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Reviews
Travelers to Unimaginable Lands: Dementia and the Hidden Workings of the Mind by Dasha Kiper
jenzim's review against another edition
Just wasn't in the mood for now. Might come back to it
traceyo's review against another edition
5.0
Thought-provoking, and not just for those of us who are caregivers. The author explores questions around what makes us who we are and how we come up with thoughts and perceptions of "the Other".
Philosophically, her ideas are quite materialist, but I found it incredibly helpful to understand patient/caregiver experiences in that light.
Philosophically, her ideas are quite materialist, but I found it incredibly helpful to understand patient/caregiver experiences in that light.
witchipedia's review against another edition
5.0
A really thought-provoking read, inhaled this one, did skim some of the sections that I was less interested in. What's stayed with me most since reading is what she discusses about how our brains/bodies "borrow" from each other when people communicate. Which is fascinating in its own right (like how does neurodiversity affect this?) but she ties that to how ppl with dementia can often seem like their brains are more normatively functional than they actually are, because their brainwaves/neurons are matching and "borrowing" from ours. And how that makes it harder to not take it personally when loved ones with dementia say or act in hurtful ways. And then she takes it a step further to describe how its' not so simple as reminding caregivers/family/etc that "your person is not in your right mind, don't take it personally," because once you stop holding someone morally responsible for their behavior, you really lose them in a more devastating way- and can that loss be tolerated? This book really honors the complexity and difficulty of navigating dementia.
bonnie_reader's review against another edition
emotional
informative
reflective
4.5
cognitive decline is a tragedy for the person who suffers it AND their caregiver, something I hadn't previously considered. This book illuminates the issue without wallowing in sadness.