Lest We Forget: Remembering and Forgetting.
by SIRS Publishing, Inc.
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REF SIRS 2003 Fam49 America Confronts a New Old Age. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam5 The New American Family. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam5 My Life As a Blender OR Surviving in a Stepfamily. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam50 Lest We Forget: Remembering and Forgetting. | REF SIRS 2003 Fam52 The Graying of the Prisons. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam53 Alone Together. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam54 Struggling and Alone. / |
Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2003.
Originally Published: Lest We Forget: Remembering and Forgetting, May 2002; pp. 1-6.
"It's ironic. Over the years, every man accumulates a large number of things he'd like to forget but can't, yet over the years, particularly in his advancing years, every man forgets things he'd like to remember. Forgetting names can be an embarrassment, misplacing eyeglasses a bother, losing car keys a real nuisance. But when the little lapses seem to mount up, they add another dimension: worry about 'losing it,' about severe mental impairment and Alzheimer's disease." (HARVARD MEN'S HEALTH WATCH) This article examines normal memory loss that occurs with age and addresses more severe forms of mental impairment, such as Alzheimer's disease.
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