'A great life after diagnosis': Retired CBC journalist discusses life with Alzheimer's - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 11:51 AM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

'A great life after diagnosis': Retired CBC journalist discusses life with Alzheimer's

Darce Fardy responded to his diagnosis the way you might expect from a lifelong storyteller: He decided to share it with the world.

Darce Fardy and his wife, Dorothea, share their story to help others with the disease

Darce Fardy's initial response to his Alzheimer's diagnosis: "This is a great story." (Radio-Canada)

Longtime CBC journalist Darce Fardy, now 84, was at the St. John's airportabout five years agowhen a man plunked down next to him and struck up a conversation.

When their chat was over, Fardyturned to his wife and asked, "Who was that?"It was Hockey Night in Canada announcer Bob Cole, a man Fardyknew from working together at CBC St. John's.

"I knewhim well,"Fardytold Radio-Canadathis week. "I don't know if I even remembered his face."

Concerned about the odd experience, Fardy and his wife Dorothea went to hisfamily doctor and discovered the truth: Darce Fardyhas Alzheimer's. Fardy said there was no despair that day. Instead, hehad an apt reaction for a personwho spent his life as a storyteller in four provinces, including Nova Scotia.

"This is a greatstory," he remembers telling his family. "Would you mind if I write about it?"

'Too many people are embarrassed'

Fardy contacted the Chronicle Herald and since then has written about two dozen columns for the newspaper about his dementia. And now, during Alzheimer Awareness Month, he and his wife are sharing their story again so that the approximately17,000 Nova Scotian familiesfacing the disease and other dementias can learn that they are neitheralone nor doomed to a terrible life.

"Too many people are embarrassed by it and it's a pity, you know,because there's a great life after diagnosis that you can takeadvantage [of]," he said. "I go to the gym regularly, we socialize a lot, we had 26 people herethe other [day], more, for a Christmas party, and they all know I haveit, but nobody's reacting or overreacting to that."

Dorothea Fardy says, "I'm tough as old boots, that's what I am." (Radio-Canada)

Fardy does not fit the stereotype of a person struggling with dementia. To combat the diseasehe takes "a mess of pills," exercises regularly and reads. His vocabulary is large and he uses it.His memory seemed sound during a 20-minute interview with Radio-Canada, though he says it's gotten much worse since the diagnosis.

And there are other struggles.

Fardy said he hasn't driven since the day he went to the doctor's office, and he dearly misses neighbourhood walks. He's not supposed to drink anymore (though his daughter slipped him a couple over the holidays), and he has "crazy" dreams. He'sfallen twice, a problem he blames on the dementia rather than any physical ailment.

'She's the ideal kind of person'

Fardy greets questions about his resiliencewith a shrug, grateful for the support from peopleincluding his wife, whom he first met when she was 17.

"She's the ideal kind of person. She can handle things. She's notlooking at me saying, 'Oh, you poor bastard' or anything like that," he said. "She's just getting on with it."

Dorothea said, "At the verybeginningI toldDarce, 'You're not ashamed you havearthritis. Why would you be ashamed you have Alzheimer's?'And that'sthe truth of it."

Darce and Dorothea Fardy share a laugh when asked about their resilience. (Radio-Canada)

Still, shesaid she wouldn't have been as public with the diagnosis as Darcehas been. That is,untilshe saw the way people reacted to it. Then she was all in.

"People will come up to him on the street and say my aunt had it, myuncle had it, my sister has it," she said. "You felt as if someone had taken their finger out of a dam. Suddenly everything about their wholefamily came out. Everyone we've talked to, you can see the relief thatthey can talk about it. And I think that's a big help. I think if youcan talk about it, you can accept it."

Darce Fardy worked for CBC in four provinces, including Nova Scotia. (CBC)

Both Fardyslaugh and smile about their life together.

"I'm as tough as old boots, that's what I am," Dorothea said. "When you can't changeit, you don't really have much choice. You just get up, put one footin front of the other, and find things to laugh about, things to fightabout sometimes."

#iNoticedWhen

Linda Bird, director of programs and services for the AlzheimerSociety of Nova Scotia, said the reality is that many people with Alzheimer's live well, but too often the stigma attached to the illness reduces people's quality of life and isolates them further.

Linda Bird, director of programs and services for the Alzheimer Society of Nova Scotia, says dementia can show itself through more than just memory loss. (Radio-Canada)

"They mightnot be talking to other people who have the disease, they might not beplanning for the future, they might not be going to their doctor toget a diagnosis, and having the best quality of life that they canhave," she said.

The society is using the hashtag #iNoticedWhen online to highlight that dementia is more than just memory loss, but can also show itself in changes in personality or initiative.

"When they start having trouble, then it's time to go to the doctorand check it out and explore whether it's dementia or something else," she said.

With files from Radio-Canada's Stphanie Blanchet