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In this solo episode, Andy explores one of the most painful dilemmas in dementia care: When someone repeatedly asks for a loved one who has died, is telling the truth always the kindest thing to do? Using the scenario of Margaret – a woman living with dementia who searches anxiously for her husband – Andy explains why connection before correction is essential not only in dementia care, but also in parenting, teaching, trauma-responsive work, and supporting distressed adults.
Through real scenarios and practical tools, Andy unpacks what distress really looks like, why a nervous system in panic cannot process facts, and how small relational shifts can reduce anxiety, prevent escalation, and build trust.
Able Target System – Behaviour support framework for consistent, compassionate responses.
Adaptive Carer Model – Care roles and strategies for dementia support.
Andy’s Blog & Podcast Episodes on connection, communication, and behaviour.
Training & Courses via Able Training: https://able-training.co.uk/podcast
Correcting someone with dementia can recreate the pain of bereavement again and again. Emotional truth often protects dignity better than factual accuracy.
Whether in care homes, schools or families, a dysregulated nervous system cannot absorb logic. Safety first, facts later.
A person calling out for Teddy may be expressing fear, loneliness, confusion or sensory overload – not seeking information. Respond to the need, not just the question.
00:00 – The emotional dilemma
00:20 – Why dementia changes how truth lands
00:43 – Introducing Margaret’s story
01:17 – Why people still reorientate bluntly
01:54 – Intent vs impact
02:39 – Honesty is contextual
03:10 – Therapeutic truth
03:50 – Capacity, reactions and emotional patterns
04:41 – Connection before correction
05:10 – What is Teddy really representing?
05:40 – Why logic doesn’t reach a distressed brain
06:25 – Prevention matters more than crisis management
07:14 – Emotional availability in care
07:55 – Walking, redirecting & environment shifts
08:14 – Using these principles beyond dementia
09:03 – Why “I told you already” makes things worse
09:58 – Trauma, time-travel and stress responses
10:40 – The risk of confrontation
11:20 – The big takeaway
11:54 – Tools you can use: Able Target System & Adaptive Carer Model
This episode is for you if:
You support someone with dementia and feel stuck between “being honest” and “being kind”.
You work in education or care and want trauma-informed communication tools.
You’re a parent struggling with repeated questions, meltdowns or emotional overwhelm.
You want practical, compassion-first strategies that genuinely reduce distressed behaviours.
You want to understand why logic fails when emotions run high – and what works instead.
If you’re tired, overwhelmed or worrying that you’re “getting it wrong”, this episode brings clarity, relief and concrete steps you can use immediately.
Podcast Website: https://able-training.co.uk/podcast
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/abletraining/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/abletrainingexperience
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/able-training-ltd-/
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@abletocarepodcast
By Able Training Support LtdIn this solo episode, Andy explores one of the most painful dilemmas in dementia care: When someone repeatedly asks for a loved one who has died, is telling the truth always the kindest thing to do? Using the scenario of Margaret – a woman living with dementia who searches anxiously for her husband – Andy explains why connection before correction is essential not only in dementia care, but also in parenting, teaching, trauma-responsive work, and supporting distressed adults.
Through real scenarios and practical tools, Andy unpacks what distress really looks like, why a nervous system in panic cannot process facts, and how small relational shifts can reduce anxiety, prevent escalation, and build trust.
Able Target System – Behaviour support framework for consistent, compassionate responses.
Adaptive Carer Model – Care roles and strategies for dementia support.
Andy’s Blog & Podcast Episodes on connection, communication, and behaviour.
Training & Courses via Able Training: https://able-training.co.uk/podcast
Correcting someone with dementia can recreate the pain of bereavement again and again. Emotional truth often protects dignity better than factual accuracy.
Whether in care homes, schools or families, a dysregulated nervous system cannot absorb logic. Safety first, facts later.
A person calling out for Teddy may be expressing fear, loneliness, confusion or sensory overload – not seeking information. Respond to the need, not just the question.
00:00 – The emotional dilemma
00:20 – Why dementia changes how truth lands
00:43 – Introducing Margaret’s story
01:17 – Why people still reorientate bluntly
01:54 – Intent vs impact
02:39 – Honesty is contextual
03:10 – Therapeutic truth
03:50 – Capacity, reactions and emotional patterns
04:41 – Connection before correction
05:10 – What is Teddy really representing?
05:40 – Why logic doesn’t reach a distressed brain
06:25 – Prevention matters more than crisis management
07:14 – Emotional availability in care
07:55 – Walking, redirecting & environment shifts
08:14 – Using these principles beyond dementia
09:03 – Why “I told you already” makes things worse
09:58 – Trauma, time-travel and stress responses
10:40 – The risk of confrontation
11:20 – The big takeaway
11:54 – Tools you can use: Able Target System & Adaptive Carer Model
This episode is for you if:
You support someone with dementia and feel stuck between “being honest” and “being kind”.
You work in education or care and want trauma-informed communication tools.
You’re a parent struggling with repeated questions, meltdowns or emotional overwhelm.
You want practical, compassion-first strategies that genuinely reduce distressed behaviours.
You want to understand why logic fails when emotions run high – and what works instead.
If you’re tired, overwhelmed or worrying that you’re “getting it wrong”, this episode brings clarity, relief and concrete steps you can use immediately.
Podcast Website: https://able-training.co.uk/podcast
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/abletraining/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/abletrainingexperience
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/able-training-ltd-/
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@abletocarepodcast