Memory & dementia care, with patience as the practice
A calm, predictable home built around the way memory loss actually unfolds — and the people living through it.
For someone living with memory loss
Memory care is for adults living with Alzheimer's disease, vascular dementia, Lewy body dementia, frontotemporal dementia, or other conditions that affect memory, judgment, and orientation.
Some residents come to us in earlier stages — still independent in many ways, but no longer safe living alone. Others arrive in more advanced stages, needing full-time care and a calm environment that doesn't ask too much of them. We care for both — and we adapt as the disease progresses.
(suggested: peaceful natural light, ~1000×1250px)
How memory care works here
- Caregivers trained in dementia care best practices
- Predictable daily routines that reduce confusion
- Calm, low-stimulation environment (no loud TVs, no chaos)
- Memory-supportive cues — clocks, calendars, name labels
- Validation therapy — meeting residents where their memory is
- Personalized comfort items — favorite music, photos, blankets
- Patience with repeated questions, never correction
- Sundowning support — calming routines for late-day agitation
- Wandering safety — secure exits and constant supervision
- Familiar foods, including cultural dishes from the resident's life
- Coordinated care with neurologists and primary care physicians
- Family education and emotional support
- Quiet, single-occupancy bedrooms for rest and privacy
- Continuity — the same caregivers, week after week
Calm, consistent, and never rushed
Memory loss is exhausting for the person living it — and for everyone around them. The instinct is to "correct" them: No, Mom, it's Tuesday, not Thursday. No, Dad, your wife passed last year, remember?
We don't do that. Correction creates shame and agitation. Instead, we meet residents where they are. If your mother thinks her late husband is at work, we don't tell her he's gone. We say, "He's not here right now. Would you like some tea while you wait?" — and she relaxes, because the world makes sense.
This is called validation therapy, and it's the standard in modern dementia care. It takes patience, training, and a calm temperament — three things we hire for.
The home itself is set up for memory care. Hallways are short and clearly labeled. Bedrooms are quiet and private. The kitchen and dining room are warm and lit naturally. We minimize the "where am I?" disorientation that makes large facilities so terrifying for someone with dementia.
My father stopped speaking for the last year of his life. The week he came to Better Life, a caregiver played his favorite Ethiopian music in the living room. He looked up. He smiled. He hummed along. We hadn't heard him hum in two years.