Imagine standing on stage, sharing your life’s story, while a relentless disease slowly erases your memories. This is the reality for Samuel A. Simon, a former public interest lawyer who once worked alongside Ralph Nader. Now, in a powerful act of defiance against Alzheimer’s, he performs his one-man play, Dementia Man, not just to cope with his own diagnosis, but to help others confront the disease’s shadow. But here’s where it gets controversial: Can art truly challenge the inevitability of memory loss, or is it merely a temporary reprieve?*
Before each performance, Simon’s ritual is both mundane and profound. He carefully props his smartphone against a stack of books, tinkering with settings to keep the screen lit. A timer is set, and then he waits. With eyes closed, he takes a moment to ground himself, tracing his breath from his ankles up to his chest, a mindful check-in with his 80-year-old body. In his hands rests a purple binder, holding the script for his play. Yet, the opening lines flow not from the page, but from the recesses of a memory he’s determined to hold onto—at least for now. And this is the part most people miss: In his fight against Alzheimer’s, Simon isn’t just preserving his own story; he’s inviting us to question how we, as a society, remember and honor those who are slowly forgetting. What do you think? Is art a powerful tool in the battle against memory loss, or is it a fleeting gesture in the face of an unstoppable disease? Share your thoughts below—let’s spark a conversation.