Funny & Cute Things Our Demented Patients Say

The intended purpose of this article is to use the written word to capture some lighthearted memories and recollections about the funny and sometimes cute statements that my demented patients have made over the years. Working with the demented elderly population can be interesting. Specialties Geriatric Article

Anyone who works around the demented elderly population can attest to the fact that they sometimes say the darndest things.

Mr. Rider is a pseudonym for the slightly plump octogenarian nursing home resident who had some cognitive decline due to vascular dementia. Anyhow, I walked into his room with his breakfast tray one weekend morning about six years ago. I naturally assumed he would eat his food after I had gotten finished setting up the tray. After all, this guy was one who never missed any meals.

"I don't want to eat this morning," he earnestly tells me. "I'm trying to lose some weight."

I was taken aback by his response because Mr. Rider was not the type of man who ever worried about maintaining his figure. However, after a few more attempts to offer him the tray, he continued to refuse, so I respected his desire to 'trim down.'

Ms. Lucinda is a pseudonym for the petite septuagenarian nursing home resident who was afflicted with middle-stage Alzheimer's disease. Nursing staff had to be very careful with the manner in which they approached her because she would take a swing at any caregiver who made one wrong move. In addition to punching the person, she would give them a verbal lashing with vulgarities that were on the same level as a drunken sailor.

I had just given her a bolus g-tube feeding one night approximately four years ago. Before I left the room, she studied me from head to toe and declared, "You're getting too fat, girl!"

Her eyes suddenly shift to my round backside. She examines me for a few more seconds and nods her head in agreement before saying, "Yes, girl. You're getting fat! You need to stop pigging out!"

Anne is a pseudomyn for the frail nonagenarian nursing home resident whom I met in early 2006 at my very first nursing job. She had middle-stage Alzheimer's disease and other psychiatric issues. I was a brand new nurse back then, and had learned in nursing school to perform 'reality orientation' when dealing with disoriented patients.

She would ask me every 30 minutes, "How do I get to the fourteenth floor?"

My newbie response: "This building has no fourteenth floor. It only has one floor. You're in the right place."

Of course, she was never happy with my answer and would furiously roll around the building in her little wheelchair until she could locate anyone else who would direct her to the nonexistent elevator or the staircase that would lead to the fourteenth floor.

Nowadays I avoid reality orientation like the plague if the patient has middle-stage or end-stage dementia. Therapeutic fibbing seems to work well with these patients and causes them the least amount of emotional turmoil.

So, have any of your past or present demented patients said anything that was too funny or so cute? Feel free to share!

Actually my favorites have been the demented who speak languages I don't know at me and we have conversations. I had a woman who would scold me in Vietnamese in the cutest funniest way. A different Vietnamese woman would go around to all the calendars and bulletin boards praying to them and receiving blessings. Maybe it worked-- she could walk better than anyone else in the place. ;)

In my area there are many people from the Netherlands and 1st-generation Americans who spoke only Dutch at home. Several times I've had to ask an elder to please repeat their request/statement because I only speak English. One lady in particular would say, "Ja, okay. So anyway," then continue on in Dutch...we learned to watch for what she looked at and/or pointed to in order to figure out what she needed. I miss her.

Teeniebert, you must be from West Michigan, too. I've had a few little old ladies that lapse into Dutch as well. :)

Specializes in Pediatric Private Duty; Camp Nursing.

I was an activity assistant through nursing school. I worked in an Alz/dem unit where I had brought colored pencils and coloring pages that were for adults (like Thomas Kincaid pics, etc.) and I handed a lady a blue pencil, tapped the sky and said, "here, color blue right up here" and she wrote, in perfect penmanship, "blue, blue, blue" all over the sky.

"One day I was guiding Mrs. "A" to the dining room area located within the building. She was a 98-year-old woman born the same year the Titanic sank (1912). At one point during our journey to the dining hall she brought her walker to a pause turned towards me and said, "are you married". I responded by saying, "I am currently not married but I do have a girlfriend". Her response was "OOHHH Shhhucckksss, I thought I had a chance". "

I wonder if it's the same frail, 79pounder who almost tripped on the way to the dining room because she couldn't take her eyes of the 'handsome young man'.

She laughed and said "I am not dead yet".

One of my delightfully confused residents asked me one day "Can you give me any pointers, you know, in the bedroom? My husband is taking me home tonight, and it's been so long I'm not going to remember what to do!"

Teeniebert, you must be from West Michigan, too. I've had a few little old ladies that lapse into Dutch as well. :)

No WAY! I was thinking the exact same thing! I'm from West MI and worked as a tech in a hospital there. I had this happen to me a few times, too.

Specializes in School.

I worked in a long-term facility over 10 yrs ago that all the residents had some sort of alz, dementia or paranoid schizophrenia and some times a combination. Here is only one of my story's.

Ms. "E" argued with her "sister", which was her reflection in any reflective serfice. One cold winter night she kept opening the front glass door and causing the alarm to go off. When I went to see what she was doing I noticed she was very aggitated. Getting closer I realized she was once again arguing with "Pam." When she noticed me she said "I keep trying to tell Pam to get in here because it's cold outside, but everytime I open the door she runs away." I redirected her back to the nurse's area and told her that "Pam" would come in when she got too cold. About 30 min later I had to remove a picture from the wall becuase she and "Pam" were having an arguement.

Specializes in Pediatric Private Duty; Camp Nursing.
I worked in a long-term facility over 10 yrs ago that all the residents had some sort of alz, dementia or paranoid schizophrenia and some times a combination. Here is only one of my story's.

Ms. "E" argued with her "sister", which was her reflection in any reflective serfice. One cold winter night she kept opening the front glass door and causing the alarm to go off. When I went to see what she was doing I noticed she was very aggitated. Getting closer I realized she was once again arguing with "Pam." When she noticed me she said "I keep trying to tell Pam to get in here because it's cold outside, but everytime I open the door she runs away." I redirected her back to the nurse's area and told her that "Pam" would come in when she got too cold. About 30 min later I had to remove a picture from the wall becuase she and "Pam" were having an arguement.

Reminds me of Deb (and her sister Flo) from Finding Nemo!

Reminds me of Deb (and her sister Flo) from Finding Nemo!

I was thinking that same thing while I was reading that!

As a student on a med/surg floor, I had probably the sweetest little old lady with dementia. She would go in and out of confusion. Sometimes she knew she was at the hospital and that she was in her 80s. Other times she thought she was a lot younger. I went to wake her up one morning and I asked her if she knew where she was. She replied "oohhh, I'm in Las Vegas" (We were in the Niagara region of Canada). And all I could say was "I wish!"

The same lady a few hours later had to have her catheter removed and inserted again. She probably had no idea she even had a catheter in to begin with. But as I'm explaining the procedure to her (this was my first time inserting a female catheter) she asked me if the catheter would impede her from having sexual intercourse with her husband. I softly said that it wouldn't but that she was in the hospital so she probably won't be doing any of that for a while. This woman's husband came to visit her every day, it was the sweetest love story I ever witnessed. She was incredibly protective of him as well, she told all the female nurses to stay away from her husband because he was hers!

She also proceeded to tell us that she was recently in this hospital. I asked her what she was here for, and she replied "oh a caesarean section, that was about 7 years ago." It was probably about 50 years prior!

Med/surg is definitely not my choice but meeting special people like this lady is what makes it worthwhile!

Specializes in Clinical Documentation Specialist, LTC.

I was sitting on the bed with a tiny, frail little lady who was one of my favorite residents in a nursing home I used to work in. She would cooperate with me when nobody else could get her to eat or let them do ADL care. Anyway, I leaned in towards her to talk to her and she said "If you're going to kiss me just go ahead and do it." I assured her I was there for a visit and not for a kiss lol!

Specializes in L&D.
A member of my family suffers from dementia, & I find nothing funny or cute about it. There is a thread elsewhere on this site that talks about the elderly being devalued, & I thought of this thread.

Go ahead, let the flaming begin...

Sometimes you gotta laugh to keep from crying.