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She's Convinced Someone Is Stealing From Her

She's Convinced Someone Is Stealing From Her

By R R

She's certain her ring was stolen. Her money. Her good scarf. And the accusation lands on whoever is closest — often the very person doing the most for her. You. You know you didn't take anything. You know it's the disease talking. And it still stings in a deep, disorienting way, because being accused of theft by your own mother is a particular kind of hurt, even when you understand the cause.

Let the understanding take some of the sting out. Accusations like these are common in dementia, and they almost always come from a specific, understandable place. As memory fails, your loved one genuinely can't recall where she put something — and an empty space where a ring used to be needs an explanation. The mind, doing what minds do, fills the gap with the story that makes sense to it: it didn't vanish, so someone must have taken it. It's not a moral judgment of you. It's a frightened brain trying to make sense of a world that keeps losing its own objects. Underneath the accusation is usually fear — of losing control, of being vulnerable, of a world that no longer holds still.

Knowing that points straight to what helps, and what doesn't. What doesn't help is defending yourself or proving her wrong. I would never take your ring, Mom — however true — tends to escalate things, because to her the loss is real and your denial sounds like part of the problem. Arguing the facts pours fuel on the fear.

What helps is to respond to the feeling instead. Stay calm; don't take the bait of the accusation personally, even though it's aimed at you. Reassure her that you'll help find it — joining the search rather than disputing it puts you on her side. Often, simply helping look, and offering comfort, settles the storm faster than any defense. It can also help to learn her favorite hiding spots, since misplaced items frequently turn up in the same few places, and to keep a duplicate of commonly "lost" essentials on hand.

This is the kind of situation our caregivers at Geriatric Care Solutions are trained to navigate. The Montessori approach to dementia care teaches responding to the emotion beneath a behavior rather than fighting the behavior itself — meeting fear with reassurance, not correction. Trained caregivers can also absorb these accusations with less personal hurt than family can, which sometimes makes the home calmer for everyone.

She's not really accusing you. She's frightened, and her mind handed her the only explanation it could find. Meet the fear, help her look, and let the accusation pass — because it will. You haven't lost her trust. The disease just borrowed it for a moment.

For compassionate in-home dementia support, call 1-888-896-8275 or email ask@gcaresolution.com.

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