Mobile Memory Enrichment

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Mobile Memory Enrichment We are an in-home person-tailored life-enrichment company. We come to you! We provide activities in-home for individuals living with memory loss and dementia.

We are very strategic in our holistic approach. Activities focused on head-to-toe wellness. This is a hub where you will find support, others like you with questions about behaviors and approaches, as well as share hard times and successes. We are here to support each other.

Today, we spoke at the Oregon Senior Referral Agency Association. People in our industry in all forms attended. It was a...
21/05/2026

Today, we spoke at the Oregon Senior Referral Agency Association. People in our industry in all forms attended. It was awesome!

We sold a P.A.L box and many were interested in MME services.

Hello everyone! We just wanted to let you know that we are hiring! If you know someone who would be a great fit for our ...
01/05/2026

Hello everyone!

We just wanted to let you know that we are hiring! If you know someone who would be a great fit for our Activity Coach position, please have them apply.

Here is the full job description and where to apply:

Mobile Memory Enrichment

We’re taking off! 🚀 ​Mobile Memory Enrichment is growing! We’ve officially added two new Activity Coaches to the team to...
25/03/2026

We’re taking off! 🚀

​Mobile Memory Enrichment is growing! We’ve officially added two new Activity Coaches to the team to help us reach more older adults in our community.

​We specialize in bringing the fun (and the brain-boosting activities!) directly to:
- Private Homes
- Adult Foster Homes

​We’re on a mission to make every day more meaningful for those living with memory loss. Now that our team has grown, we are accepting new clients!

​Click the link in our bio to learn more or visit:
www.mobilememoryenrichment.com 🔗

​ MME BrainHealth

Big news from the Mobile Memory Enrichment team! 🚀​We are so excited to announce that we’ve hired two new Activity Coach...
24/03/2026

Big news from the Mobile Memory Enrichment team! 🚀

​We are so excited to announce that we’ve hired two new Activity Coaches! This means we have more availability to bring our specialized memory care programs directly to you.

​We know how important it is for loved ones to stay engaged and active. Whether they are living at home or in an Adult Foster Home, we bring the enrichment to them!

​Our coaches are trained to provide activities that spark joy, connection, and cognitive stimulation.

We are officially ready to take on new clients—if you or someone you know could benefit from our services, we would love to help!

​Check out what we do: www.mobilememoryenrichment.com

📞 503-662-9222 Reach out today to get started!

Mobile Memory Enrichment provides personalized dementia care and caregiver support. Our holistic approach reduces stress and enhances quality of life.

Caregivers tell us that one of their biggest “aha” moments is this:What looks like stubbornness… is often communication....
06/12/2025

Caregivers tell us that one of their biggest “aha” moments is this:

What looks like stubbornness… is often communication.

According to the National Institute on Aging (nia.nih.gov), people living with dementia often express needs through behavior when language becomes harder.
Families say things begin to change when they start asking:

“What is this behavior trying to tell me?”

Suddenly the lens shifts:

• Pacing = restlessness or needing the bathroom
• Repetitive questions = anxiety or seeking reassurance
• Refusing care = fear, confusion, or overstimulation
• Shadowing = needing safety or grounding

It’s not misbehavior — it’s messaging.

And when caregivers see this, everything softens.
Not because it gets easier, but because it starts to make sense.

💡 Try Doing:
Choose one behavior you’ve struggled with this week.
Ask: “If this is communication, what might they be telling me?”
Then try one gentle response: reduce noise, simplify choices, offer a familiar object, or soften your tone.

Weekend Activity:
Spend ten minutes together doing something rhythm-based — folding towels, tapping hands to music, sorting objects by color.
Repetition and rhythm create calm, predictability, and connection.

This shift — from reacting to understanding — is one of the most powerful transformations caregivers experience.

Caregivers often hear, “Let me know if you need anything.”But support doesn’t grow from vague offers — it grows from con...
05/12/2025

Caregivers often hear, “Let me know if you need anything.”
But support doesn’t grow from vague offers — it grows from connection, planning, and people who follow through.

Today’s focus in our Caregiver Collective is this:

Who checks in on you regularly?
Who knows your load?
Who can step in when you hit empty?

You don’t build a care circle by accident. You build it one conversation at a time.

💡 Try Doing:
• Pick one person you trust
• Ask if they’d be willing to be a check-in partner
• Choose a weekly or bi-weekly time for a simple “How are you holding up?” message

You deserve a village that supports you as much as you support your loved one.

💭 Try Saying:
“It would help me to have someone I can check in with each week. Can we do this together?”

The Moment You Realize They’re Not “Being Difficult” — They’re CommunicatingCaregivers tell us that one of their biggest...
05/12/2025

The Moment You Realize They’re Not “Being Difficult” — They’re Communicating

Caregivers tell us that one of their biggest “aha” moments is this:

What looks like stubbornness… is often communication.

According to the National Institute on Aging (nia.nih.gov), people living with dementia often express needs through behavior when language becomes harder.
Families say things begin to change when they start asking:

“What is this behavior trying to tell me?”

Suddenly the lens shifts:

• Pacing = restlessness or needing the bathroom
• Repetitive questions = anxiety or seeking reassurance
• Refusing care = fear, confusion, or overstimulation
• Shadowing = needing safety or grounding

It’s not misbehavior — it’s messaging.

And when caregivers see this, everything softens.
Not because it gets easier, but because it starts to make sense.

💡 Try Doing:
Choose one behavior you’ve struggled with this week.
Ask: “If this is communication, what might they be telling me?”
Then try one gentle response: reduce noise, simplify choices, offer a familiar object, or soften your tone.

Weekend Activity:
Spend ten minutes together doing something rhythm-based — folding towels, tapping hands to music, sorting objects by color.
Repetition and rhythm create calm, predictability, and connection.

This shift — from reacting to understanding — is one of the most powerful transformations caregivers experience.

Cookie Day Calm — and Why Sweets Sometimes Get Tricky It’s National Cookie Day, and nothing brings comfort faster than w...
04/12/2025

Cookie Day Calm — and Why Sweets Sometimes Get Tricky

It’s National Cookie Day, and nothing brings comfort faster than warm sugar and familiar smells — especially for someone living with dementia.

But here’s an insight many caregivers don’t hear enough:

🧠 Why Cookies Help (and Sometimes Don’t):
Familiar smells like vanilla, cinnamon, and chocolate activate emotional memory and can reduce stress.
But too much sugar can increase restlessness or heighten late-day confusion — especially in individuals sensitive to blood sugar changes.

So today, the magic isn’t just in the treat… it’s in the experience.

💡 Try Doing:
• Offer one cookie at a time instead of leaving the whole plate out
• Let them help with a simple, safe step (sprinkling sugar, stirring gently)
• Use the smells — vanilla, cinnamon — even if you don’t bake
• Pair the cookie moment with calm music or a familiar routine

💭 Try Saying:
“Let’s enjoy this together. You pick the cookie — I’ll pour the tea.”

Cookie Day can be cozy, safe, and grounding when we guide the moment with intention — and connection.

He was trying so hard to speak.You could see the thought forming… but the words just wouldn’t line up.His frustration gr...
03/12/2025

He was trying so hard to speak.
You could see the thought forming… but the words just wouldn’t line up.
His frustration grew, and the moment felt heavier by the second.

Then you tried something different.

You opened a book and invited him to read a few lines with you.
Slowly. Gently. One word at a time.

And suddenly — his next sentence made sense.
Not perfect. Not polished.
But his.

Sometimes the magic isn’t in correcting the words — it’s in giving the brain a different path to find them.

💡 Try Doing:
Choose a familiar book or poem and read a few lines together.
Rhythm, pacing, and visual cues can help the brain reorganize language.

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Monday 09:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 09:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 17:00
Thursday 09:00 - 17:00
Friday 09:00 - 17:00

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