How We Are Dealing With Olu Jacobs' Dementia - Joke Silva - Green White Green - gwg.ng

Lifestyle

How We Are Dealing With Olu Jacobs’ Dementia – Joke Silva

Published

on

Nollywood superstar, Joke Silva has disclosed that her husband, Olu Jacobs is suffering from dementia.

Speaking in an interview with Chude Jideonwo, the veteran actress disclosed that Olu Jacobs had been living with the dementia for sometime.

 GreenWhiteGreen GWG reports that dementia is a broad term for loss of memory, language, problem-solving and other thinking abilities that interfere with daily life and is especially associated with the aged.

“He is dealing with issues and it is been going on for a couple of years. It is known as dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB).

“It is a degenerative disease that affects the brain and it is almost like a Parkinson type of disease, it affects the brain and affects the person.

“First time I’m saying this publicly… that is what we have been dealing with but the thing is, it is hard on him because he doesn’t understand what is going on and it is hard on us family members as well.

“We have gone through some times and situations recently that I wish I had the old you here so I don’t battle these times on my own but we are grateful for the moment of clarity. I miss the times we work together.”

Joke Silva also spoke out on how she discovered that she was an adopted girl.

“It’s something like where one is just getting to share it in the public. It is something that I found out when I was much younger. Mine was a secret adoption. It was not something that my parents discussed.

“My mum’s elder sister wanted me to travel with her to Kenya and my mother was not around. She asked if I knew where my passport was and I was like yes yes yes. I know where mum keeps all the important documents.

 “Then I go to the important suitcase that has all the important documents, where I found my passport but also found my adoption certificate. It was like ‘I beg your pardon’. I was 10-11 at the time. It was a bit shattering.

 “It was tough. You know how you’re very sensitive as a child. There was just something in it letting you know they would have discussed it with you if it was something they wanted to discuss.

 “But I got to a point when I was able to discuss it, myself and my mum. What was interesting is that she found it easier to discuss it with my older son than she did with me. My mum wasn’t comfortable discussing it.”

Send Us A Press Statement Advertise With Us Contact Us

 And For More Nigerian News Visit GWG.NG

Click to comment

Trending

Exit mobile version