Hi AC Forum,
I feel like I run the gamut of emotions on a weekly basis. I think that is a difficult side of this caregiving. Not being able to fully satisfy - or not being able to satisfy for what should be a normnal period of time. And on the same token know that each day you go down this path you just running to the finish line.
It's the craziest and horrible life as I am not able to live my life, yet I have a hard time thinking of my mom living with less. Also not being the face of which she says to at first seeing her and asking her how she is, "Better now that I see you!" Knowing that you are the comfort in their sight. Yet what it takes from one feels enormous - emotionally, monetarily, physically.
How are you doing?
LastOne
I'm not sure there is a great way to cope with this situation that so many of us are in by choice or default. I would guess a lot of us are just hanging on doing the best we can and we'll continue to do so until the situation changes.
I agree with what some of you say in that there are special moments a few times a week where she says thank you, or "You do so much!" I actually had to quit one of my two jobs so I can care for her. I know everybody says you have to take care of yourself, but I find that difficult and as if it's yet another challenge to deal with. Thank you all for sharing your experiences. This site was a blessing for me, and I feel less alone. Let's all hang in there and breathe deeply. I'm Brian
I have a huge range of emotions, going from peaceful and compassionate to indifferent to angry and resentful. Sometimes it is not linked to anything that my mother is doing. It can just be how I wake up feeling, so I can't blame anyone but me. It helps to step back and look at how I feel and adjust my attitude. Doing that helps me feel better and makes me more tolerable, I'm sure.
I do like when people tell me I need to take more time for me. I do take time for me every day, but the responsibility is still there. People can say to take a vacation, but you know it is not that simple. When the person you're caring for is competent and won't let anyone in or go somewhere for respite, there's only so much you can do. He/she is a person who is often headstrong and not an object we can move around at will. Wouldn't it be nice if we could just say, "Mom, you're going to Shady Manor for two weeks so I can take a vacation," and she would go. HA! My mother would say no. She would say she was fine on her own or she would want to go on vacation with me.
Wouldn't it be nice to really be the boss?
Last One you hit on why I have been taking care of my mom 24 x 7 for the past 7 years. Yes, my ability to live my life as a wish is certainly restricted and I am often emotionally frustrated and angry as well as physically exhausted. But if I were to quit and institutionalize my mother, her capacity to live any type of meaningful existence would be over.
Since the actual move, she has been really pretty good...we have a video link (baby monitor with camera - not internet addressable) and a wireless doorbell so she can signal when she needs or attention. I still help with morning chores and medications and meals and bedtime, but mom is finding more things to occupy her time (crosswords, word finds, solitaire, etc) and that has helped.
Last night as I was helping her get ready for bed, she said, " i know God put you on this earth to take care of people and pets and I am thankful. I hope God takes care of you." Wow - I was so used to the negative stuff and things have gotten so much more positive. And it is really nice living with my husband and the cats again!
I saw my doctor just before 'running away from home' for two weeks 3 years ago - with hubs permission - for some absolutely necessary R and R. The doctor's care and kind words and the support of my husband AND the two weeks I had alone at my sister's home (they both work) doing absolutely NOTHING for anyone else - and walking twice a day, swimming in her pool and just relaxing for the first time in YEARS - all of this saved my sanity and my life.
When I came home I did exactly what the doctor ordered. I CREATED BOUNDARIES - some physical and some emotional. Of course, my MIL thinks I AM CRAZY - because I pasted fabric over the windows in my french doors and tied the doors shut from MY side AND put a 40 lb bag of water softener salt in front of the door adjoining our living spaces - AND I didn't speak to her for 3 months - it took that long to forgive her.
I still cared for her meals, meds, etc. but my husband took them in to her. I just needed a very long break from her and her hatefulness.
Anyway, the doctor said I needed to set boundaries and we did. It seemed harsh at first - but he said NO ONE has the right to barge into another one's home making hateful, unfounded accusations. That I should treat her as a next door neighbor who needed assistance. That is what I did.
The time off from interaction with her saved me and allowed me to forgive her - I realize now that she MUST have a mental problem because NO ONE IN THEIR RIGHT MIND does the things she did and continues to do. She lives in denial of any hurt she has caused. And anything she THINKS is true - whether it is or not - whether it happened or not.
I know that not everyone's circumstances allow them this much freedom. My MIL is able to care for her personal needs - all I have to do is cook, clean, monitor meds and doctor appointments. Thankfully, her care does not require 'hands on' care the way it used to. She has 'Lifeline' in case of an emergency and meals on wheels for lunch. I leave breakfast and her meds on her kitchen counter before she wakes up and hubby takes supper to her in the evening. She has frozen food she can nuke if needed - in case we are not home. We no longer stay home every minute 'just in case she needs us.' Thankfully, her health is not that bad right now. .
We have already decided that if/when she is ever hospitalized again for the required amount of time for Medicare - she will not come back home - she will go ot a N.H. She also has 2 years of N.H. insurance through her husbands company. After ten years of care - I no longer feel guilty about this decision. We figure if a 2 hour visit every year is good enough for one sibling and a 2 day visit every year or two is good enough for the other sibling - then certainly ten years of care is enough already.
My husband spends more time in a month sitting in doctors waiting rooms than her other kids spend with their mother in a year! I clean her apt. while she is gone. We have done our best and are no longer in the physical condition to handle 'hands on' 24/7 care. Those days are over. We will not feel guilty over this. We just won't.
I know this may seem hard hearted to some - but we have done our best and everyone's best is different. We do not feel that we need to DIE or give up our life completely so that she may continue to live outside a N.H. And I can tell you that if I had to go back to the around the clock care I gave 5 years ago - I would literally die. I cannot go back to that - EVER.
So, basically, it all came to a point where we HAD to make changes in order to continue to care for my MIL. We HAD to take our life back. If I have to go back to NO LIFE except for hers - well, it just isn't going to happen. Bad backs, bad shoulders, surgeries and added years have taken their toll. Physically we are not the same people we were when this all started any more than my MIL is. Sadly, old age goes one way - DOWN HILL. I don't feel it is fair for an elderly parent to expect their child (and sadly, in our case it is just my husband and myself) to look after them at any expense to themselves. I would NEVER want my own children to do that and have told them so.
I know not everyone will agree with me but this arrangement has allowed me to continue caregiving without feeling furious all the time. If you, as a caregiver, feel overwhelmed, angry, resentful, furious - something needs to change. And the changes needed are sometimes the hardest because those changes feel 'selfish' when we are so used to giving, giving, giving. But, we have to have a life too.
But she would never survive in a nursing home. Your mom is lucky to have you Brian. It's tough, hard and often thankless but I think we can take solace in knowing we are caring for someone who has cared for us.
The question is: Do WE as care givers DESERVE a life? I say YES. I have done my best and spent some of the best years I had left in my own life caring for someone else's parent with absolutely NO help from her other children and very little appreciation from my MIL. It took ending up in a very bad place in my life to realize that WE deserved a life too.
You can still CARE for a person even if they are in a nursing home. It will still require regular visits on our part to make sure they are cared for properly. I never want ANY of my children to do what I have done for the last ten years. NEVER.
Everyone's circumstances are different. but if you read enough post on this forum you will realize that without help - meaningful help - from other family members - being a sole care giver will turn a loving, giving person into a resentful, stressed, unhappy person and sometimes worse. No one should have to 'wish for death' for themselves - thinking it is the only way out of care giving. That is the place I found myself in 3 years ago. Not a good place. I will NEVER go there again. No care giver should have to feel that way in order for another person to stay out of a nursing home. Don't Care giver's count? Don't our lives matter too? I say, yes.
that you went through that. Learning to create distance has value. Especially if you were healthy enough to leave what was happening on the other side of french doors as boundaries. What kind of paste do you use, I have a sliding glass door.
Looking forward to decorating that, things are better now. Hoping you still get out for a swim and walks, don't forget!
Stay strong.
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This allowed me to feel that I had some privacy - even though my MIL uses the room on the other side of the French doors. We have to do what we have to do. It has been 3 years and if I enter her apt - I knock first :0) She only comes into our part of the house when invited - for dinner once in a while. We no longer have her at our table for every meal the way it was before.
My doctor said she is capable and SHOULD TAKE SOME INTITIATIVE in her own life as far as her friendships, etc. She still has living friends and relatives in the state she moved from but rarely writes to them or calls them. She has a few friends here as well that she never calls. She has an older sister that she never calls.
She expects everyone to write to her and call her! I told her to have friends, we must BE one. That mail and the phone work BOTH WAYS. I don't know that she cares enough about others to reach out. She does not even send sympathy notes or anything. (she even speaks 'ill of the dead') She is totally and completely self centered. I pray that I do not become a person like my MIL when I get into my 'later' years. I told my kids to ignore me if I do.
Typical interchange between us: This one is kind of funny. :0)
She asked me to buy her a cake WITH FROSTING. (doc says allow her to eat what she wants and we do). So, I bought a lovely cake and took her a slice and put 4 slices in her fridge - the rest in our freezer for later. We don't eat cake. I went into her apt. later that evening and asked her how the cake was. She said "I have tasted better'' ''It was AWFULLY SWEET!" I said, well, after all, it WAS a cake WITH FROSTING. Then I said 'picky, picky, picky' (with a smile) and left the room. Our interchanges are kept to about 1-2 min. a few times a day now. I just make sure she is ok and that things are picked up, etc. I can only handle small doses at a time and am SO GRATEFUL her health allows this. Postscript: 2 days later the cake was ALL GONE! I said 'did you change your mind about the cake?' She said "well, it sort of grows on you'' - and she has since eaten 4 more slices. So, she has her cake and has eaten it too! :0)