How do you continue to be a caregiver when your parent has always had some form of mental illness...in my case Narcissitic Personality Disorder. My mother has always suffered from this and now trying to be a more closely caretaker is bringing me down. No one is realizing I cannot take care of her by myself. She is crafty and her aging just makes is all much worse. More and more calls from neighbors to the police or paramedics with her stunts. They say she cannot be alone but I cannot tolerate to be around her. She refuses to go to a nursing home, so now trying to find someone who will at least come and check on her a couple times a day at least to give her her psych meds. There is no one to help me. I have been of work for almost a month on FMLA and it seems to be a waste of my time, since she can do many things by herself...(she just tore apart the patio cleaning it ...an 85 year old pushing and pulling couches and vacumns...) mental illness in an aging parent..HELP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I've been trying to take care of her for six years and moving her in and out of AL - to her own apartment - which became such a disaster (she wasn't able to take care of it or herself); now she's going to an Adult Foster Home - hopefully a smaller setting will be more soothing to her - I just wish she would get a grip on reality (seems to come and go). I'm hoping to be able to see her - but already I sense that she's going to be calling and complaining about the other residents (all very nice older ladies) and/or the caregiver - a wonderful, kind caring woman - who I feel must be eligible for sainthood to open her home and care for people in this condition.
At any rate, I'm managing her finances and have the responsibility of cleaning out yet another apartment (she makes such a mess of everywhere she lives, that is no small matter!!!) Friends are offering to help move a few things she can take with her - but I know at the end of the day I'll be the one there with the final mess to clean up.
And my BP is running high - I'm afraid to take it anymore. I've already had the cardiac condition (mine was treated by undergoing an ablation a few years ago)...so the stress of this event with my mom isn't causing those crazy palpitations that were occurring before the ablation (I'm thankful for that - otherwise I would have had a heart attack by now, as those were 'stress related')...We can only surmise who was causing my stress??? Hang in there...this is a great forum. I posted in Caregiver Life Balance and received many words of encouragement there. I still find it amazing the number of adults who are trying their best to take care of elderly parents - and we have such similar stories, issues, concerns. The Socialworkers at the hospital said that caregivers should not be relatives - they're the worst ones as far as taking the abuse that our parents want to dish out - they have no problems telling family members where to get off - things they'd never say to a stranger - or one could hope they won't.
That's not to say I do things for her. I'm the Wizard of Oz behind the curtain, managing finances and medical care. But in minimizing contact, I'm trying to preserve what's left of my health. In 7 months my blood pressure has skyrocketed (when I had no BP issues before). A benign cardiac condition has morphed into something malignant. Anxiety levels are barely manageable.
This forum has helped a lot.
" I've lived with this my whole life and at times it's been h*ll. " Yes!
You are not alone - there are many here with this type of problem. ((((((((hugs))))))) to both of you.
dherrington They did the diagnosis when mother was in hospital for something else, and her senior nanny broke down in front of hospital staff and told about the abuse she had been subjected to. Frankly, I think if it had been a family member they may not have gone ahead with the diagnosis. It really is a very difficult situation. If you can document her behaviors and take them to her doc when she is seeing him/her about something else and let the doc know - give the doc your account of your mum's problems, it should help. Ask for a psychiatric evaluation. It sounds like your mum is delusional and needs an antipsychotic. Good luck.
Long answer, it's her illness with its intrinsic anxiety tinged with paranoia plus maybe dementia where she can no longer even tell herself some of her worries may not make sense, plus worrying about being worried and trying to give herself a sane explanation for why she is worried.
Untreated mental illness can be like a little window into hell. You probably get nowhere trying to reason with her, but reassuring her she is a loved person and distracting her with all the good things about her you can think of, and telling her that many people worry when they are in her situation, but what others say about her just isn't that important, especially if it isn't true, and "everybody" with an ounce of sense can see it isn't true, may get you a LITTLE peace...but medication, if there is anything she can take, might help a lot. She really is suffering, and the rituals and obsessions are the things she has to try to keep that suffering at bay.
Fortunate or unfortunate (depending how you look at it), my parents have the money to keep them in a nice assisted living facility. As you can guess no one took me up on my bet. Go figure!
My mom is in a skilled care facility after an essentially failed rehab stay...too long a story for here - she'd been in assisted living out of state and I used that as the entree' for moving her here after my dad passed on last year. I do my mom's laundry since she is now close enough to make it practical, though this nursing home will actually do it for no extra charge - just to force myself to go there and to have a "reason" to be there every few days, because I feared I otherwise could easily slip into not visiting much at all. I think that might be a key - if they think you are a captive audience they just let it all loose on you rather than even try to think about how it makes you feel and how it makes you not want to spend time with them. Not that perspective taking is going to be a strong point for folks with any kind of dementia, but if they notice that they can't just fully take your presence for granted they may be able to learn some limits that make things tolerable.
....What a mouthful of truth! Mom's hateful to those close to her - nothing new (BPD, NPD, possible MPD) - and it slays me when someone says that they just LOVE her because she's so understanding and compassionate. I've offered to give her to them and they laugh - they think I'm joking....
I can't quite figure whether my little narcissist/munchhousen/demon is truly attempting to take me out with her or just could'nt care less what effect her crazy is having on myself or the rest of the family. She is a smack in the face of anything true or Godly and a constant source of offence to me.
On the days when I need to attend to the queen I am litterally paralyzed up until the last possible moment to ready myself & go.
She has run her "con" on others well and I get absolutly no help from her doctors. I am ready to temder my resignation (again) and hand her over to the state in order to save my own life. My husband fights me on this...worried about what people would think, but not so much worried about my wellbeing. She has been sucking the life out of me for 15 yrs..(since my father died).
She refuses any outside help unless she goes on one of her little "vacations" to the hosp and rehab at the NH. The docs are more than willing to milk the medicare cow for all they can & they'll have to answer to GOD for that. When she is ready to come home she'll tell them she is perfectly capable although her slave is required to do most everything for her. The cycle then begins all over again. The docs have acknowledged the parrtern but have all but accused me as the cause.
How is it that folks over 65 are to be considered sweet little old people with no recognition of past history as crazy, evil, wicked, criminal or demonic????? How is it that we allowed the government to close all the institutions and dump these lunatics in our laps?????? WTF???????
#1 recognize it
#2 Understand it
#3 Gather yourself
#4 on't feel guilty
#5 Be "CALM"
#6 If necessary GET OUT
LOL tHATS ALL i DID WHEN i WAS A TEENAGER WAS TRY TO FIND A WAY OUT NOW AT THIS AGE i'VE INVITED HER IN WHATS WRONG WITH THIS PICTURE, wELL THE SIBLINGS DON'T WANT ANYTHING TO DO WITH HER AND i COULDN'T LET MY PARENTS LIVE ALONE AS THERE WAS NO ONE TO HELP THEM.
Well enough said there are so many and you know what I find interesting our childhoods were horrific and we aren't that way???
New reading material
Healing the Daughters of Narcissistic Mothers
WILL I EVER BE GOOD ENOUGH? Written by Karyl McBride PhD
Have a good day and do something nice for you each and every day. Neon
Here in a nutshell for everyone who is reading & doesn't have a frame of reference for what NPD is a good explaination:
With narcissim, it is a CONSISTENT personality trait so to speak, where the person organizes their entire life around convincing others that they are much more superior than they might orginally think the narcissist to be. They might go to great measures to do this regardless so they lie, cheat, etc. What makes this disorder so interesting, is most of the time, people who truly have this disorder don't recognize in themselves that they truly feel inadequate to others. They build up many defenses (which include lies and grandiose thinking errors) to keep themselves from experiencing the negative emotions associated with a loss of self-worth or self-esteem. But underneath all of the energy expenditure to convince others that they are superior (and thus themselves) they UNCONSCIOUSLY feel like they are below par in all the areas that matter most in life.
You can sort of view narcissim as the "fake personality" a person adopts to keep them from feeling inadequate. The unconscious feelings of inadequacy are greater than those who do not suffer from this personality disorder, which is why sufferers go to great lengths to maintain this personality.
Most often, they will come from a childhood environment where the people whose respect & love mattered most (ex: parents) was witheld and they felt and/or were greatly criticized as a child unless you succeeded in the areas which seemed important. And almost as often they might come from a family of the opposite extreme where they may have been the favorite - showered with complete praise and never needed to question their superiority until you got to school as a young child and didn't receive greater adoration than the other children from your teachers (for example)and this built in anxiety which motivated you as a child to search for a solution which ended up evolving into this disorder. Narcissists are skilled at manipulating codependant relationships to reinforce their sense of superiority.