If you’re like most caregivers, there’s a point when you hear yourself say:
“I’ve already told you this.”
And not just once.
Five times. Ten times. Maybe twenty.
You repeat the same answer. The same reassurance. The same reminder.
At some point, it starts to feel ridiculous.
Let’s reframe that:
**Repetition isn’t failure.
It’s love in loop form.**
Loops Build Safety
Think of it this way:
- A baby hears the same lullaby every night.
Why? Comfort.
- A favorite movie gets watched again and again.
Why? Familiarity.
- A ritual like lighting a candle or saying grace grounds a moment.
Why? Rhythm.
Repetition isn’t just okay — it’s foundational.
When someone’s memory is slipping, they need loops more than logic.
They need rhythms more than reminders.
They need you to keep showing up in the same spot with the same smile, even if they don’t remember why it matters.
Yes, It’s Tiring
Let’s be honest: Repeating yourself can feel maddening.
That’s normal.
You’re allowed to feel that. But don’t mistake your exhaustion for ineffectiveness.
You’re doing something deeply important.
Repeating Builds Trust
- When you say “I’m here” every day,
even when they forget… they learn to trust your presence, not your words.
- When you calmly redirect a repeated question…
they feel safe.
- When you laugh at the same joke again…
you create a little space where nothing is broken.
Don’t Wait for New Progress
Sometimes, caregiving is about building predictable loops so that even in the fog, something feels stable.
You’re the lighthouse.
Keep blinking.
💡 Solace Tip:
“I once said ‘good morning’ 14 times in one loop.
Phuc answered every time. That’s how I learned what love sounds like.”