Does anyone else find that being a full time carer and working, you accumulate a lot of rubbish and aren’t as environmentally friendly as you would normally be or is it just me?
I feel like I’m accounting for majority of the rubbish at the communial bins on a block of townhouses 🙄😣
first theres the depends,.. a few every day,...
baby wipes, cleaning wipes etc etc
I’m also always doing laundry so I’m going through liquid detergent like there’s no tomorrow and clothes softener.
But due to being exhausted I’m also becoming more and more wasteful with food,..
I’m buying a lot more pre-packaged goods and due to mum's dementia I'm also wasting a lot more food,.. ie she might only have a few bites and even if I offer to re-heat she will refuse and want something fresh.
I’ve also started using some paper plates because of this,.. because I got sick of constantly doing dishes.
Oh and don’t get me started on paper towel, there’s always spills and I also get her to wipe her hands on them as she was wiping dirty hands on towels so I removed them.
There’s a part of me that feels guilty environmentally but there’s also a side to me that gives myself some slack saying “Anything to make things a little easier is worth it”. Aka it’s hard enough working full time and caring for Mum full time while getting average 5-6h sleep a night.
Yes, Mum is on waitlist for aged care and I’ve had offer for someone to come help at home but apparently it’s only for an hour! I can honestly say an hour will give me no help and in a way I’m already dreading it as I feel like it will actually be more effort for me. Ie get Mum ready for an outing will mean I will have to stop work and prep her,.. There will also be someone that comes into shower Mum but they already said they won’t insist she has a shower which means most likely we’ll be paying for someone to come and try convince Mum and then leave me with the job.
Was just curious if others feel that rubbish accumulated like there’s no tomorrow while being a carer.
I worked as a hospice nurse for 5 years, and saw the same changes you have been making.
One family though our agency should pay for have the increased trash taken away. Takes all kinds, doesn't it?
Do what you need to do keep your head above water until you have more time/energy to demonstrate your concern about the environment.
Hoping that bed in the care home is open soon.
Speaking of decay in the fridge: my mother ordered quarts of this special holiday fruit salad at Thanksgiving and finished off one of them in a timely fashion. The other one got pushed deep into the back of the fridge and lost for about a month. When I discovered it and told her it needed to go, she threw a scary fit and threatened me with police action if I threw it away. I've warned her so many times about eating spoiled food, but she won't listen. So, more than a month after it was prepared and sold to her, she eats half of the old container and then has terrible diarrhea for three days. She tried to deny eating it and refused to tell me where the container was (she stuffed in the freezer). She refuses to wear her incontinence underwear so I'm washing round-the-clock normally; this 3-day event really pushed the limits of the appliances and me. No sooner did that resolve when she decided that she would just have a normal bowel movement in her bed (over several hours and several bedding changes). While trying to manage this round of laundry, I reached the incontinence pad with the large "load" and just said F'IT, I'm throwing this one in the trash. It felt so liberating and was the nicest thing I'd done for myself in a very long time.
You can't control your sleep schedule (I'm right there with you on that issue--it's torturous, and I expect to have PTSD in response to doorbells long after my mother passes) and you can't control your mom's behavior, so just give yourself permission to cut corners and survive. You have to survive, Cappucino.
My ex told me that dump sites will be able to be recycled in bulk in the future for fuel, plastics, metals, etc. He explained his Google research to back this up... and for all I know, he could be right. I hope he's right. We are all too wasteful. But it's ok to just get through the days right now because what options do you have? Maybe your own Google research will give you some ideas on more environmentally-friendly ideas.
I broke them down and stored them beside a file cabinet and taped up when needed.
I just used the last box and I am going to miss those sturdy boxes.
If you are waiting for placement, you might want to consider doing this, you will be needing boxes soon.
Have you ever considered making your own laundry detergent? I can share a 3 ingredient recipe that takes 5 minutes to make. I make 2 gallons at a time, quicker then running to the store and about $1.25 a gallon, 64 loads per gallon and minimal trash.
Sometimes we all make excess garbage, you just have to accept the fact and know that eventually it will change.
One thing that I would try is giving mom a few bites on her plate, easy to give a bit more if wanted and then you can serve leftovers another day. She won't remember and it will save you time, money and effort.
Eventually, this, too, will pass, and you'll be able to return to a more conscientious way of living. Like many situations in life, there are times when we have to adapt to a new normal for a while before things return to what we're accustomed to.