Do we want to enjoy the short film? Lost Property ?, to talk about a very delicate subject.
Life sometimes gives us very strong blows. It is not always all light and color, and yet we must continue to face it with integrity. Sometimes phrases like “why me” appear in our minds. Don’t I deserve this?! However, it is not a question of deserving or not, what happens to us is sometimes surrounded by darkness, but it is in our hands to see the light in all this darkness.
- Dementia is one of those difficult experiences that we can live.
- We are talking about one of the most difficult blows that directly impacts our memory or those of those we love the most.
- Also causing our memories to lose our identity.
- However.
- Is it possible?To see that from a different perspective?Here we leave you the short “Lost Property”.
- Which responds with a “Yes?Round.
- “.
“Dementia affects 47 million people worldwide. -WHO-
From the short “Lost and Found” we can learn a lot to put into practice in our daily action. When life strikes us and we feel that we have lost everything, we may be led to insist or rush into the action that reverses or compensates for the situation as soon as possible. However, we forgot to be patient.
We generally have little tolerance for uncertainty and the truth is that not knowing what will happen in our future can generate a lot of anxiety, making us feel on the verge of a cliff whose depth we cannot estimate. This precipice, in turn, has a lot to do with the loss of control that unexpected and negative events or news bring to our lives.
This anxiety rarely helps us. Scams will continue to surprise us without being able to do anything to prevent them, let alone to control them.
So what do we do? As the short of dementia teaches us, patience and persistence are needed. Stop wanting everything to be resolved from today to tomorrow and focus on the small steps of improvement that can be achieved with effort and, most importantly, a lot of hope.
So patiently coping with the blows that life can give us does not mean that we have lost hope, but we will try with love to live with this uncertainty of not knowing what will happen tomorrow, aware of what will happen today. in the present, we have control and power.
Alzheimer’s disease is a type of dementia
Another lesson given to us by the wonderful short film is to look at the little things, even those that seem insignificant, because in them there is usually our own happiness. To realize this, it is sometimes necessary to spend years and reach the age of the protagonists of the short film.
We always pursue great dreams, we try to accumulate many things, we desire countless riches, however, what really has value is in the smallest, imperceptible, because when the person on our side suffers dementia, the big dreams collapse and the accumulation of things no longer make sense, what do we have left ?, there is magic.
Time and time again it seems that life has to hit us hard so that we can open our eyes and achieve something we don’t appreciate. The funny thing is, they were always even. It wasn’t something we had to fight for. It was there, we just had to enjoy it! But we didn’t because our attention was somewhere else.
“For many advice, there are life lessons that we will only understand through bumps and stumbles. Anonymous?
Although the blows that life gives us are hard and make us suffer – in the case of the short film, for the person you love the most – we must not underestimate a positive part that they certainly have: they allow us to open our eyes. We live in a constant autopilot in which we only receive adversity and unexpected problems.
It’s time to stop waiting for this to happen, so we can start enjoying the little things, the life we have and start cultivating patience to deal with what’s not happening as expected. Valuable teachings that can be drawn from the wonderful short film that we have in mind, where love, appreciation for small things and a slight change of perspective can be the beginning of a wonderful journey with the person we love most, even if their reality and ours are not.