I am 34 and never left home. My father passed away about nine years ago. My mother is going to be 81 in a few weeks, and her health is deteriorating. Her mind is getting worse, too -- she has hallucinations, delusions, neglect of personal hygiene, serious balance problems, etc. She has been in rehab for four weeks following a hospital stay for an impacted bowel. She went through FOUR days of incredible pain before I could get her to go to emergency. It killed me watching her suffer like that. She refuses home health -- she won't even let the beautician at the rehab place do her hair because she doesn't want a stranger doing it. It has been at least six weeks since it has been washed.
She is planning on coming home when she is out of rehab -- and one of the nurses worked out a daytime visit home tomorrow without discussing it with me. She isn't safe even with me home ... and is terribly hurt that I was reluctant for her to come home for a daytime 8 to 10 hour visit.
I live with my mom, and I have a professional job that requires intense hours. I am not doing as well on my job as I would like to, and I spent 11 years getting a PhD to qualify for this kind of position. I feel guilty about putting my job ahead of my mom, but I cannot provide the level of care she needs.
My siblings are both disabled, and I am the only one she has that can help. I love her very much, and I worry about her safety and her health at home. I can't be home all the time, and to make matters even more interesting I have narcolepsy that prevents me from driving. If there is an emergency at home, I have to find a ride or wait for a cab to get to her.
My health is breaking, and my emotions are also. I am the youngest child, but she never discusses memories from my growing up -- only of my older brother and sister. Sometimes she does not know who I am .
I think she needs to be in assisted living, but I feel like I am taking her home away from her. Am I wrong for wanting her to go to assisted living? Honestly, I am not even sure I can survive her visit home tomorrow without having a breakdown.
She also managed to prowl around in almost all the closets ... and tell me how cluttered the house was. :)
The house belongs to her ... I have paid for some improvements on it (siding, bathrooms) and now pay all the household bills. I never left home -- stayed home all through college and helped her take care of my Dad who had Alzheimer's.
I think she has figured out that I feel she needs more help than I can give her, but I wanted to wait until after Christmas to have that talk with her.
Thanks for all the advice and comments, everybody. It has really helped!
It doesn't sound to me like assisted living is suitable for her, although professionals who know the situation can advise you on that. It sounds like she may need more directed supervision than assisted living provides. At the very least, look for a facility where she could easily transition from assisted living to memory care or skilled nursing care when that is needed (if it is not needed now.)
You'll get through the Christmas visit. Resign yourself that you may not get anything else done but monitor your mother and help her. But you can do that for 8 hours, I hope -- or shorten the visit if necessary. This will be a good chance to see what having Mom come home would be like. Take notes!
Some practical considerations -- has/will a doctor specify that she needs 24/7 care? Is she still considered competent to make her own decisions? Who owns the home you both are living in?
Can she afford to pay her own way in a care center, or will she need Medicaid?
Even if you conclude that for her to have the best possible care she has to be in some kind of care center, you may not be able to simply sign her up for that if she does not want to go.
What you can do is control what YOU do (if not what your mother does). You can say, "I will not provide 24/7 care for her." You can say, "I will not be in the house between 7:15 am and 6:00 pm on weekdays, and also not for any part of the day on Saturday." You can and should make up your mind about the role, if any, you are willing to play in her care. (Keep in mind you want the best care for her, right?) Then be very, very firm about that decision. Tell it to the rehab social worker. Tell it to entire care team in family care meetings. Tell it to the doctors who are working with her. You don't have to justify yourself to them. You have a right to make your own decisions. But be very clear in sharing what your decisions are.
The notes you take Christmas day may be useful in explaining why you don't think your mother can remain alone all day while you work.
My heart goes out to you. You must decide what is best for your mother within the parameters that are possible. That role reversal is so hard!
Come back and let us know how you do Christmas day, and how the situation unfolds.