One text away from falling apart | Bianca Dye on caring for a parent with dementia | Club Sandwich episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 3, 2026 · 36 MIN

One text away from falling apart | Bianca Dye on caring for a parent with dementia | Club Sandwich

from Club Sandwich · host Vera.guide

Sarah Macdonald and Bianca Dye on caring solo for a mum with dementia when you have no kids and no siblings to share the load – and why "I don't have children" doesn't disqualify you from the sandwich generation.This week Sarah Macdonald is joined by broadcaster Bianca Dye: an only child, with no kids of her own, and the sole carer for her 81-year-old mum, who has Alzheimer's-form dementia. Bianca keeps apologising for "complaining" because she doesn't have children, and Sarah sets her straight early: you don't need a kid to be in the sandwich generation. It's about layers of life – work, care, your own health – all squeezing at once. The two ex-radio women cover the lumpy, chunk-by-chunk reality of a parent's decline, the guilt of being away for work, the small daily battles (the stains, the moved pills, the TV remote), and the army of friends who keep Bianca standing. There's a real hack in here too: you can be right, or you can be kind. Plus the practical lifelines – the Carer Gateway, Dementia Australia, home-care packages and the gap before they kick in, and looking at aged care before it becomes an emergency. And the part that will land hardest for a lot of our listeners: what it's like to nurture a parent who didn't fully nurture you, and how that can, strangely, heal something. Ageing parents? You've got them. We've got you. Content note: This episode includes frank discussion of dementia and of a parent expressing suicidal thoughts. If you need support, Lifeline is on 13 11 14 and the National Dementia Helpline is 1800 100 500. JOIN THE CLUB: Visit https://clubsandwich.community to join the tribe, access resources, and find our private Facebook community.SEND US YOUR QUESTION: [email protected] Week's Hack: "You can be right, or you can be kind." Bianca's friend gave her this line and she leans on it constantly with her mum. With a parent who has dementia, winning the factual argument (which song came first, whether there's a stain) costs you the relationship and changes nothing. Let it go.  Some practical advice:- use music as connection (people with dementia often light up and remember lyrics); - carers can get their own free counselling through the Carer Gateway; - call Dementia Australia (National Dementia Helpline 1800 100 500); - start touring aged-care homes early so it's not a crisis decision (do the "sniff test" — see our aged-care episode); - get a Vera guide for a human to walk you through the maze. Meet the regular Clubbers:Melissa Reader. CEO of Vera and expert on Australia's ageing crisis.Jo Lamble. Clinical psychologist specialising in guilt and family dynamics.Dr Ginni Mansberg. GP and women's health advocate who tells it straight.Dr Stephanie Ward. Geriatrician helping you understand when "old" becomes a crisis.Kerry Milligan. Gogglebox star bringing humour and honesty to the sandwich generation.Topics covered in this episode:- Why you don't need kids to be in the sandwich generation — it's layers of life, not just children- Being an "only child" in caring, even when you have siblings who've stepped back- Friendship as chosen family — the army of friends who fill the gap- A mum's Alzheimer's-form dementia diagnosis, and reading the geriatrician's letter- "You can be right, or you can be kind" — letting go of being right- Music as a way in for people with dementia- When a small argument becomes a "trauma dump" — history surfacing under pressure- Caring with your own load: perimenopause, ADHD, executive dysfunction ("I can't human for two")- The guilt of being away for work and relying on neighbours and friends- Decline in chunks, and how moving a parent can trigger a sharp drop- ACAT assessment, the new home-care package levels (Level 8), and the gap before care starts- Looking after a parent's mental health, while protecting your own- Caring for a mum who wasn't always there for you (callback to the Mother's Day episode with Jo Lamble)- The decision about residential aged care, and touring homes early (the "sniff test")- Carer Gateway counselling, Dementia Australia, and getting a Vera guideCredits:Club Sandwich is brought to you by Vera, helping families caring for ageing parents navigate this stage of life so you don't have to do it alone. JOIN THE CLUB: Visit https://clubsandwich.community to join the tribe, access resources, and find our private Facebook community.SEND US YOUR QUESTION: [email protected] This episode is supported by Australian Unity Home Health and Care. Proactive local care that helps your parents stay independent and living well at home. Visit https://australianunity.com.au/clubsandwich. Need more clarity at 3 AM? Vera gives you a structured 15-minute voice conversation to help you understand where your parent stands and what to do next. Discover more at https://vera.guide. Sarah Macdonald – Host and Executive Producer.Melissa Reader – Commissioning Editor, Executive Producer and Clubber.Justin McArthur – Executive Producer.Audio + video edits by P. Zinner Podcasts (https://pzinner.com.au)Theme music 'Club Sandwich' by Sean Wayland. Hear more from Sean at https://seanwayland.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

"I can't human for two." Broadcaster Bianca Dye joins Sarah Macdonald to talk about caring solo for her 81-year-old mum, who has dementia — with no kids and no siblings to share it. Why you don't need children to be in the sandwich generation, how friends become family, the hack of choosing kind over right, and the hardest part: loving a mum who wasn't always there. Content note: includes discussion of dementia and suicidal thoughts. Support: Lifeline 13 11 14, Dementia Australia 1800 100 500.

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One text away from falling apart | Bianca Dye on caring for a parent with dementia | Club Sandwich

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This episode was published on June 3, 2026.

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Sarah Macdonald and Bianca Dye on caring solo for a mum with dementia when you have no kids and no siblings to share the load – and why "I don't have children" doesn't disqualify you from the sandwich generation.This week Sarah Macdonald is joined...

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