Beneath the Surface April 1, 2000
"Let's make a bow. Here, I'll put my finger right there to hold the ribbon, and you tie the bow." "Okay," she answered cautiously. Slowly she reached for the slant-cut ends of red ribbon. Holding one between her right thumb and forefinger, the other end between her left thumb and forefinger, she stopped. She appeared unsure of the next step. Latent muscle memory suggested to her that some time ago she could tie ribbons into bows. But she could not remember ever, actually, tying a bow. She looked at a finished product. She could not reverse-engineer the process of tying a bow (most of us could not do this either). She watched a happy patient succeed. Her short term memory deteriorated, she could not watch a step and reproduce it. "We're not in a hurry," I said to her. "Thank you," she said. Continuing to grasp the ends of the ribbon, she slowly waved her hands circularly over the spot where my finger held the ribbon in place. Perhaps she hoped the movement might trigger a recollection. It did not help. She squinted. I suggested an alternative. "How about if you hold the ribbon, and I'll tie the bow?" "That would be nice," she responded. She smiled because she could help. We tied a bow together and smiled together. I wondered if I was supposed to let her try again. I looked over to the program coordinator. She smiled and nodded. The point was to enjoy being together, not relearn kindergarten. So we worked away quite happily, and with seven other Alzheimer's patients we assembled 40 little bags of candy for a party. Each red and gold cellophane pouch held a caramel, some candy corn, and a chocolate kiss or two bound by a ribbon. We felt pride in the heap of packages in the middle of the table. The stash would have been larger if we had ...
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