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My mother is in her mid 80s with multiple chronic health conditions. She has been in SN for about 10 months now and still not accepting that she cannot live independently nor live with my husband and I. She operates in 2 modes: either negative complaints about her caregivers and the food, room temp, noise, etc. or wanting to know my every move - what my husband and I are doing, eating, planning every day. Even though I donated most of her former possessions to relatives, friends and charity, she still expects me to have held onto certain items of clothing, appliances, and household items and to bring them to her in SN. The facility is primo with the best state and federal ratings, and she wants for absolutely nothing. She is on Medicaid and has all of her needs met, but wants everyone to cater to her whims, especially me. And then she berates me and dumps her negativity and guilt-tripping with "You only have one mother". Please help...I have little energy left to live my life!

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It sounds like your Mom is currently struggling with this adjustment. Wanting what she no longer has, wanting her things back, her independence back. For the world & you to make her happy.

Hopefully at some point, something will *click* for her & she will concentrate more on the here & now. Engage in what she can. Make friends where she is. Take responsibility for her own happiness.

I don't have a magic answer but have observed this...

When folk want a beer, they go to the pub. If one pub is out of beer, they'll flock to another.

Attention & affection are real needs. But it is not up to you to supply 100% of her social needs.

For complaints, turn it around & ask what SHE can do about her problem? As you've seen, just listening to her problem 1. Doesn't solve her issue 2. Doesn't make her any happier 3. Gives a green light to more attention for more complaints.

For the nosyiness, only give out what you feel is harmless or 'need to know basis'.

My Mother started calling last year to ask what I ate for lunch. Ok one day. Then just became way too much! "Food" became my answer.

That behaviour may be driven by boredom. If so, letting your life be her entertainment may stop her trying to fill up her own days. Or it can be manipulation - little guilt hooks "oh I wish you'd invite ME" etc.

Make & accept less calls is what worked for me.

PS may sound harsh but the good news is she makes the best of it now. Seems to have accepted it is up to her how she feels 😊
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MissGypsy Sep 2021
Your assessment of the situation really resonates with me and I appreciate your feedback. I can only change myself and my reactions to her, so I will press on and adapt...one day at a time and sometimes one hour at a time.
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HI Miss Gypsy,

Today was also my difficult day with an elderly parent in a Nursing home. I can certainly feel where you are coming from. I too have had to let calls go to voicemail, and am embarrased to admit that I have let my mail box stay full so he can't leave a terrible message - which he has been doing lately.

Don't accept that you are worth the bad behavior that you are on the receiving end of. If you have a faith, your God would want you to take time for you so you can be healthy and your best self. You may have only one mother but there is only one YOU! Get your energy back and reclaim your life. Do something that you have been wanting to do for a while.

Thanks for posting your message, it also let me know that I am not alone. I sometimes have to work overtime and have busy schedules, and my elderly father wanted me to come to his care facility immediately to give him his butterscotch candy and money (which he can't really spend anywhere, he has dementia and is wheelchair bound). He got angry when I said I couldn't go and said he was wasting his time talking to me.

Again, hoping you have a much better week and hope to hear that you regain your energy, you deserve it!
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MissGypsy Sep 2021
Sorry to hear of your difficulties with your fatherly. You are definitely not alone and I know how exasperating it can all be, but hang in there. My husband and I will be visiting Mom tomorrow, and I pray for strength. In the meantime, I am working on having a new mindset and reclaiming my energy and life. Thanks for taking the time to reply!
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Call screen.

My kids all do it to me, and I am 65 and in good health. I know full well they can answer their phones, they simply choose when and where to answer.

I'm not offended by it. If I feel the call is important enough, I leave a message to get back to me ASAP. If not, I just say "call or text when you have a second".

The 'next generation' (and my kids are only just barely becoming middle aged!) does not like to talk on the phone. They text, which I hate, but I've adapted.

I ALWAYS let my mom's calls (infrequent as they are) go to voicemail first, then I listen to see what's needed and call her back when I can deal with her.

No need for guilt. This is now 'mom's problem' and if she has someone to complain to, she will. Just don't be that person!
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MissGypsy Sep 2021
Amen to that! Our generation knows how to communicate, especially face to face. I also prefer phone calls or e-mail. I still have a "flip phone", do not text and do not participate in social media. In my case, there are no children, so it's not a necessity for me. Thanks for your advice.
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When an infected gallbladder landed my mother in the hospital for 17 days, then rehab in a SNF which turned into permanent placement there, I would get lots of calls. (Previously, she lived "independently" in her condo.) What stopped the calls pretty quickly was that she forgot how to use her tracphone (the only kind of cell phone she would ever get).
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Dealing with the same situation. Mom (84) who lived w/us (my husband and kids -all adults now) 22 years until last Oct. when she a bad fall, resistant infection, collapsed lung landed her in the hospital for 2 weeks. Moved to Rehab and then into long term care at the same facility after Medicare coverage ended.

Mom is a hot mess of medical, cognitive and psychological conditions: has dementia, COPD from smoking 2+ packs of cigs a day, diabetes, clinical depression and other mental health issues, heart disease, chronic anemia and trouble maintaining weight, thyroid issues. And yes, I tried to do the care solo for the last several years (exhausted). Thankfully after spending down her assets (cost about $13,000-$14,000 a month, shocking but that is the price here) she is now on Medicaid.

She is in one of the best NH in our state. Mom's NH is fully staffed with board certified geriatric internists, psychiatrists, a cardiologists, neurologist, RNs, social workers, and others. There are dietitians on staff, mom gets to pick her own food options daily and all meals are delivered to her private room. There are many daily activities (exercise class 2 times a day, art classes, game room, book club, weekly bingo, outings on their beautiful grounds, daily movies in their activity hall, etc.)

Mom will have none of it. She will not leave her room. She has the TV blaring day and night. Keeps the blinds closed and the lights off. She complains about everything. Says they do not bring her her meds, they steal things, that she can take care of herself, that they do nothing for her. But of course it is all done for her. They have to shower her (she cannot do that now), but she tries to refuse showers. She tried to guilt trip me (her only child, dad passed when I was 14) and her 81 YO brother with his own health issues (6 other sibs all passed) to "bring her home," and has regular outbursts that "family are supposed to care for her till the bitter end," and that we are "mean to her" for NOT taking direct care of her.

Sadly, with dementia and her host of mental health issues there is no explaining reality. Her reality is her reality. She is getting the best care there. I have let go and accepted that the professionals should handle this now. Also, I need to protect myself from her constant lashing out. By assuring they are getting the best care possible, that IS CARING. Being a caregiver (be it a direct daily care giver or more remotely as is my case now) does NOT mean one has to become another's personal punching bag even if it is your own mother.

My advice: Let the calls go to voice mail, or block the number for a bit. The NH will call if there is a true emergency. My mom's cell receives text messages, so often I will text after she calls repeatedly (like 6 times in a row) and say, "I will call you next week."

Call during the morning (after breakfast and before activities or before lunch) as the longer the day goes many have "sundowning" or early evening anxiety issues. I have found avoiding any evening calls best due to my mom's sundowning.

When you do call or visit, limit the time and have a few upbeat things to talk about. I have found if there are voids in the conversation or too much time, that is when she goes negative and starts complaining, so I try to have 2 upbeat things to say and limit calls to 10 mins and visits to maybe 30 mins. Bring a snack/meal for them if allowed. Have an tablet (larger than phone) with pics of grandkids, pets, flowers to show them -- keep them occupied when visiting.

And if she goes negative and won't get off it; I just say I have to go or someone else is calling, someone rang the door bell, etc.; anything just to be polite but to end the call or visit.

Stretching out the calls/visits to longer times in-between has also helped me recover and to get back to living my own life.

I hope mom will acclimate to the NH/partake in their activities, but that's on her to choose.
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Cover99 Sep 2021
Maybe your mom is bored, even with all that is offered to her.
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Wow - I sure am glad you relayed the part about her expecting you to have saved/stored all of her "stuff" and can bring it to her at will when she asks. It's shocking the specific items mine will ask for and expect me to put my finger right on it and then bring to her. Never mind that her dwelling was larger than mine and I have more people staying with me - therefore no way in heck I could have saved even 10% of her stuff. Never mind that she shares a nursing home room with another person and must leave room for other person's stuff. When she asks for specific items and assumes I have them, I have been telling her that I don't have time to look through ALL of her stuff and it was easier to just buy one (with HER funds). Mine is on Medicaid as well and it's an A+ facility - which she does not appreciate. We went through some dark times trying to keep her at home, but she either could not or would not do what she needed to do to remain in her home. She needed 24/7 care - which I could not provide or arrange to take place in her home for a variety of reasons. Mine has therefore been in a NH literally for years at this point and still, just within this past month, in the midst of several serious health declines/rebounds, she was STILL asking about getting her into her own place and complaining about the nursing home. "They don't do anything for me here and it's silly to spend the money." Just know you are not alone. You did all that you could and this is what's best. My lady keeps telling us that "so and so was picked up by her family and will probably live with them now." Wishful thinking and a not-so-subtle hint. She even told us "so and so is leaving/left" about a lady who was STILL there (I went and talked to the lady). Their world gets very small when they are in a facility and I think this leads to thoughts of "getting out of here", preoccupation with the next meal and what's being served, concerns about their current/former possessions, whether "those girls" are bringing them the right pills, concerns they don't get more therapy, concerns about being too tired for therapy on a particular day, concerns and fantasizing about the "perfect" outside world, etc. It will always tug at the heart, but you will learn to address what truly can be handled and what needs to be handled. The rest of it is not truly within your control.
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MissGypsy Sep 2021
I can tell you are speaking from the heart and know exactly what I am going through. Thanks so much for caring enough to respond.
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A ringing phone can go unanswered.

Just ignore the phone calls for the most part. Call her on your time, and say goodbye and hang up if she starts complaining.

You know she's safe, having you at her beck and call at all times via the phone could be preventing her from acclimating to her new enviornment.
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MissGypsy Sep 2021
Good point. Thanks for taking the time to reply.
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