“Before I Forget” by B. Smith & Dan Gasby with Michael Shnayerson, foreword by
Rudolph Tanzi, PhD
c.2016, Harmony Books $25.00 / $33.00 Canada 322 pages
by Terri Schlichenmeyer, OW contributor
You can’t remember what you came into the room for.
That happens with disturbing frequency. Forgetting your glasses, losing your keys, it
really bothers you because you’re not sure if it’s a normal part of aging or something
else. And in the new book “Before I Forget” by B. Smith & Dan Gasby with Michael
Shnayerson, the worry isn’t yours alone.
For most of her life, B. Smith was a whirlwind of activity. She was a model, and had her
own line of household goods, TV shows, and restaurants she co-owned with her husband,
Dan Gasby. She was known for her sense of style and her elegance.
And then, a few years ago, something uncharacteristic began to happen: the woman who
was put together, inside and out, began to display emotional outbursts, use inappropriate
language, and her fashion sense faltered. Her memory faded until it frightened the couple
and they sought help.
Smith, as it turned out, had mild-stage Alzheimer’s.
A take-charge kind of guy, Gasby did his research.
“Some 5.2 million Americans are living with Alzheimer’s,” he says; half a million people
die of it every year. Perhaps due to higher rates of diabetes and heart disease, it hits the
black community the hardest: by age 85, “half of all African Americans have it.”
Knowing the facts can be empowering, but they don’t make dealing with the disease any
easier. Smith lost things constantly; “hoarded” clothing, to Gasby’s irritation; and, though
she was previously fastidious, ignored sloppiness. She shut family out physically and
friends, emotionally. Long-ago recollections were sharp, but her short-term memory was
all but lost.
When things got worse and Smith was inadvertently put in a dangerous situation, the
family found expert advice, only to learn that there was little they could do. Alzheimer’s
has no cure. It can barely be “managed.” They would just have to deal with the day-to-
day challenges and learn to cope…
Of his wife, and their plans one day, author Dan Gasby says, “She sits…at the breakfast
table, the love of my life, waiting quietly for me to tell her what to do.”
Is there a sentence more heartbreaking than that? I don’t think so, and you’d be likewise
hard-pressed to find a book that will affect you more than “Before I Forget.”
Would you blame anyone if you saw a pity-party in this book? Probably not, but there’s
no whining in Gasby’s words, nor will you find “poor me” in what B. Smith contributes
(with Michael Shnayerson). Instead, there’s resignation here; a we’ll-get-through-this
wrapped in a love story that gets more and more poignant as the story progresses. Gasby,
who is fierce about Alzheimer’s education, also offers up-to-date information and advice
on what worked for him and Smith, and what doesn’t.
Without being a spoiler, there is no happy ending to this book, save but the sheer love
that makes it soar. If you’re an Alzheimer’s caretaker, or are facing the disease yourself,
you absolutely will want this memoir. “Before I Forget” is a book you never will…