PODCAST · health
No GPS on Memory Lane
by Valerie
No GPS on Memory Lane is where caregivers, family members, and accidental crisis managers come to feel seen. Host Valerie Wilde blends storytelling, expert advice, and laugh-or-cry moments from the front lines of dementia and elder care. It’s part support group, part survival guide, and part honest conversation about what it really means to care for someone who's forgetting the way.
-
10
Episode 9: Lonely on Both Sides
Send a textMy mom says she feels lonely — forgotten — locked away from the world. And yet, she chooses not to leave her room. Not for meals. Not for activities. Not even when we offer to go with her.In this episode, I talk about the complicated reality of loving someone who is safe, cared for, and still deeply isolated — and how some patterns of loneliness don’t begin with illness, but quietly precede it.This is a conversation about ambiguous grief, boundaries, and the hard truth that we can’t want connection more than someone else is willing to accept it.Support the show
-
9
Episode 8: When the Caregiver Needs Care
Send a textSometimes caregiving asks more of us than we realize — until our own bodies tap us on the shoulder and say, “It’s your turn.”After a three-month pause, I’m back to talk about why I had to step away: navigating my own health challenges, learning what it means to stop pouring from an empty cup, and finding my way back without everything being neatly resolved.This episode isn’t about having answers — it’s about giving ourselves permission to rest, reset, and return when we can.If you’ve ever disappeared for a while just to survive… this one’s for you.Support the show
-
8
Episode 7: Fish, Face, and Other Notes
Send a textDementia isn’t just grief and red tape. Sometimes, it’s sitcoms, imaginary fish, and your mom asking why her face keeps disappearing.In this episode, I share some of the most memorable, surreal, and unexpectedly tender things my mom has said over the last two years. These quotes—these “notes”—are fragments of her changing reality, but they still carry her voice, her humor, and her heart.From wedding venues that don’t exist, to heartfelt confusion about whether she still has a second job, these moments are as absurd as they are emotional. They remind me (and maybe you too) that even when memory fades, love and identity find strange ways to stay present.If you’ve ever laughed and cried in the same breath, this one’s for you.Support the show
-
7
Episode 6: “Good Days Are Still Hard”
Send a textWhat do you do when your loved one with dementia has a “good day”—but it still hurts?In this episode, I talk about the strange emotional terrain of almost. When my mom remembers something… and then forgets it 20 minutes later. When she smiles, laughs, even calls me by name—but still believes she needs to leave for work in the morning.These are the days that look like progress from the outside, but carry a quiet grief on the inside. Because sometimes the hardest part of dementia caregiving isn’t the chaos—it’s the clarity that doesn’t last.I also break to the present moment, over two years into our Wernicke-Korsakoff journey, to reflect on what she’s relearned, how time gets warped, and why she still believes she should be living a life that no longer exists.This one’s for anyone who’s ever felt guilty that the “better” days still break your heart.Support the show
-
6
Episode 5: Calling from the Hostage Situation
Send a textWhat do you do when your mom calls from the nursing home and says she’s being held hostage by her ex-boyfriend from 15 years ago?In this episode, I talk about the stage of caregiving no one prepares you for: 👉 the daily phone calls 👉 the delusions 👉 and the emotional whiplash of comforting someone inside a reality you can’t share.I also talk about what it feels like to become your parent’s emotional anchor—and the strange comfort that comes from being the person they call, even when they don’t know exactly where they are.If you’ve ever taken a deep breath before answering the phone… this one’s for you.Support the show
-
5
Episode 4: Wernicke What? My Mom’s Diagnosis—and the 12 Days That Changed Everything
Send a textWhen my mom was suddenly hospitalized for confusion, delusions, and memory loss, I didn’t know what we were facing. But within days, a neurologist gave us a name: Wernicke Encephalopathy. A rare, often alcohol-related brain injury caused by a severe Vitamin B1 deficiency.I’d never heard of it. I didn’t know what it meant. But I did know one thing—we had 14 days to find out if she would come back to us.In this episode, I share what those 14 days were like. The hope, the heartbreak, and the moment we realized love—and even the best care—doesn’t always lead to recovery. I also talk about the emotional whiplash of getting a diagnosis and still feeling completely lost.If you've ever prayed for a turning point and found yourself standing in place… you're not alone.Support the show
-
4
Special 1: The Three Legal Documents Every Family Needs with Elder Care Attorney John Saccoccia
Send a textWhen someone you love is diagnosed with dementia, everything changes—fast. And one of the most urgent (and overwhelming) questions becomes: Who has the legal right to help them?In this episode, I sit down with elder care attorney John Saccoccia to break down the three essential legal documents every family should have in place before a crisis:✅ Healthcare Power of Attorney📄 Living Will💵 Durable Financial Power of AttorneyJohn explains what each document does, why timing is everything, and what happens if you wait too long. We also talk about real-life challenges caregivers face when these protections aren’t in place—and how to start the conversation with your loved ones before it’s too late.If you’ve ever thought, “We should really get that paperwork done someday…” This is your sign to do it now.Support the show
-
3
Episode 3: 2020 in Hindsight
Send a textBefore the diagnosis, there were warning signs—only we didn’t know they were warnings yet.In this episode, I revisit the slow unraveling that began long before my mom’s official diagnosis. From forgetting how to unlock her phone to abandoning frozen dinners and doctor follow-ups, her world was quietly changing—and I was already stepping into the caregiver role without realizing it.If you’ve ever looked back and thought, How did I miss it?—this one’s for you.Support the show
-
2
Episode 2: Just Me and Mom and the VFW
Send a textBefore the diagnosis, before the confusion, before the daily calls from the nursing home—there was just me and my mom.In this episode, I take you back to the before. To the childhood memories of buffet lunches, breakroom nail polish experiments, and blue retail vests three sizes too big. You'll meet my mom not as a patient, but as the strong, funny, stubborn woman who raised me—through foot surgeries, rheumatoid arthritis, and Monday Ponderosa runs with Grandma.Because before you become a caregiver, you're just a daughter. And before dementia rewrites everything, there’s a version of the person you love that’s worth remembering.This one’s for all of us holding onto the before.Support the show
-
1
Episode 1: It Started with a Phone Charger
Send a text The night everything changed—and I didn’t even know it yet. Support the show
We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.
No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.
No topics indexed yet for this podcast.
Loading reviews...
ABOUT THIS SHOW
No GPS on Memory Lane is where caregivers, family members, and accidental crisis managers come to feel seen. Host Valerie Wilde blends storytelling, expert advice, and laugh-or-cry moments from the front lines of dementia and elder care. It’s part support group, part survival guide, and part honest conversation about what it really means to care for someone who's forgetting the way.
HOSTED BY
Valerie
Loading similar podcasts...