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Alzheimer's: When Awareness Begins to Fade

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  In the earliest stage of Alzheimer’s, many people know something is changing. They feel it before anyone else does—a word that won’t come, a thought that slips away mid‑sentence, a familiar task that suddenly feels foreign. This awareness, called insight , is part of the brain’s self‑monitoring system. At first, it remains intact enough for a person to notice the difference and quietly compensate: making lists, avoiding complex tasks, or withdrawing from situations that expose the gaps. Families often see this as resilience, and it is. But it’s also the first sign that the mind is working harder to stay balanced. Over time, as the disease progresses, that insight begins to fade. The same changes that affect memory also affect self‑awareness. A person may no longer realize they’re repeating questions or misplacing items. They may insist everything is fine—not out of denial, but because the brain can no longer register its own decline. By the later stages, awareness of the illness ...

How to Walk Through the Dark Night Without Despair

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You don’t escape the night — you walk it. The way through is not resistance, but trust. 🌘 1. Stop trying to fix the darkness The night isn’t a problem to solve; it’s a passage to endure. Trying to “get back” to how things were only deepens the ache. Let the darkness be what it is — a teacher that speaks in silence. 🌘 2. Keep showing up Even when prayer feels empty, keep the rhythm. Faithfulness in dryness is its own kind of prayer. The soul learns endurance by staying present when nothing feels alive. 🌘 3. Let go of spiritual self‑judgment You’re not failing because you feel nothing. You’re being purified of the need to measure your progress. Holiness is not a feeling; it’s fidelity. 🌘 4. Trust the hidden work The roots grow in the dark. You may not see transformation, but it’s happening beneath the surface. Every surrender, every quiet “yes,” deepens the soul’s capacity for union. 🌘 5. Seek companionship, not correction Find those who can hold silence with you — not those who ru...

When People Become Unfettered: The Strange Freedom of Having “Nothing Left to Lose”

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Every so often, a public example gives language to something we’ve all seen in quieter corners of life. The recently coined term “YOLO Caucus” —used by journalists to describe lawmakers who act more independently once they’re no longer facing reelection—captures a familiar human pattern: when consequences fall away, behavior changes. This isn’t about politics. It’s about people. 1. The psychological shift: from preservation to authenticity When people believe their job, reputation, or standing is at stake, they often act cautiously. But once the risk evaporates—because they’ve quit, been fired, retired, or already made a major decision—something loosens. They may: Speak more plainly Set boundaries they avoided before Make decisions based on principle rather than strategy Stop performing for approval It’s not that they become different people. It’s that the cost of being themselves drops to zero. 2. The workplace version: “I’ve already given notice…” Anyone who has ever worked with som...