Greenwich Time

Alzheimer’s Associatio­n to honor man for devotion to wife’s care

- By Susan Shultz

DARIEN — There are moments in one’s life when its realized that things will never be the same, according to Darien native Dick Helstein.

“You realize going forward that time will forever be marked as ‘before this happened’ and ‘after this happened,’” he said.

For Helstein, that moment came at the “perfect” phase of his and his late wife’s life, having raised their four children, Tim, Annie, Maggie and Liz, in the idyllic setting of a Darien neighborho­od.

“I had my wife, Sue, of 50 years. We had four kids who are happily married. A beautiful home. Ten perfect grandchild­ren. We were planning the perfect next phase. Then the diagnosis came,” Helstein said.

Susan Helstein’s diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease came “completely out of the blue.”

“It was nothing we expected. No family history. It was a punch in the gut, a journey you never plan for,” Dick Helstein said. “... Everyone knows a cancer survivor. No one knows an Alzheimer’s survivor.”

The Helsteins’ doctor recommende­d they call the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n for resources and support. The associatio­n also offers a 24-hour number for help. And on May 15, Dick will be honored by the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n of Connecticu­t at its virtual gala, Celebratin­g Hope, for sharing his story and raising money for research at the Walk to End Alzheimer’s.

Dick said the advice the couple initially got was to start planning in the early stages of the disease and agreeing on plans, which they spent a lot of time talking over.

But some of the best advice they got was, “You don’t have to stop your life for this. You have a number of good years to go,” he said.

“I encouraged Sue, with her strong spirit, she would not be defined by this disease,” Dick said.

And she was not. Susan decided to pick up the violin again, she took up tap dancing, the couple took river cruises, she began to take German lessons to encourage her brain to remain active.

“Sue was excellent that way. We knew it was progressiv­e, but we were going to live until it stopped us,” he said.

According to the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n, Alzheimer’s is a degenerati­ve brain disease that is caused by complex brain changes following cell damage. The most common early symptom is trouble rememberin­g new informatio­n because the disease typically impacts the part of the brain associated with learning first.

Symptoms continue to get more severe and include disorienta­tion, confusion and behavior changes. Eventually, speaking, swallowing and walking become difficult. There is no way to prevent, cure or slow the disease.

Along the way, Dick began to get more involved in the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n.

“There’s no way to know how to handle every situation as a caregiver. You go one day at a time. That’s how it works,” he said.

Jim and Kate Clark of Greenwich will chair the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n event, and MLB former Yankee Mark Texeira will emcee.

The event raises money to serve the 80,000 people living with Alzheimer’s in Connecticu­t and their caregivers, and fund critical research toward a cure.

Dick said he honored to get the award but only will accept it on behalf of all the Alzheimer’s caregivers who have gone through the same journey.

“There are 200,000 caregivers out there. I’ll be glad to accept it so they know they aren’t forgotten,” he said.

 ?? Helstein family / Contribute­d photo ?? Dick and Susan Helstein.
Helstein family / Contribute­d photo Dick and Susan Helstein.

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