Are you considering caring for a loved one with Alzheimer's at home? This is the true story of one family who did it. Lifelong resident of quaint midwestern Cissna Park, Illinois, Glenda Ann Krumwiede was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2017 at the age of seventy-three. She resided happily in a sturdy old farmhouse on a quiet, wooded, country road with her husband of nearly sixty years. For two years, the couple managed Glenda's cognitive decline on their own until their then twenty-eight-year-old granddaughter returned from a five-year galivant about the country with the conviction to help. With no prior caregiving experience, Lauren and her grandpa Rich provided Glenda's care at home for the next two-and-a-half years until her passing. This book is a photo filled memoir of those years written by a granddaughter with hopes to inspire and gently guide those touched by Alzheimer's disease by sharing her successes, regrets, and greatest lessons learned. Insights into daily life living with Alzheimer's are offered from a poetically honest perspective. The story is shared in honor of Glenda and the ways she touched everyone around her with her beautiful spirit throughout her life and even during her most difficult trial. From a young age, Glenda had instilled in Lauren a virtue to live by known as The Golden Rule which is to treat others as you would want to be treated. As she sought to apply this throughout the changing seasons of her grandmother's condition, she learned more about herself and her place in the world than she ever expected to.