How to handle luggage when flying?
We are going on our first extended cruise post dementia in May and I am concerned about handling carryon vs checked baggage with a spouse who watches me struggle and cannot process how to help. Any lessons learned for me to decide on handling luggage?
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Haha yes I have just been on my own the last three years! Looking forward to hearing other ideas, strategies, and experiences. It often feels pretty lonely. Thanks for the welcome!
Yes, welcome. I am in awe of how you planned for and gave yourself permission to spend the money necessary to have the way smoothed well ahead of you both as each part of the trip unfolded- kudos and double kudos!
And yes, hanging out with us will give you unfortunate insight into what is to come. I passed the no more trips milestone about two years ago. Two weeks ago, things went south in a big way at my husband’s longtime barber, and I’ve realized that it’s time to use the facility’s.
Working with what you’ve got to work with and accepting the continual decline is hard, we’re here for you.
Whew! The cruise sounds like a LOT of work. I lost my husband to Parkinson's a few years ago.
I live in the hill's of West Templeton. wine country. Very close to Pismo Beach. This is the most beautiful time of the year with everything so green. Make a trip this direction and it will be every bit as good as a cruise. You are 20 miles from the ocean in Cambria. There are guided tours that will pick you up at your hotel or Airbnb. There is a service called Senior Go that will drive you around in Paso Robles for $5 each way.
How lovely. You sound well settled after your husband’s passing and we have loved our many trips to various wine and beach areas of California in years past. We have never been to the Great Lakes and especially want to see Mackinac Island which this cruise will include.
My husband particularly enjoys the small ship cruises we have taken to areas around the world as it allows us to see many areas without packing and unpacking more than once and having all transportation done for us. My only concern was our flight which requires one connection, something we have easily done with no difficulty in the past. I am hoping that Viking’s new expedition ship which provides so much extra onboard will make this an easy and enjoyable experience.
Hi- thanks and m at I ask how long your husband has been in a facility? I assume it’s memory care- and his age? My husband is young and when I visit them to check them out it’s even more depressing…he won’t fit in.
My husband went into assistive living at 77, he has a diagnosis of vascular dementia, his first neuropsych testing was 10 years ago, when he mentioned to his PCP that he was noticing memory problems. The test results led to the diagnosis of MCI, so I knew what was coming, just took awhile to get there. My job as a Home Care OT took me in and out of all local ALs and nursing homes.
I would recommend not holding yourself to just looking at “Memory Care”units unless he is a wanderer and needs a locked unit (not a lot of dementia people have this motivation and initiative). On a “general” floor, there will be people of varying ages, who for whatever reason, need the structure and available care in AL. Some have diabetes and need close monitoring (4 sticks daily) and no one at home to do the sticks and draw up the insulin. Some have had strokes, cognitively fine, but again, without a caregiver at home. Some have adult children who live a distance and couldn’t keep up with all the duties of keeping a home or apartment going. My husband was taken in by a group of four guys- three have dementia and the leader has had a stroke. He gets everybody laughing, organizes calling on his cellphone weekly for DoorDash to bring take-out, and schedules the retired guys from his band to come in monthly and play for everyone. You’ll be surprised how the opportunities for socialization (especially with “the guys”) will brighten your hubby’s spirits.
When making visits to see if a place might suit, of course, look for cleanliness, repairs done, no unpleasant odors, residents look well-cared for , etc. Then, I believe the best advice is to not look for chandeliers, but to look for how the staff appears- do you see kindness in their interactions with the residents, is there laughing, maybe a little teasing, are there smiles, do they make eye contact with you? My area has several “luxurious” ALs, the one I chose has “family home” vibe and not a single chandelier 🤣
Funny story- there is a bus stop/shelter with a bench near my husband’s AL. The “guy group” thinks it’s hilarious to take a walk there (the leader keeps the dementia guys together and is pushed in his wheelchair by one). They park themselves on the bench at the bus shelter and wait for the next bus. The drivers stop, look at this group in horror, they laugh uproariously and say they’re just resting from a walk. Laughter and teasing ensue, the drivers are getting to know them and they always stop.
I loved this story and you have enlightened me on the thought of AL vs just thinking Memory Care.
My husband is still in the MCI category but I am proactively thinking about our future. I recently put deposits down on two different CCRC facilities. They are both very nice and have all the levels of care including rehab as needed. They also both have at least 3-4 year waiting lists. My hope is that we will be able to move into and enjoy an independent living apartment together before thinking we need another level for him and God willing my brain stays intact. I just turned 72 and my husband is 77.
Thank you for this story.
I am so glad the luggage and travel question is here. I have been reading all the posts and glad to see that travel is still a possibility for many. It is becoming more difficult, but we are hoping to get a few more good trips in.
My husband and I stopped checking luggage long ago after a trip to London left him without luggage for days.
We find it simpler to pack two airline approved carry ons per person. In 2019 we did a three week Eastern European group tour and were the only ones with only carry on luggage. But we did it and had no issues.
Last year we did a 14 day Viking Cruise to Greece/Turkey/ Croatia and Italy-no checked luggage.
They have laundry rooms down the hall from all the cabins.
This year we are doing a 30 day Viking Cruise (probably our last hurrah) and do not plan to check luggage.
It is a challenge and I have to weigh the bags to make sure they will accommodate but in the long run it feels so much simpler to us. We also have signed up to be trusted travelers so we get through lines quicker.
All that being said, I am hearing that many like to check luggage and be done with any worries of overhead compartments etc. I get that too. Also my husband still can help and walk with the luggage throughout the airport. I can see where checking the luggage and not having to worry about it until the flight is over is also nice.
So, for now, while we can, we are sticking with our no check policy. I'm not sure how much more we can do these international trips. We may be resorting to long car drives, which I also love. I do all the driving now.