Alzheimer’s Starts Silently
Alzheimer’s doesn’t begin with the dramatic forgetting we imagine. It begins in the quiet margins of a life—small hesitations, subtle detours, moments that don’t quite fit the person we know. Long before a diagnosis, the brain is already changing. Proteins are misfolding, pathways are rerouting, and the mind is working harder to do what once came effortlessly. But none of this is visible from the outside. What families see are tiny shifts that are easy to reinterpret as stress, distraction, or normal aging. In the earliest phase, a person may pause mid‑sentence, not because they’ve forgotten the word, but because the word takes longer to reach them. They may repeat a story, not out of confusion, but because the memory feels newly vivid. They may withdraw from complex tasks—not dramatically, but with a quiet preference for the familiar. These changes are so subtle that even attentive loved ones often miss them. The person themselves may sense something is off, but they compensate,...