I decided to ave my mom in a home almost 5 yrs ago. It wasnt just my decision, my sister wanted the same. Now my mom is getting much much worse. She has dementia. She may pass soon as she no longer gets out of bed. I am having to extreme regret and guilt that I did not bring my mom into my home. I feel very strongly that I made the wrong decision, that I could have cared for her with some help. I feel I didn't even try.
So I know about guilt and all I can say is that we make decisions that at the time seem right and second guessing is a complete waste of time. I know my Mom knew I loved her and I am sure your Mom knows you love her too. Try not to beat yourself up. Its hard but its a waste of time. Just keep loving her.
Your mother may die there, but you can be with her.
Take care Nora... you did good by your Mom.
I think it would have been harder had you cared for her so long and then had to make the decision.
IMHO, you could look back and realize that you made a good decision then which has provided your mother with care she needs for the advancing dementia.
It's hard to be objective, though, about facility placements. We feel a need and obligation to care for our parents as long and to the extent possible, but the difficulty is that sometimes that's just not possible.
Was your mother well cared for during these past years? Were her medical and emotional needs addressed? Was she in a good home? If yes, then your decision was a good one.
Honestly, I don't mean to be discouraging but I think these kinds of dilemmas are long lasting and aren't easy to resolve, so don't be too hard on yourself.
You could just sit down and make a checklist of the advantages of having been in a home vs. being cared for by you.
But I think the overall consideration is this: you state that you " could have cared for her with some help. I feel I didn't even try. " That tells me that you weren't prepared emotionally, and perhaps financially and physically, to undertake her care.
In that situation, you did make a good decision to get her the care she needed in a home. If you had taken her but weren't prepared and didn't want to do it, more than likely you would face some of the resentment faced by a lot of other people who post here - full of anger and hostility toward their parent. That would have been worse than a facility placement, wouldn't it?
But her dementia would have continued to get worse. She would now be at the point of not getting out of bed. This disease progresses on its own timetable. So far we have nothing to change its course. How we treat our loved ones, the kind of care they get, where they are getting the care, can make a difference in their day-to-day quality of life. It does not make a difference in the long-term outcome. Dementia marches to its own drummer.
So if your mom was reasonably content in the home and was getting good care, then probably you and your sister made the right decision. You did what you could to ensure the quality of her life. And that is all you can do.
If you feel she might pass soon, something you can do toward the quality of her life is have her evaluated for hospice care. And visit her very often during this phase of her life. You can't go back and change the decision from five years ago (and it might not even need changing), but you can do your best now. Don't let your regrets get in the way of continuing to do your best.