At 47, she was a busy mom juggling work, family, and the beautiful chaos of raising a young child. Forgetting where she left her keys, mixing up appointments, losing track of conversations — she brushed it all off as stress, exhaustion, “normal mom brain.”
But slowly… something felt different.
She began repeating questions without realizing it.
She would walk into a room and suddenly have no idea why she was there.
One afternoon, she found herself staring at a familiar street — unable to remember how to drive home.
That’s when fear finally outweighed denial.
She went to her doctor expecting to hear she needed more sleep, vitamins, rest. Instead, she heard the words no one her age imagines:
“You’re showing signs of early-onset Alzheimer’s.”
Her world stopped.
She remembers sitting in the doctor’s office, numb, trying to understand how this could be happening at 47 — with a young child at home who still needed her, depended on her, adored her.
She said the first symptoms she noticed now seem obvious:
• Forgetting simple words mid-sentence
• Getting lost in places she knew well
• Misplacing items constantly
• Struggling to follow a conversation
• Feeling mentally “foggy” almost every day
But at the time, she blamed herself. Stress. Age. Multitasking. Anything but a disease that steals memories before life is even halfway over.
Today, she shares her story to warn others not to ignore early signs — especially younger adults who never think Alzheimer’s can touch them.
“I wish I had listened to my body sooner,” she said.
“I thought I was just tired. I didn’t know I was getting sick.”
Now, her mission is simple:
To stay present.
To create memories while she still can.
To be the mom her child will always remember — even if, one day, she can’t remember herself.
Her courage is heartbreaking.
Her honesty is saving lives.