Her husband thought it was normal forgetfulness. Then the police showed up at his door.
The knock was firm, urgent. When I opened the door, two police officers stood there — and between them was my wife, Molly. Pale as a ghost, shaking, her purse missing, a bandage around her head. She'd been found wandering downtown, mugged and disoriented, unable to explain how she got there.
That was the night I finally understood how far things had gone. I called every neurologist I knew. The answer was always the same: her memory was declining, and there wasn't much more medicine could offer. I took a leave from work. For months I barely slept, running on coffee and worry, searching for anything that could reach her.
Then a colleague mentioned something strange he'd come across while researching how sugar affects the aging brain — a clue that started with a 70-year-old woman who, against all odds, couldn't forget a single detail of her life.
What he'd discovered about her daily habit is what finally changed things for Molly. You'll see exactly what it was in the video above.