets more representation (which doesn’t make it good, but it does exist). However, it hopefully doesn’t need explaining that minorities deserve to be represented too (...and represented well), so this is what this post will be about.
Please don’t treat this as your only source on writing a character like this (even though I’m willing to bet it’s the only one like this, at least on tumblr), do your research and always check other sources.
Also, for clarity: intellectual disability isn't an umberalla term for "mental/brain disability". It's a specific, singular diagnosis that used to be known as "mental [r slur]". It's not the same as brain damage, autism, dementia, dyslexia, and anything else that's not specifically "intellectual disability". It's something that you are either born with or acquire early in life.
How do I Include Them in the Story?
[Plain Text: How do I include them in the story?]
A profoundly ID person will spend the majority of their time either at home or in some sort of care facility since they will require 24/7 help. The easiest role to put them in is probably a family member of another character. I've mentioned on this blog before that the "ID characters always end up as the annoying younger sibling" thing is overdone, but none of these necessarily have to be true for this suggestion to work (especially not the "annoying" part).
A non-ID character could have an intellectually disabled older sibling, twin, cousin, uncle/aunt, the sibling of a grandparent, etc. Seriously - a severely disabled person can be an adult, or even an elder. Just not as a parent, since a profoundly disabled person can't consent (a lot of ID people very much can, but this is the one disability where your level of functioning is baked into the exact diagnosis - profound ID comes with the inability to consent/understand the consequences enough to consent).
"They're a family member" is basically the easiest "excuse" to include a profoundly intellectually disabled in a story (and, as a bonus, you don't have to figure out how the other character would react to meeting them for the first time, since they probably knew each other for a long time already).
If your story isn't about the profoundly disabled character and instead just features them as a character, it would be much easier to not make the other character their primary caregiver. It's simply a ton of work and the character wouldn't have time for fighting dragons and whatnot - it'd be easier to have the abled character spend time with the disabled character at home (or care facility; you can very much visit someone in one) hanging out rather than actually doing the caregiving part.
Outside of a home and a care facility, there are also day care programs that some people might attend. This is the rarest solution out of the three mainly because of financial reasons, but also these resources aren’t as common for people who can’t walk, learn self-care, etc. Going to one takes time (the profoundly disabled person isn’t gonna walk there by themselves) and probably requires a specialized van (that you can bring a wheelchair in, which is incredibly expensive). Most day care programs are focused on people who are moderately or severely ID at most. One made for profoundly ID people would require 1:1 aides, which generally means the programs are much smaller for logistical reasons, but also even more expensive. For most people, too expensive without funding. Basically, this is an option, but you have to consider your character’s financial situation and/or what kind of financial support do disabled people get where they live.
Another way is having the disabled character in some sort of high position - in real life there were quite a few cases of profoundly and severely intellectually disabled royalty. Depending on the place and time there might have been pressure to not let the public see them, but this wasn't always the case. The biggest example of the latter was probably Emperor An of Jin (the first Jin, Eastern one) who was, as his title suggests, crowned at some point. He didn’t actually rule (his uncle did) but yes, you can have a severely disabled person as the head of a monarchy, it’s not without precedent.
In fiction you can do whatever you want anyway when it comes to ableism, you can have it be there, or you can have it not be there - and if it does exist then there are still different kinds of ableism you can portray that aren't the "literally killing-the-disabled-baby/hiding-them-in-some-dungeon level of eugenics" kind. Maybe a rich family who cares about their image would actually be unable to shut up about their kid to show how "saint-like" they are for caring for the disabled - it is unfortunately realistic, and can be a potential way to have the character exist in public, not ignore ableism, and also not go the aforementioned literally-just-murder route that writers usually do to show an ableist family.
Characterization
[Plain Text: Characterization]
Warning; the bar here is somewhere in the Earth's inner core. If your character has a single characteristic beyond aggressive/loud/unmanageable*, they're automatically at the top of most complex fictional representation of severely/profoundly ID characters. Congrats.
* - Some people are those things but, unsurprisingly, they're other things too. A lot of profoundly ID people can actually be completely quiet - you notice people who are loud because they're loud.
As with literally every character, you need to figure out what they like and not like. This can be quite literally anything, but try to think of the basic stuff. Do they have something they really enjoy eating (and conversely - something they refuse to eat)? Do they have some sort of comfort toy or object they don't want anyone touching (and maybe showing them playing with it with a different character could be a way to show how much they trust them)? In more modern settings, do they have a favorite show they always bug everyone to put on? Are they really clingy or do they hate physical contact (again, maybe they only enjoy it from a specific character)?
Another characterization could be comfort objects. A lot of profoundly ID people are autistic (which I'll touch on later) and will have an object that they bring everywhere the same way that non-ID autistic people might. There's nothing really specific here, just another layer of "this character is a Person". Maybe they have a blanket they really enjoy chewing because the texture feels good or some sort of plushie they like to throw around because it makes a sound they find funny. Lots of options. Maybe they have a personal “tell” to let others know they want their comfort object brought to them.
Keep in mind, you have to show this all in non-verbal manner. A profoundly ID person is probably not using any sort of AAC device (the most robust one I remember seeing right now was a low-tech one with "yes" and "no", but there are probably ones who operate on a larger amount of singular words). This is basically another opportunity for characterization - what do they do when they're happy - laugh, flap their arms, make sounds? - and when they're upset - scream, hit themselves, make different sounds? Obviously, you'd have to take other disabilities into account (e.g. many profoundly ID people won't move much, some might not be able to make much audible sound, etc.) but almost anything helps.
This brings us to…
Communication
[Plain Text: Communication]
An important thing (concept?) I'll throw here is "total communication", which can mean different things in different contexts, but here I'll use it to mean "using everything you can to communicate with someone who cannot do so in a ‘traditional’ way".
Communication can be categorized as having two sides; expressive and receptive. For most intellectually disabled people in general, receptive skills tend to be significantly higher than expressive ones, though there are specific disorders where it’s reversed or equal. As mentioned before, most profoundly ID people won’t speak orally, won’t use sign language, and won’t use AAC (though out of all three, AAC is the most likely one). Some might say single words, but that’s about it. It’s not a “physically mute but can write perfectly grammatically correct sentences” situation, it’s more of a “[single noun]” one, if anything. Receptive skills however are pretty decent (in comparison) and they would probably understand their name, the name/title of their carer(s), names of things they see every day, events they have some frame of reference to (e.g. if they grew up Christian, they would probably know what Christmas is), etc. Your other characters could (and should) talk to them like they can understand, even if they don’t catch everything or even most of it. I say a lot of “probably” there, but the people who can’t do so usually have other comorbidities, which I’ll mention later.
To go back to expressive communication, eye pointing can be used to figure out what the character wants. A change in breathing can be used to tell that a character got stressed. Throwing an object can be used as a hint that the character wants to play. Maybe them reaching towards person A means they want to eat, but reaching towards person B means they want them to sing a song for them. Maybe them making a particular face means they just had a seizure and need to be comforted. Whatever their "tells" like this might be, other characters who know them would probably be able to tell more-or-less what's going on - you don't have to go really in-depth, especially if it's a minor character, but figuring out the ways your character communicates with others will make it feel more like a person and not a Disabled Lamp (“if you can replace a disabled character with a lamp or a sick dog, they’re not a character”).
If you read some of these and go "that's a thing that a child would do" then you're not necessarily wrong. A profoundly ID adult might enjoy activities that primarily kids partake in. This is, I can't stress this enough, not the same as "mentally being a child". Otherwise, a whole bunch of adults on this very website would be "mental middle schoolers" based on the shows that they watch - but they're obviously not. A profoundly ID adult doesn't have the "mind of a baby" if their favorite game is throwing a toy, they have the mind of a profoundly intellectually disabled adult. Sometimes people assume that since ID people aren't mentally [incorrect age], they always "act their [actual] age" and essentially end up downplaying how much some people's ID affects them, when the point is that no matter what you do, you are your age. An ID character who is 26 years, incontinent, constantly puts their hand in their mouth, can't speak, whatever, is mentally 26 years old the same way that they would be if they had a wife and a mortgage.
For the last thing from this section I'll circle back to the assumption that all severely/profoundly ID people are loud, aggressive, etc. - as I said, some of them are (just like abled people). The thing is, this is not always an unreasonable response to being unable to communicate with the people who are caring for you. If you had a pressure sore but couldn't explain it to anyone you'd be pissed off and screaming too. That's an extreme example, but still applies. If someone is severely stressed out (for an abled person, this might be inheriting a ton of debt, for a profoundly ID person it can be a change in daily routine), they can lash out. It's an unpleasant but very much human reaction to have, even if what's behind the ID person's behavior is significantly different from what an average abled person might consider "a good reason".
So I guess my advice is, try to show some empathy to the character, even if they genuinely are loud and/or aggressive. Intellectually disabled people - including the profoundly disabled ones - aren't some alien species that is just mean and hates their caregivers for no reason, some just can't process their feelings the way an abled person might because of their disability. That's not to say that caregivers aren't allowed to feel frustrated - because they are - but that very severely disabled people aren't purposefully evil. As mentioned in the earlier parts, all behavior has a cause, just like for literally everyone. So if the character is being "unmanageable": maybe they aren't some cursed burden, maybe they're just stressed out of their mind and now someone they don't know that well is trying to do *something* to them, which they can't figure out because of their disability affecting their receptive language skills.
Resources and What to Keep in Mind
[Plain Text: Resources and What to Keep in Mind]
Some resources you might read about ID can be potentially misleading. Even if you specifically look for causes of the profound severity of intellectual disability, you will get results for mild ID. That's mainly because people with mild ID make up >85% of intellectually disabled people and those with profound ID make like 1%, so they're a minority in a minority.
Basically:
Down syndrome is a very unlikely cause. It's always listed as the main genetic cause of ID, but that's only true for mild and moderate severities. If you choose any of the common causes of ID make sure it actually has the symptoms you're looking for.
Most profoundly ID people will have either severe brain damage early in life (and this can come with cerebral palsy), cephalic disorders (e.g. microcephaly), genetic conditions that you've never heard of (e.g. Pallister-Killian or Emanuel syndromes, 3p deletion), genetic conditions that you've never heard of for a very understandable reason (e.g. X-linked intellectual disability-limb spasticity-retinal dystrophy-arginine vasopressin deficiency… there are hundreds named in this way), or just have it without a known cause. The last one happens much more often than people tend to assume.
For a reason I'll probably discover at some point, most disorders and syndromes that come with ID are said to have "autistic-like features" rather than being "comorbid with autism". In practice, it's the same thing. Your character is probably autistic.
In the same way, a lot of practical resources will assume that ID = moderate ID (since most mildly affected need no or minimal support, and severely/profoundly disabled ones are a small minority) so pay attention if you're looking at the right things. If it's talking about having a job, travelling alone, etc., then you got clickbaited.
Another subsection here will be comorbidities because there are a lot of them. I’ll mention the biggest ones.
Brain damage is the most common one (except autism) and can vary a lot. There is barely anything I can say about this one, it’s an enormous spectrum that for some people causes disability and for others barely affects their symptoms. Cerebral palsy, especially quadriplegic, is seen a lot and might affect the character’s mobility a lot. Some people might be unable to breathe or swallow and need a breathing or feeding tube.
Deafness and blindness are comorbid with a surprising amount of causes of ID. The thing is, you could take advice for deaf/blind characters as-in for a character that has both (e.g.) glaucoma and mild ID and not change much, but this doesn’t really work for a character who’s profoundly disabled like this. The situation that can happen here is that it’s not actually known if the person is or isn’t deaf or blind because they can’t tell you. As mentioned earlier, some people will have absent receptive communication skills. How do you verify if they’re deaf or just not reactive to language? Some people won’t react to even extremely loud sounds, even if they can hear them perfectly well (besides, a lot of deaf people can still hear some). Same for verifying if they are blind - obviously, sometimes there’s something visual going on, but often there isn’t. Especially since the main causes of both blindness and deafness will be brain-based, not ear- or eye-based. Another character not being sure if the disabled character is blind or just very uninterested in visual stimuli is a possibility, especially with less advanced medicine. This is also why you might see those weird statistics of "between 5-90% of people with [condition] are deaf" kind.
Mobility is almost always severely affected. Some are fully mobile, but that’s simply not common. The average person will be unable to walk independently. It’s not always a muscle or nerve problem (though it absolutely can be), it’s mostly an issue of coordination. Because of this (and understanding physical space), operating a wheelchair (...successfully) might be impossible. This doesn’t mean you should just drop your character in a hospital wheelchair for them to get wheeled around because they will probably need a wheelchair that will actually support them - a headrest, ability to tilt, a harness, all that. This could be done with a powerchair (they can have controls on the back for a second person to operate), a manual wheelchair, or an adaptive stroller.
Now for resources;
One good resource I can recommend is SBSK (which I shared before), to my knowledge this is the only place that interviews severely and profoundly ID people (+their families) and the interviewer is great at actually interacting with many of them.
Most resources on the practical things only ever talk about caregivers (who are very important) but completely ignore the actual person being cared for which IMO kinda defeats the point.
Good luck writing!
mod Sasza
#mod sasza#intellectual disability representation#writing resources#writing ideas#writing disabled characters#writeblr#writing advice
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