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How to stop concerning behavior

annie51
annie51 Member Posts: 357
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How do you stop your LO from doing inappropriate things? Two examples…

When we walk in the neighborhood, DH sometimes wants to walk up people’s driveways so he can look at the water behind their house. I can’t think of anything to stop him other than saying that’s private property, then he gets angry at me and cusses me out.

DH walked across the street to a house with small children which has a large picture window - he just wanted to say hi, but he peered through the window before the mom came out to talk and he was telling the kids to come over to our house (I walked over when I saw him there). The dad apparently notified the sheriff and they came to my door today to ask what kind of mitigation was in place to prevent future incidents. I’m now hypersensitive to him leaving the house and I have a special lock I can use when I don’t have eyes on him.

I’m not very creative when it comes to saying the right thing to redirect or prevent him from doing certain things like this without making him angry. Any creative thinkers out there? 😉

Comments

  • annie51
    annie51 Member Posts: 357
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    You are so right about this. The young family did know about his condition and the deputies that came to the house also knew, so I’m assuming they made the complaint knowing he has Alzheimer’s. Probably just being cautious. Most of the other neighbors know as well, good for having extra eyes out for him if he wanders.

  • SDianeL
    SDianeL Member Posts: 2,050
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    Sadly, there is no way to stop inappropriate behavior in dementia patients because you can’t reason with someone whose reasoner is broken. People with dementia need to have eyes on them at all times. I don’t think he should be walking in the neighborhood alone. He could wander off. Wandering can happen at any time. If you still want him to walk for exercise, perhaps an oval walking track or park loop where you both could walk to avoid the triggers for inappropriate behavior in your neighborhood. Many people do not understand dementia. Sad that your neighbors couldn’t come talk to you to try to understand it better.

  • harshedbuzz
    harshedbuzz Member Posts: 5,610
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    @annie51

    A visit from the sheriff? Yikes. I am so sorry you're dealing with this.

    So now you're both on local LE radar. I feel for both parties around this one. It's not like parents of young kids teaching them to be safe in the world can be normalizing your DH's behavior. But he's also not a pariah. Still, I'd be diligent about using alarmed doors and locks going forward. A different neighbor might have responded with a gun rather than a 911 call.

    The best way to manage behaviors that are inappropriate and come with significant consequences is to not take him to the places they could happen. For a time, we couldn't take dad anywhere but the doctor's office because of confabulations that could have resulted in jailtime or local TV news coverage.

    In your shoes, maybe an outing to a local park or downtown street for a walk. Maybe avoid playgrounds if he's focused on engaging children.

    It might be useful to reach out individually to neighbors about his condition and to carry Alzheimer's cards to hand out when you're in public with him.

    HB

  • HollyBerry
    HollyBerry Member Posts: 211
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    For the past year or so, I've avoided any place where my partner can go up to strangers and try to engage them in conversation. That means no grocery store, no public places, and when we have had to go to a Dr appointment, I try to plan which entrance, which elevator, etc to minimize problems. It may be (fingers crossed) diminishing somewhat… not sure… but I have also discovered that Goodwill is a safe place because there is enough stuff to engage her and the people shopping at Goodwill are more tolerant of oddness :-) We have some public garden spaces in our city and they've been successful in the same way this year. I wonder if she's reaching a point where she is more interested in engaging with things than people.

    I have also told as many neighbors as possible, preemptively, with the intro "I think it's helpful if people know what's going on just in case you see something that doesn't seem right, you can let me know." Then I share my contact info.

  • Timmyd
    Timmyd Member Posts: 176
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    edited August 21

    My DW is prone to "inappropriate" behavior in public spaces, but it is so far been harmless and I am sure women who exhibit strange behavior are far less threatening to the public than men.

    I have found Walmart to be a good store where I can take DW and people seem to be consistently accepting of her odd behavior, staff included.

  • annie51
    annie51 Member Posts: 357
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    Thank you all for your responses. I am more vigilant now when he opens the front door rather than assuming he’ll stay in our driveway.

    One positive thing I’ll point out is how many people we encounter that listen to his non-sensical talk and just pretend they know what he’s saying and respond to him - this makes him feel valued and makes me feel good too. This happens even if they don’t know about his condition. I definitely want to get some of the handout cards - I’ve been able to mostly tell people quietly but sometimes the cards would be helpful.

  • Cate2024
    Cate2024 Member Posts: 18
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    The neighbor to the back of us had a dog toy in their fenced yard that one of my dogs was eye balling. I had to stop my husband from marching over to demand they move it (or take it for our dog). He was very angry at me for intervening. I so get you!

Commonly Used Abbreviations


DH = Dear Husband
DW= Dear Wife, Darling Wife
LO = Loved One
ES = Early Stage
EO = Early Onset
FTD = Frontotemporal Dementia
VD = Vascular Dementia
MC = Memory Care
AL = Assisted Living
POA = Power of Attorney
Read more