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What would make a good visit with Dad who recently lost most of his vision. His wife has just been taken from him: she's in a nursing home with Alz. He is 95. He can walk and do a lot for himself.
He is sweet and has humor but is very devastated right now. What would be the best way to be with him? All I can think of his make him cookies, bring him a home cooked meal he'd like, and just sit with him or walk with him, and take him to see his wife. I wish there were more I could do.

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Your ideas are the best ones I think. Can he read things on a white board if you write large enough? My father was deaf. Our hand-held white board was a great way to communicate. With your father's vision loss, though, I don't know if he would be able to see it. A black marker on the white board might work best. I can't think of any better way to please him than to bring cookies and take him to see his wife. At 95 it may fill the day for him to do the things you talked about.
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Oh, I forgot, he has diabetes so I probably should just bring him other food. I don't know what his diet is. I am not there due to the distance and other people care for him. I guess my just being there will be appreciated.
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Since he has diabetes, you may want to bring him nuts, sugar free cookies, or sugar free candy. He can't have much of the latter two things, since they still have carbs and fats, but he can have a bit. The sweet might taste good to him. My mother likes the sugar-free Whitman's box of candy. The only place I've been able to find it is Wal-Mart, though I'm sure they sell it elsewhere. The little bags of sugar-free candy that hang with the others on candy aisles are also good. One or two pieces of these are treats to diabetics who still have a sweet tooth.
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