“When You Do Nothing You Die a Little Bit”: On Stillness and Honing Responsive Existence Among Community-Dwelling People with Dementia

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterAcademic

Abstract

Health care for people with dementia has been concerned with questions of mobility for long, mainly focusing on people with dementia’s unsupervised movement as a safety threat. Little attention is paid to what informs such forms of mobility and to the experiences of potentiality arising in these mobilities. Based on a 2-year fieldwork among community-dwelling people with dementia in the Netherlands, this chapter explores the vicissitudes of moments that study participants characterized as “still”. It consequently follows interlocutors in the repetitive walks around the house they explained were ways of dealing with these still moments. The chapter draws on critical phenomenology to argue that engaging in repetitive mobilities of leaving and returning home could be the way in which this study’s participants nurtured the responsive engagement with the world many of us already find ourselves involved in throughout our everyday lives. This analysis not only highlights how the “still” is a phenomenon that sparks p
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationImmobility and Medicine Exploring Stillness, Waiting and the In-Between
EditorsCecilia Vindrola-Padros, Bruno Vindrola-Padros, Kyle Lee-Crossett
PublisherPalgrave Macmillan
Pages185-206
ISBN (Electronic)978-981-15-4976-2, 978-981-15-4978-6
ISBN (Print)978-981-15-4975-5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2021
Externally publishedYes

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