Today we took groceries over to my parents house. For the first time I saw my Mom [97] climb up on a short stool so she could put things in the freezer [refrigerator that has the freezer on top]. She has Dad hold open the freezer door while she rearranges things in there.
I can fully understand why my Mom would prefer to put away the groceries instead of Dad helping her.... Dad doesn't clue into the fact that the newer items go behind the older items so the older items get used first. No wonder she becomes The Flash when we bring in the groceries :)
But standing on a stool? Short one or not, to me that was a high risk for her. Yes, I tried Caregivers but Mom asked them all to leave... [sigh]. Mom is still of clear mind so there isn't much I can do for her. As Dad keeps saying "we can manage"... :P
What risks are you seeing in your own family?
Now thinking back over the past couple of years, and not realizing what dementia was until I found the Aging Care forum, I am now thinking both my parents were developing dementia.... but were hiding it pretty darn good.
My Mom still was having Dad [94] still do fix it chores around the house, some of which including climbing up ladders, like to replace a light bulb in a ceiling fan on a cathedral ceiling. HELLO, Dad is a major fall risk. What was she thinking? Now I believe she wasn't thinking clearly at all.
And the snow shoveling... Dad said he needed to shovel the driveway in case of an emergency and he needed to get the car out. Earth to Dad, if there is an emergency you dial 911, the fire department and EMT's have their own shovels.
I haven't done much research on older age brain issues but I'm wondering if one of the first functions to deteriorate is self protection. I don't say this in a facetious manner but rather just a "wondering out loud" query.
I understand the need to retain the pretense of independence, as well as the delusion that nothing's going to happen to them, but I think there's also an issue of not wanting to be embarrassed to ask for help.
I think there's a grace to growing old and accepting limitations, but some of our elders haven't found it.
How do you deal with the anxiety of what your mother insists on doing? I've spent many a sleepless night worrying.
I'm not wild about mom's use of knives, either. Her dominant hand is so gimped-up and unresponsive that she cannot write. But every time she wants to open a letter, she's waving the Farberware around like a ninja.
Sometimes there's no fixing stupid.
Your post made me laugh, Freq. that your mom has the optimism to have enough food in her freezer that she has to rotate it. Even I don't have that kind of freezer. And my GRAM, who was probably 91 at the time, once told me she didn't even buy green bananas!
Tell your mom Maggie said, "You go girl!!!"
I would love to counter the perception so many people have of seeing older people as being prime candidates for bingo playing and sitting in wheelchairs watching the world go by.
Standing on a stool? I can beat that. How about standing in an unheated garage, on a step ladder, with one foot on the top step and the other on the hood of my car, to remove fluorescent lights from a garage? As each light was removed, the lighting became less, and as the last light was removed, well, there was no lighting at all other than the lantern I used as a spotlight. Given that the temps were in the teens, it was too cold to open the garage door.
I thought sure I'd have a heart attack before that was over.
I think there are really 3 factors involved: (1) not actually, or not wanting to, recognize that age has severely limited options to do work which is more dangerous now than ever, (2) need to prove oneself and (3) Depression Era mentality, by which you save and take things with you that aren't needed elsewhere.
It's been suggested to me that I do the same thing; some people don't understand why I still have a large garden - "turn it into grass! " (and increase the boring time mowing the lawn, increase the out of pocket cost of gas and oil, increase my carbon footprint through use of an outdoor gas appliance?).
But I do find it somewhat naïve if not insulting that someone passes judgments on my activities without really knowing what my goals are and what my underlying limitations must be. The assumption seems to be that I should curtail my activities even though I'm the best judge of my own limitations.
So I understand how my father feels.