Many people living with dementia repeatedly say, “I want to go home” — even when they are already in a safe and secure environment.
This longing is rarely about a physical address. It is about memory, identity, safety, and emotional security.
For most of us, “home” means familiarity, warmth, and belonging. For someone with dementia, that feeling often connects to a much earlier time in life — sometimes childhood, sometimes early adulthood — even if the details of those memories are blurred. What remains is the emotional imprint.
When a person with dementia asks to go home, they may be expressing:
- A need for comfort
- A desire for familiarity
- Anxiety or confusion
- Loneliness
- A longing for loved ones
- Fear of the unfamiliar
Understanding this changes everything. It shifts the response from correction to compassion.
Why the Feeling of “Home” Is So Powerful
Even as memory fades, emotional memory often remains. A house is not just walls and furniture — it represents:
- Laughter around a table
- Children growing up
- Familiar smells from the kitchen
- A bedroom that once felt safe
- A place where they knew who they were
When someone feels stressed, tired, or disoriented, the brain reaches for its deepest sense of safety. That often surfaces as: “I want to go home.”
It is not stubbornness.
It is not ingratitude.
It is not confusion alone.
It is emotional memory speaking.
What You Can Do When a Loved One Wants to Go Home
Instead of correcting or arguing (“But you are home”), try approaches that validate the feeling behind the words.
1. Validate First
- “You miss home.”
- “It sounds like you’re feeling unsettled.”
- “Tell me what you loved most about your home.”
Validation reduces anxiety far more effectively than correction.
2. Gently Redirect
After acknowledging their feeling:
- “Let’s sit together and have some tea.”
- “Tell me about your kitchen — what did it look like?”
- “Shall we look at some photos?”
Redirecting works best when it feels natural, not forced.
3. Use Familiar Objects
Surround them with items that feel like “theirs”:
- Family photographs
- A favorite blanket or cushion
- Familiar clothing
- A well-loved book
- Personal décor items
- A scent they recognize
Visual cues can ground someone when memory cannot.
4. Maintain Predictable Routines
Routine creates safety.
- Same wake-up time
- Regular meal times
- Familiar music at certain times of day
- Repeated comforting activities
When life feels predictable, anxiety decreases.
5. Create a “Home-Like” Environment
Even in a care facility:
- Use warm lighting
- Display personal photos
- Include favorite music
- Prepare familiar foods
- Keep personal items visible
Small environmental changes can reduce repeated “going home” distress.
6. Explore What “Home” Means to Them
Ask gentle questions:
- “Where was your favorite home?”
- “Who lived there with you?”
- “What made it special?”
Sometimes talking about home satisfies the emotional need behind the request.
7. Offer Reassurance
Often what they need most is:
- A calm voice
- Physical presence
- A hand to hold
- Repeated reassurance: “You’re safe.”
Safety must be felt, not explained.
Recognising the Emotional Layer
The desire to go home can also reflect:
- Grief over lost independence
- Fear of unfamiliar surroundings
- Feeling like a burden
- A need for closeness
These emotions are real — even if the context is confused.
Responding with patience prevents escalation. Arguing usually increases agitation.
Caring for the Caregiver
Supporting someone with dementia can be emotionally draining. Hearing “I want to go home” repeatedly can trigger guilt, frustration, or helplessness.
Caregivers should:
- Take regular breaks
- Share responsibility when possible
- Speak to friends or support groups
- Seek professional advice if overwhelmed
- Allow themselves to feel tired without shame
You cannot pour from an empty cup.
When caregivers feel supported, they respond more gently — and that gentleness is deeply felt by the person with dementia.
In the End, “Home” Is a Feeling
For someone with dementia, home may no longer be a place on a map. It becomes a feeling of safety, recognition, and love.
We may not be able to take them back to the house they remember.
But we can bring the feeling of home to where they are.
Through:
- Familiarity
- Patience
- Emotional validation
- Small daily comforts
- And consistent kindness
That is how care becomes connection.
And sometimes, that connection is the closest thing to home.