Teun Toebes has been living in a nursing home for a year now and he wrote a book about it: Nursing Home. It became an indictment about how we deal with people with dementia. “I would absolutely do it again, but I underestimated it.”
He hopes to improve the lives of people with dementia with his book. “You cannot bury your head in the sand. Everyone will have to deal with it at some point. The number of people with dementia is increasing rapidly in the Netherlands. Now there are 290,000 and in 2040 more than half a million people will be living with dementia. If I don’t think about it now and help change things, I’ll have to experience it myself later, but then my vote will be worth nothing.”
Closed doors
Something that Teun encounters, literally, are the closed doors in the Utrecht nursing home. They are nicely covered with photos of the Utrecht canals.
“But the residents can’t go to the real canals. The world stops at these doors for people with dementia. You need a code to get out and they don’t have one.”
Excluded
Teun believes that too little is being discussed with the residents about what they want. “What does mother herself want? We don’t ask her this, because we do not consider people with dementia to be equal at all,” he says.
“We exclude them from society and I find that very bad. My roommates in the nursing home are such wise people. I have learned so much from them. They feel so well whether they are excluded or not.”