Director Asghar Farhadi's first idea for the movie was the image of a man washing his father, who had Alzheimer's. He built the rest of the film around that scene.
A Separation (2011) is the first Iranian film to win an Oscar 🏆 !.
Tengo miedo de perder la memoria y aun recordarte. de olvidar tu rostro, tu olor, tu voz y sonrisa y aun asi extrañarte, porque aun tengo inpregnada en mi alma tu esencia. Extrañarte sin saber quien eres, donde estas o si me estas buscando. Sentir que algo o alguien me falta y no saber que o quien es. Tener un vacío en mi que no puedo llenar. Tengo miedo de morir sin conocerte de nuevo.
Visité a mi bisabuela, padece de Alzheimer y antes de irme me dijo; “no te olvides de mi”. Casi me parte el corazón, porque aunque quizá ella en algún momento me olvide, siempre estará en mi memoria y corazón.
My name is Jaye and due to several medical issues in our family, I am the only one in my family that can work and we are horribly struggling to pay our bills.
My boyfriend, and the father of our two toddlers, has stage 3 cancer and has been out of work for months due to his condition. And to make it worse, he had a bad episode 2 months ago that sent him to the er where a new nurse tried to put an iv in the side of his wrist and ended up severely damaging his nerves so badly he had to have surgery last week to have 2 nerves removed.
I had to take even more time off work so he could have his surgery and a couple of days to heal while I did everything for us and the taking care of his mother with alzheimers.
I'm just a cashier at a small store, so we are completely dead broke because of this and behind on a few bills because of where he hasn't been able to work at all.
^That is our phone bill, which is due tomorrow. We have to have our phone on so we can contact his doctors because something isn't healing right and he's already had to go back to the hospital to have it rewrapped and is probably going to have to go again cause we think he pulled a stitch or two yesterday while he had to watch the kids so I could go to work. Our gas has already been shut off for over a week now because we have literally no money to pay it, so we have no hot water either. Thank god it just got warm here a couple weeks ago too cause we have no heating right now either.
Please help my family, we have literally no money and our bills are due
To all those who couldn't listen to the show (who can't): Don’t get spoiled! The video will be in a few days on Youtube
IT’S TOO INTENSE!
Don’t spoil this moment!
But give to the cause https://tiltify.com/+wes-johnsons-alzheimers-association-fundraiser/falloutforhope-wes-johnson-alz-2023
Heyy i just wanted to put in a recommendation for a long fic.. the work is called Eden!Verse by ImprobableDreams900
Its got 7 books (3 of which are over 100k)
It's a post canon for the book and omg its the best... it firstly shows both as asexual and the characterisation is *chef's kiss*.. it does have major character death though but in the truest essence of good omens as a story it also has a happy ending.. to be more specific – it has 7 happy endings🤭🤭
Its honestly one of the best works of fiction I've ever read and it still haunts me... it has set the standard for fanfiction in my opinion and i go back to it all the time
Hello! We've recced this one before but for our new readers:
Eden!verse Series by ImprobableDreams900 [G-M]
Picking up where canon leaves off, my Eden!verse chronicles Aziraphale & Crowley's adventures through great losses, gains, and life's cosmic curveballs. From a village on Earth to Heaven, Hell, and Eden itself, Aziraphale and Crowley make many new friends, learn God's plan for them, and discover what it means to love each other.
It is, in turns, gripping, epic, heartrending, sweet, romantic, and humorous. Based on my readers' comments, there is a great likelihood that you will cry.
''We had a complicated relationship. She had a tough childhood. When she was still a baby, her mother tried to jump out of the window while holding her. As a result, she wasn't affectionate with me. I was nine when I drew my first portrait of her. She had the most beautiful, outspoken deep eyes. I would often crawl into bed with her. She would lie, smoking cigarettes and playing pocket solitaire. She wasn't snappy or anything. She just couldn't show any signs of affection. I always tried to get close to her, searching for confirmation of her maternal love, but she always kept her distance. So drawing her was the closest I could get to her. It might sound crazy, but her dementia came as a gift to me. She was in her early eighties when it started. It made her softer, sweeter, and more approachable. When I visited, she proudly showed me copies of my illustrated books translated into Japanese and told me that her daughter had made them. We spent hours in silence while she sat in her chair looking out the window while I drew her. In the past, there were many moments when I could have cut off contact, but somehow I never did. All my life, I felt somewhat incomplete. When you hold a love for someone, but you can never express that love, it's killing you inside. So with dementia, she allowed me to get close, take care of her, and even bathe her. For the very first time, she allowed me to love her.''
El artista William Utermohlen (1933-2007) fue diagnosticado con Alzheimer en 1995, durante los siguientes 5 años se autorretrató hasta que apenas pudo recordar su propia cara.