Travelers to unimaginable lands : stories of dementia, the caregiver, and the human brain / Dasha Kiper ; foreword by Norman Doidge.
"These compelling case histories meld science and storytelling to illuminate the complex relationship between the mind of someone with dementia and the mind of the person caring for them. After getting a master's degree in clinical psychology, Dasha Kiper became the live-in caregiver for a Holocaust survivor with Alzheimer's disease. For a year, she endured the emotional strain of looking after a person whose condition disrupts the rules of time, order, and continuity. Inspired by her own experience and her work counseling caregivers in the subsequent decade, Kiper offers an entirely new way to understand the symbiotic relationship between patients and those tending to them. Her book is the first to examine how the workings of the "healthy" brain prevent us from adapting to and truly understanding the cognitively impaired one. In these poignant but unsentimental stories of parents and children, husbands and wives, Kiper explores the existential dilemmas created by this disease: A man believes his wife is an impostor. A woman's imaginary friendships drive a wedge between herself and her devoted husband. Another woman's childhood trauma emerges to torment her son. A man's sudden Catholic piety provokes his wife. Why is taking care of a family member with dementia so difficult? Why do caregivers succumb to behaviors--arguing, blaming, insisting, taking symptoms personally--they know are counterproductive? Exploring the healthy brain's intuitions and proclivities, Travelers to Unimaginable Lands reveals the neurological obstacles to caregiving, enumerating not only the terrible pressures the disease exerts on our closest relationships but offering solace and perspective as well."-- Publisher marketing.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780399590535 (hardcover)
- Physical Description: xxxii, 233 pages ; 22 cm
- Edition: First edition.
- Publisher: New York : Random House, [2023]
- Copyright: ©2023
Content descriptions
| Bibliography, etc. Note: | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Search for related items by subject
| Subject: | Alzheimer's disease. Brain > Diseases. Caregivers. Dementia > Case studies. Dementia. Memory disorders. |
| Genre: | Case studies. Informational works. |
Available copies
- 1 of 1 copy available at Tsuga Consortium.
Holds
- 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
| Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stroud Branch | 616.831 Kip | 31681010314318 | NONFIC | Available | - |
- Baker & Taylor
"After getting her master's in clinical psychology, Dasha Kiper took a leave of absence from school and began to look after a Holocaust survivor with middle-stage Alzheimer's. For a year, she lived with the emotional strain of caregiving, learning at firsthand how disorienting and painful it can be to look after a person whose condition blatantly disregards the rules of time, order, and continuity. Based on the subsequent decade she has spent counseling caregivers of dementia patients, Kiper offers an entirely new approach to understanding the relationship between patients and those tending to them. In these poignant but unsentimental stories of parents and children, husbands and wives, Kiper dispels the myth of the perfect caregiver. Relying on a wide breadth of cognitive and neurological research and borrowing from philosophy and literature, Kiper explores the existential dilemmas created by this disease: a man believes his wife is an impostor; a woman's imaginary friendships with famous authors drive a wedge between her and her devoted husband; another woman's childhood trauma emerges to torment her son; a man's sudden, intense Catholic piety provokes his wife. As painful as these conflicts are for caregivers, resolving them has its own cost. In orderto find peace, caregivers try to walk an impossibly fine line between acknowledging what the disease has taken from someone they love and recognizing what it has left"-- - Baker & Taylor
Drawing on cognitive and neurological research and borrowing from philosophy and literature, a clinical psychologist who counsels caregivers of dementia patients explores the existential dilemmas created by this disease and explains why itâs difficult caring for someone with this disease. Illustrations. - Random House, Inc.
These âmoving and often surprisingâ (The Wall Street Journal) case histories meld science and storytelling to show that caregivers donât just witness cognitive decline in their loved ones with dementiaâthey are its invisible victims.
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âThis book will forever change the way we see people with dementia disordersâand the people who care for them.ââLori Gottlieb, author of Maybe You Should Talk to Someone
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A BBC BOOK OF THE WEEK ⢠A TELEGRAPH BEST BOOK OF SUMMER ⢠A NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW EDITORSâ CHOICE
Inspired by Dasha Kiperâs experience as a caregiver and counselor and informed by a breadth of cognitive and neurological research, Travelers to Unimaginable Lands dispels the myth of the perfect caregiver. In these compassionate, nonjudgmental stories of parents and children, husbands and wives, contending with dementia disorders, Kiper explores the existential dilemmas created by this disease: a man believes his wife is an impostor; a womanâs imaginary friendships with famous authors drive a wedge between her and her devoted husband; another womanâs childhood trauma emerges to torment her son; a manâs sudden, intense Catholic piety provokes his wife.
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Kiper explains why the caregivers are maddened by these behaviors, mirroring their patientsâ irrationality, even though theyâve been told itâs the disease at work. By demystifying the neurological obstacles to caregiving, Kiper illuminates the terrible pressure dementia disorders exert on our closest relationships, offering caregivers the perspective they need to be gentler with themselves.