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Erin,
Just remember to cut yourself some slack dear, none of us are perfect. I grew up with the Irish Catholic guilt so it's kind of a way of life, LOL! Just a bit of perspective and empathy can get you through rough spots sometimes.
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Being my mother's lifeline was something I never aspired to. (If that sounds awful, so be it.)

I never dreamed that my mother's personality and abilities would change so much AND I'd be her lifeline.

Longer ago than I realize(ed), Mom was deliberately covering up and whitewashing her early issues. As mom's undiagnosed disorder progressed, some of her weird accounting was "actually" true in her mind.

I mistakenly thought I was dealing with a competent (albeit quirky and increasing self-centered & difficult) adult. That ship had sailed.

Mom and I were living in 2 different worlds -- in every sense of that phrase -- and it was all on me to adapt to her world. She sure as h*ll wasn't adapting to mine. Couldn't if she wanted to.

We caregivers are constantly playing offense AND defense in someone's else's alternate reality. It creates a stress that we can't "leave at the door."

[And no, I didn't live with Mom. So technically I'm on the wrong thread. But thought I'd chime in.]
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Great point Blackhole... subtlety, unknowingly, we seemed to be 'groomed' and teathered to an unvisible embilical cord that is tough to cut. I understand completely. That's when things get so muddled up the you can hardly think straight, let alone try to describle this to anyone (even if you could, most wouldn't care). It's like being in a straight jacket you can't untie sometimes. That's why we have to get away when we can, even if it's minutes... but, anything more than an hour or more is best.
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Hello, My issue is I am dealing with a 92 year old father, frail with the beginnings of dementia. However, that is not the issue. It is his verbal abuse. He has always been seemingly nice to others and verbally abusive to his family-which is common among bullies. But I am at my wits end with his ugly scowl and screaming and nasty jealous comments. There is NO EXCUSE FOR ABUSE, NONE! I will be getting married in about a year or so...just got engaged and I do not want him in my marriage. He is so nasty. I know my other sibling don't want to take care of him. I have no problem being a care giver but his abuse has escalated and I'm the only one he speaks to that way.
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My mom is 86 with dementia. I work a fulltime job and have a caregiver to help me when I'm away from home. But I do everything. Cook breakfast, prepare lunch, dinner, baths, medication administration, transportation, etc. The sitter is just here to make sure my mom doesn't burn down my house basically while I'm at work. I've never been so tired mentally and physically in my entire life. I'm too tired to do most things. My house is a wreck. I am too tired most days to even bath myself. I have no joy. I cry at the drop of a pin or get angry at the smallest thing. I've been put on Lexapro which helps some, but I'm just exhausted.

I'm actually on vacation this week. Vacation just means I'm not going to work. I'm at home. I can't afford a vacation nor could I go without having to take my mom since none of her other living children would take her for me. So, I've been sleeping all week, when she sleeps. That's vacation for me.
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Babygirlga,
I can relate to the fatigue and overload feeling. I do not have an outside caregiver, Mom would run out of money quickly and I am far from wealthy enough to afford it. However, I also notice that I am also going through (my pre-change of life) which has greatly affected my energy, mood, occasional hot flashes and lots of other annoying things. I don't know how old you are but if you haven't gone through that lovely stage yet, could be part of what is making you even more miserable than you would be under the already trying circumstances you are in. I am often wiped out with crashing fatigue, my normally clean house gets put on the back burner because my energy literally goes to zero. This has really ramped up in the last few months. My emotions are much higher now, like constant PMS symptoms, crying more, irritated easily, overwhelmed. Sometimes it's hard to figure out because we are living stressful lives with a lot of responsibility so is it caregiver burnout or the change of life or (gulp) both! I know I am dealing with both which makes it so much worse. I remember when my Mom went through it, she was working full time as an RN and raising 4 kids still. She would freak out over the mildest things and us kids would be looking at each other like, "What the ????" Totally over reacting to stuff, crying, etc. We finally figured it out. I cannot take hormonal pills because I get even more unpleasant side effects so I just have to roll with it and pray to God it does not get drawn out over several more years. I loved to garden, now no energy, any chore I must do, I get wiped out afterward and my body hurts for it. I must be careful what I decide to take on now knowing the price I will pay after. Doesn't make the caregiver responsibility any easier and you find yourself wondering how much longer can you keep this up, right? No breaks, no vacations, just a never ending list of "gotta do this and gotta do that." I joked with Mom that I wish I could be on an Ativan drip. Hang in there and if you have already gone through peri or menopause, forgive my long winded guess. I can't think of a more trying time to go through the change than having to be a caregiver to our parent at the same time!
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Rainey... I really... really do think a massage would help... a little... (It's miserable feeling badly like your are...)
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One thing I really dislike about being a live-in caregiver is that the doctor assumes you'll be available to do something every two hours. Doctors really ought to stop assuming that the only reason a caregiver breathes is to serve their care receiver.
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Heart2Heart,
Just had one a few weeks back. The problem is in order for me to really benefit from them, I need to go once a week. I am sure you know they are not cheap and adds up quick. The last one I went to (this new spot close to home) offered more reasonable prices. I can say it merely scratched the surface of a mountain. What I really need is a hot tub with lots of jets! Eventually we will get one because husband knows I could really benefit but we have other things that are in critical need re $$, outside of house needs repair from rotton boards and needs paint.
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Rainey69, thanks for the words of encouragement. I'm 48 and haven't menopaused yet. Nor have I been diagnosed with premenopausal conditions. And I'm far from wealthy. I just sacrifice my wants and needs for my mom's. I would donate a kidney to get a night's rest in a hospital I'm so tired. When I'm exhausted combined with frustration and anger I tend to shut down and get quiet. It's my way I guess to keep from exploding and saying horrible things. My body suffers terribly when this happens as when the moment passes I am unreasonably sleepy and I am so sore I feel like I've been hit by a car. Meanwhile my mom is miserable because I haven't really spoken more than a few monosyllabic words (yes, no, fine, etc) to her during the shut down phase. I feel I'm just an episode away from a stroke/heart attack/mental breakdown.
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Babygirlga... You must take care of yourself... (I know how difficult it can be... and, I need to follow my own advise).
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Babygirlga,
I know that feeling all too well. I wake up feeling like a truck hit me but I have arthritis in my lower back and bursitis in both hips. That's why I pay for physical things I take on, sometimes just laundry, cleaning and vacuuming is enough to make me sieze up with pain when I am done. It sounds like you are internalizing everything, not good. I get it, I have run out the door and jumped in my car because I was afraid if I stayed one more minute, I would end up saying horrible things I would regret. You need to get it out somehow, scream into a pillow, cry your eyes out until you fall asleep, get a dart board, something, but don't let everything bottle up inside you or one day, Mount Vesuvius will eventually blow. It won't be pretty and the fall out will be far worse than if you just allowed a few steam puffs to escape every now and then! Way back in the day, if anyone pushed me after I gave my warnings, they got a taste of something they never quite forgot. So, I understand wanting to bury that. It was scary because it was blind rage.
Lastly, just for the heck of it, look up peri menopausal symtoms, see how many you can relate too. You are about my age too, I will be 48 this year. I have been going through peri menopausal symtoms for a few years already. I could say I fit most of them. I deal with doctors enough to tell you, they certainly don't know everything. I have diagnosed Mom so many times while they were scratching their heads!
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Hi Rainey. My phone died today. Just saw your post. Absolutely right about Irish Catholic guilt.
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Erin,
LOL!!!!! Yep, I can't get away from it. You want a good laugh? I married an Italian and he is WORSE! He told me the Irish learned it from the originals, the Roman Catholics. So I grew up with (and she still tries) to guilt me and then, my husband does it to me! Example: I got super busy and forgot to pre-plan his dinner for when he gets home. He gets all upset and then exclaims, "Fine, I'll just make oatmeal, you don't care enough to think of me." *Sighs*
It is just a way of life.
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Rainey On a much lighter note. Irish / Italian marriages are supposed to be great and as I have heard my whole life " make beautiful babies".
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Well he certainly makes me laugh, a lot! Nobody else can leave me in a crumpled ball laughing so hard, tears are pouring out my eyes and my stomach can hardly take it. He knows just what will make me lose it like that 😂
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Rainey. I've been married 33 years and he still makes me laugh. Guess that way , we are lucky.
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Someone said just do the best you can i have a very hard time but that's what I'm doing and I try to do little tbings,for myself like take care of my teeth or take a nap. It's very difficult
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Annabelle B. This is a nightmare. TwilighZone show. It just doesn't seem to end. And no end in sight.
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My husband feels enormous amounts of anger, guilt and huge resentments toward (yes....his OWN MOTHER!) for being given NO CHOICE but to take care of her. He grew up with an extremely miserable mother. Always angry, always miserable, and never let him have a life. She still doesn't. She's still manipulative even with dementia. That part about her never changed. The problem with my husband is, he was a sucker for having to tolerate it and I always told him he should never have. But he got stuck taking care of her because his sister who lives 2 streets over AND who has POA doesn't want anything to do with her. His mother is only getting worse it seems by the day.

The other day she thought I was stealing my own car.
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Speaking from someone who is in a similar position as your husband, my hat is off to him. After watching my own family I realize that there is only one person in the family that has a sense of responsibility. If everyone turned their back, then the older people would end up being that person living alone down the street with no one to care for them. I admire the good people who will step up and do what needs to be done. It isn't easy, but often it is the choice that needs to be made. I just wish the older person didn't have to be so difficult.
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Annabelle B, Some of the best advice I have gotten was from 1 of the articles on AgingCare. It said to strive to be a B+. When I started out I tried to be A+++. If I stayed there I would be burned out by now.
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I think I'd strive for a C+... (I think on a caregiver scale a c+=A+++++++)
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The last two comments about C+ or B+ are super fantastic!! Thank you Johnk6749 and Heart2Heart! Nothing wrong with average.
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My eighty-seven year old mother lived in Ohio with her grandson (38) and great grandson (16). Last year she had a terrible fall, smacked her head really hard on a door frame, which caused a severe neck fracture, and was taken to the emergency room. She was very close to severing her spinal cord. I live in California.

I got the next flight I could and rushed to her side. Her face was horribly bruised and they had a C-collar to stabilize her neck. She was heavily sedated but during waking moments was angry, sad, frustrated and asked us to just let her go.

I stayed all night and all day with her in the ICU for almost three weeks (through the neck surgery), all night and all day through her six weeks of rehab with skilled care and then all day and night, six weeks in a nursing home rehab facility. All to try and get her mobile and able to perform her activities of daily living. She made little progress. Medicare would no longer pay, so we went to her home and had home health for six weeks. She was more comfortable at home and improved much faster in this environment.

I knew my nephew and great nephew would not be able to care for her and that I would have to take her home to California with me. She was extremely resistant so I fibbed to her and said it would be temporary until she got better.

To make a long story short (!!) She has now gotten calmer and more logical, even though she has no remembrance of the accident or how she was doing prior to it. She knows she has to stay with me as she has severe arthritis in her knees and is not steady enough to be alone. I was 65 when it happened and I knew I would have to quit my job to care for her. Even though it would be another year before I could get full SS benefits, it was something I wanted to do. Both of my brothers had Hemophilia and have passed away. There are no family members here but my son, who has to work. My husband is in prison, and my son stays with her on the weekend when I go to visit him.

Even though she has a bit of memory loss I can't explain why, but I am so happy to have this time with her and although I know I have some burnout and am not taking as much care of myself as I should, I am so happy to take care of her - it doesn't make me angry or sad. She is also very funny and we laugh a lot every day. She thanks me every day "for everything you do for me". She says she doesn't know what she would do without me. I promised myself and her a long ago, as did my son that she will never be in a nursing home.

I know it must be difficult for those whose loved ones have severe dementia or Alzheimer's, and I empathize and wish you peace and happiness.
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Thank you for sharing your heart rendering story Sandy. Best Wishes for you and your family.
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Brian: I admire your strength and resilience in taking care of your mom. Thank goodness you have no distractions to hinder you. Parents sacrifice for us all their life. Most do anyway!! Keep doing what you are doing but remember to find some YOU time!!
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I can't stand cleaning poop all day long!! Argghh!#!
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Then my husband wants me to sleep with him :( HOW CAN I?
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Extremely tough position Patty... You'll have to get very creative... back off slowly maybe.... little by little....
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