It usually starts with something small. A word that won’t come. A familiar name that vanishes mid-sentence. A pot left on the stove, just once. And then the question that families dread: Is this just getting older — or is something wrong?
Most of us normalise these moments for too long. We tell ourselves it’s tiredness, stress, age. And often, we’re right. But sometimes we’re not — and the earlier families recognise the difference, the more time they have to plan, support, and make the most of what matters.
This article won’t diagnose anyone. What it will do is give you a clearer picture of where the line is, so you can trust your instincts when something doesn’t feel right.
Normal Aging vs. Dementia: The Key Difference
The single most useful thing to understand is this: normal aging affects speed, while dementia affects function.
An older person may take longer to recall a name, need more time to learn a new phone, or occasionally walk into a room and forget why. These are annoying but normal — the brain is slower, not broken. The information is still there.
In dementia, the information itself becomes unreachable. Not just slower to retrieve — genuinely lost. And beyond memory, other cognitive functions begin to fail: language, judgment, spatial awareness, and the ability to manage everyday tasks independently.
Signs That Are Usually Normal
Before worrying, it helps to know what doesn’t warrant concern:
Occasionally forgetting a name or word, then remembering it later. This is extremely common after 60 and doesn’t indicate disease.
Misplacing things from time to time — keys, glasses, a phone. What’s normal is being able to retrace your steps and find them.
Feeling slower to learn new technology. The brain becomes less flexible with age, but it still learns.
Needing more time to make decisions or process information. Speed slows; capability remains.
Forgetting what day it is momentarily, then remembering shortly after.
These are the normal wear and tear of an aging brain. They’re frustrating, but they don’t disrupt daily life in lasting ways.
Signs That Deserve Attention
These are the changes that cross from normal aging into territory worth discussing with a doctor:
Asking the same question repeatedly in the same conversation. Not once — but several times, with no memory of having just asked.
Getting lost in familiar places. Becoming disoriented on a regular route driven or walked hundreds of times is a meaningful warning sign.
Difficulty managing familiar tasks. Struggling to follow a recipe that’s been made for decades, or becoming unable to manage household bills that were never a problem before.
Significant changes in mood or personality. Becoming suspicious, withdrawn, fearful, or uncharacteristically aggressive — especially if this represents a real shift from who the person has always been.
Trouble finding words — beyond the occasional tip-of-tongue moment. Stopping mid-sentence frequently, substituting wrong words, or referring to objects by description rather than name (“the thing you write with”).
Poor judgment in ways that are out of character. Giving money to strangers, neglecting personal hygiene, or making financial decisions that make no logical sense.
Putting objects in illogical places and being unable to retrace the steps to find them — and sometimes accusing others of theft.
None of these signs alone confirms dementia. But any of them, especially if they’re new, progressive, or beginning to affect daily independence, deserves a medical conversation.
Why Families Wait — And Why That’s Understandable
Most families don’t act on early signs immediately, and that’s not a failure. It’s human. We don’t want to be alarmist. We don’t want to frighten our parent. We tell ourselves it’s a bad week, a difficult season, the natural course of things.
There’s also a quieter fear underneath: that naming it will make it real.
But early diagnosis — when it turns out to be dementia — genuinely matters. It opens access to treatment options that work better in earlier stages, gives the person with dementia more time to participate in decisions about their own care, and allows families to put practical support in place before a crisis forces their hand.
What to Do If You’re Concerned
Start by writing things down. Note specific incidents — what happened, when, how often. Concrete examples are far more useful to a doctor than a general sense of worry.
Then have an honest conversation with your family member’s GP. You don’t need to have all the answers — you just need to share what you’ve observed. A doctor can rule out other causes (thyroid issues, vitamin deficiencies, depression, and medication side effects can all mimic dementia symptoms) and refer for further assessment if needed.
If your loved one takes regular medication, it’s also worth reviewing whether doses are being taken consistently. Missed or doubled-up medications are surprisingly common in older adults and can cause confusion that looks like cognitive decline. Simple systems — whether a pill organiser, a family member checking in, or a medication reminder service — can eliminate this variable entirely.
A Final Word
Worrying about a parent’s memory is one of the loneliest experiences a family can go through — especially in those early months of uncertainty, when you’re not sure whether your concern is valid or you’re overreacting.
You probably know your person better than anyone. If something feels different — not just slower, but genuinely changed — trust that instinct enough to get it checked. The earlier you look, the more choices you’ll have.