I enjoy many crafts including knitting and crochet but I also love running and I raise money for Alzheimer's Research UK in memory of my mum (please read her story below to see why it is so important to me). So far I have run 24 marathons including 2 ultras of 35 and 52.4 miles. I have run the London marathon 6 times now and 3 times I have knit all the way round and hold the Guinness World Record for "The longest Scarf Knitted Whilst Running a Marathon"! In 2010 I ran the London marathon whilst crocheting and now hold the Guinness World Record for the 'Longest crochet chain whilst running a marathon'. I've also knit whilst riding on the back of a tandem in the Isle of Wight Randonnee.
In 1997 my mother, then aged 81, had a series of minor strokes. Shortly after that we started to notice behavioural changes notably memory loss and confusion over everyday items. We thought it was just old age finally catching up with her. Then she started wandering and had violent mood swings. Although she already lived with us it became obvious that she couldn't be left alone for long and so I left my job to care for her. The next few years saw a gradual decline into the blackness that is 'vascular dementia'. My normally placid mum became violent and aggressive. She had psychotic incidents where she would see imaginary people (children hiding in her wardrobe, Russians sitting on the stairs, women stealing her clothes) and she would shout at them and sometimes throw things too. She was so convincing that we used to go and check that there wasn't anyone there! When my sister died mum did not know who Judy was or that she was her daughter. There came a point when I suddenly realised she no longer knew that I was her daughter and this was a terrible time for me. In the last 2 years that she lived with us, life for us all became almost unbearable as she needed 24 hour care - she couldn't be left alone at all because she would either wander off or hurt herself, she never slept for more than 30 minutes at a time during the night, she became incontinent and incapable of doing anything for herself. Finally my husband and I realised that we could no longer provide her with the care that she needed and she went to live in Castlemaine where Harry and his team did a splendid job caring for her. There she lived a zombified existence unaware of who she was, what she was or where she was. It was heartbreaking. She died in March 2005, the day after her 89th birthday.
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