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![]() wrote in message he said he was getting too old. He has now forgotten that. .. He has insufficient water storage and is relying on desalination equipment that has a history of failure. His main engine is unreliable and difficult to start although it hasn't many hours since a full rebuild. His rigging is old and underrated for bad weather. He spent several hundred thousand dollars buying a yacht that no one could sell for nearly nine years, because of these problems. He is relying on being able to fix these problems himself, not hire professionals to do it. My sister tells me that the last time she saw him, just before he bought the yacht, he was "losing it" starting to act senile, forgetting things that he had just discussed and remembering things from the past that were mixed up, confusing events from various decades, combining them into one. Wouldn't you be worried if it was your father? Faith I'll give my opinion for what it is worth. I'm a physician in Geriatric and Internal Medicine in Australia. From what describe, if accurate, your father likely has Alzheimer's disease. While many would question giving a diagnosis over usenet, it's not a big call as Alzheimer's is the commonest cause of dementia by a large margin ( about 3/4 of all cases at that age) and affecting about 25% of 85 year olds. The lack of judgement and forgetfulness you describe is typical. Many are under the mistaken impression that these are a natural concomitant of aging but that is not the case- Three out of four 85 year olds are cognitively normal. While I know nothing of your medicolegal systems (I'm assuming you're in the US), here, the appropriate step would be a medical assessment to make or refute a diagnosis and if he is suffering from Alzheimer's of significant degree, and thus not have decision making capacity, then take the suitable steps to protect him and others from harm. Of course if he does not have a disease like Alzheimer's affecting his cognition and is simply a foolish/stubborn/cantankerous old man then he and his friend can accept any risk they choose. Playing the odds, I think the likelihood is a dementing illness in the early stages. Unfortunately we see quite commonly the effects of Alzheimer's disease too late to intervene. Many a family business has been ruined by bad decision making from dementia before it is picked up, leaving the spouse destitute. I do go sailing as well - hopefully the off topic post is excused. Peter HK |
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