Watching a loved one change because of dementia is one of the hardest things a family can go through. Alexis Ferrara is a Certified Dementia Practitioner and Senior Memory Care Advisor at Arden Courts who has spent years working directly with families navigating this journey. She has trained caregivers, employees, and families alike, and she believes education is the single most powerful tool we have.
Alexis believes that with the right knowledge, support, and compassion, families don’t have to face dementia alone.
Keep reading to learn what she has to say.
The hardest part for most caregivers is the emotional toll of watching someone they love slowly change. Dementia doesn’t just affect memory; it touches reasoning, communication, and behavior too, and that creates a kind of grief that caregivers carry long before they actually lose their loved one. On top of that, a lot of caregivers are dealing with guilt, exhaustion, and constant uncertainty, all while trying to keep their loved one safe and independent and still hold together their own job and personal life.
People often think dementia just means forgetting things. Memory loss is part of it, sure, but dementia is really a progressive brain disease, one that affects how a person processes information, communicates, makes decisions, reads their environment, and handles everyday tasks. Once families understand that these behaviors come from changes happening in the brain, not stubbornness or manipulation or someone “not trying,” it becomes so much easier to respond with empathy instead of frustration.
– Alexis Ferrara
If there’s one thing that makes the biggest difference, it’s education. When caregivers, healthcare professionals, businesses, and entire communities actually understand what’s happening in the brain with dementia, they’re able to respond in ways that are more effective and more compassionate. Giving families access to education, support groups, respite care, and specialized resources helps them make better decisions, cuts down on burnout, and improves the quality of life for the person living with the disease. And when communities become more dementia-friendly overall, it means people are treated with dignity and respect at every stage of the journey, not just some of them.
It’s completely normal to feel overwhelmed at the start of this journey, but families don’t have to go through it alone. My advice is to start learning as early as possible, ask questions, and build a support network before things reach a crisis point. The more you understand about the disease, the more realistic your expectations become, and the easier it is to communicate and make good decisions as things change over time. And please remember, taking care of yourself isn’t selfish. Caregivers who look after their own well-being are the ones who end up being able to show up fully for their loved ones. Take it one step at a time, let people help you, and know that it makes a real difference for both of you.
As Alexis shared, dementia is a journey no family should have to face alone. The most important things to remember:
Dementia care is not something families figure out overnight. But with the right education, community, and support, they can walk the journey one step at a time and never have to do it alone.
Alexis Ferrara, Certified Dementia Practitioner | Senior Memory Care Advisor | Sales & Marketing Leader
Alexis Ferrara is a results-driven senior living sales and marketing professional with a passion for enhancing quality of life for seniors and their families through person-centered care. As a Certified Dementia Practitioner and Virtual Dementia Tour Trainer at Arden Courts, she has spent over a decade training caregivers, families, and healthcare professionals on how to better understand and support people living with dementia. Known for building strong partnerships with families and referral sources, Alexis combines business expertise with genuine compassion to help families navigate one of life's most difficult journeys.