Beth Malone: How my dad's dementia changed my idea of death (and life)
Beth Malone: Wie die Demenz meines Vaters meine Vorstellung vom Tod änderte. Und vom Leben.
TED Resident Beth Malone brings bold art to public spaces across the US, encouraging artists to have a sense of humor, to be vulnerable and take creative risks. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
„Hör mal zu,
zwischen 50 und 70.
that hits people in their 50s or 60s.
die Persönlichkeit völlig verändern,
someone's personality,
wurde es wirklich schlimm
zuhause lassen --
with his own hands.
eigenen Händen gebaut hat.
with the falsetto singing voice
mit der Falsett-Singstimme
for round-the-clock care
mit Vollzeitpflege umziehen.
and I made the mistake
wir Schwestern den Fehler,
and afternoon art classes
Nachmittags gab es Kunstunterricht
Ihren Vater eingesperrt."
everybody with cutlery.
the curtains off the wall,
to throw plants out the window.
aus dem Fenster zu werfen.
the old ladies out of their wheelchairs."
aus ihren Rollstühlen gezogen."
Versuche in staatlichen Einrichtungen,
a bunch of state-run facilities
das speziell Demenzkranke behandelt.
specifically for people with dementia.
sein Gesundheitszustand.
auf dem Boden sitzend,
on the ground wearing a onesie --
that zip in the back.
Reißverschluss hinten haben.
as he yanked at it,
Stunde lang, wie er daran zerrte,
wie eine Zwangsjacke.
seinem alten Truck --
coming out of the pit of my belly.
kam aus der Tiefe meines Herzens.
glauben, dass mein Vater
was worth living anymore.
Leben noch lebenswert war.
to prioritize productivity.
Produktivität zu priorisieren.
an Adonis in this case --
ein Adonis in diesem Fall --
in the way we expect him to be,
wie wir es erwarten,
was that my dad was being tortured
dass mein Vater gefoltert wurde
the vessel of that torture.
Körper herausholen.
I'm going to kill Dad.
herausholen. Ich werde Papa töten.
to live the rest of your life
getötet hast, weiterleben.
werden, denke ich,
how to buy heroin."
wie man Heroin kauft."
about his death a lot.
about death when we were all healthy.
gesprochen, als wir alle gesund waren.
diesem Körper herausholen.
and then a support group,
Selbsthilfegruppe und sie sagten alle:
kann Menschen daran hindern, loszulassen.
when they're worried about loved ones.
and it's OK to go when you're ready.
es O.K. ist, wenn er bereit ist zu gehen.
on the ground in the onesie.
auf dem Boden liegen.
and just kind of looking at the ground.
sah irgendwie auf den Boden.
about nothing in particular,
nichts Besonderes zu reden,
he sneezed from the ginger ale.
er von dem Ginger Ale.
it jerked his body upright,
es riss seinen Körper hoch
and sparking, over and over and over again
genossen, gelebt, immer und immer wieder,
and he was looking at me,
und er sah mich an,
kannst du sterben.
was ich sagen konnte: „Papa!
ich vermisse dich auch."
because I'm just a mess.
he seemed kind of OK.
langer Zeit irgendwie Okay war.
was still attached to his body.
immer noch in seinem Körper war.
für diese Person.
um ihm und mir zu helfen,
as father and daughter.
Tochter wieder aufzunehmen.
es immer getan haben.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Beth Malone - Social entrepreneur, artistTED Resident Beth Malone brings bold art to public spaces across the US, encouraging artists to have a sense of humor, to be vulnerable and take creative risks.
Why you should listen
Beth Malone is executive director and partner at Dashboard US, an award-winning, experimental creative agency. Dashboard has presented exhibitions and special artist projects in cities around the country including New York, New Orleans, Atlanta, and Detroit. Dashboard has commissioned new, nontraditional works from over 200 artists.
Malone encourages artists to have a sense of humor, to be vulnerable and take creative risks, a practice she employed for herself when processing illness, caretaking and death. In 2014, she and her dad were sitting on a couch in a psychiatric hospital in Atlanta, GA. He looked at her and said, "I’m gonna be lost after this. After this, I’m gonna be gone." In August 2017, her dad passed away from frontotemporal lobe dementia -- just two months after she gave her TED Talk. It was a good death.
Beth Malone | Speaker | TED.com