Caregiver Restrest, help, and hope for dementia caregivers
Toolkit · engagement & joy

What do we do all day?

The question every caregiver asks by month two. It matters more than it sounds: an empty day breeds agitation, shadowing, and sundowning, and a day with purpose in it prevents more hard moments than any technique on this site. Boredom is a behavior trigger; occupation is medicine.

The rules of failure-free activity

Match the task to who they've always been

The job list: inside

Real jobs whose results you actually use. They can smell invented busywork. The towels get used; the beans get eaten; thank them like it mattered, because it did.

The job list: outside

Outdoor purpose is double medicine: the job and the daylight (which builds the night's sleep). The rails matter more out here.

How to hand over a job so it succeeds

Is this job right? The ten-second check

Five yeses make a keeper: Can't really fail? (no wrong outcome that matters) · Feels adult? (nothing that smells like a children's craft) · Matches who they were? · Safe if you look away for two minutes? · Repeatable tomorrow? If it needs supervision every second or a project plan, shrink it until it doesn't.

Music: the last door to close

Musical memory lives in deep brain territory the disease reaches last. A person who can't finish a sentence may sing every verse of a hymn or big-band tune. Build a playlist from their ages 15 to 25 (that's where the strongest musical memory lives) and deploy it deliberately: the sundowning hour, bath time, car rides. Sing with them; nobody's judging the harmony. When conversation is gone, a shared song is still a conversation. (A one-motion music player they can start themselves, and the robotic pets above: both on What to buy.)

Screens that actually help: apps & games, by stage

A tablet can be a genuinely good half hour, if the app was built for a brain that can't lose gracefully. The rule from the top of this page applies double on screens: failure-free, or it's fired. Most "brain training" fails instantly (scores, timers, wrong-answer buzzers. And one famous one paid a $2M federal fine for claiming its games could stave off dementia; the hype page has that story). The short list that passes, by season:

Set the tablet up to be kind: five minutes, once

Pin the app so it's the whole world: iPad → "Guided Access" (Settings → Accessibility), Android → "app pinning". One app stays on screen, no accidental exits into a maze of icons. Pay the few dollars for ad-free versions. Ads are confusion traps. Sit alongside for the first few sessions, hand it over as it succeeds, and quit while it's still fun: same as every activity above. The five-yes check applies to screens too. And the honest frame: apps season the day. The walk, the real jobs, and the music are still the meal.

Skip on screens: anything scored and timed (Lumosity, Peak: built for healthy brains), and AI "companion" chatbots pointed at the person. The skip list explains both.

Bodies still like to move

Late stage: the senses stay open

When tasks and words have faded, connection moves to the senses, and it still lands: a hand massage with their favorite lotion, a soft blanket to hold, the smell of coffee or bread or their old perfume, looking at (not quizzing about) old photos, reading aloud in a warm voice, your presence in comfortable silence. Sitting together is the activity. You are not failing when you're "just sitting there." You're the safest thing in their world, being near.

Outings, restaurants, and holidays

A sample day-shape that works

Morning: the walk + one "help me" task (the demanding slot). Midday: lunch, then rest or music. Afternoon: one gentle activity + a snack outside if weather allows. Evening (lights on before dusk): folding, music from the playlist, hand lotion, the wind-down ritual. Boring on paper. Gold in practice. The rhythm is doing half the caregiving.

“Whatever you do, work at it with your whole being, for the Lord and not for men.”

Colossians 3:23