My mom thinks that its easy breezy to care for her, that there shouldn't be any stress involved. I think stress has caused my body to start breaking down. I went to doctor 6 months ago because of ear pain which turned into jaw pain (I had been grinding my teeth at night and when I woke up I would find my finger prints indented into the palms of my hands) doctor told me I had TMJ and a whole lot of stress. He recommended me to go see a mental health clinic, my mom was furious over that comment and told me I was fine and didn't need to go see anyone. 2 months after that I had severe face, head, and neck pain all on my right side. Went to doctor and he diagnosed me with Trigeminal Neurolgia. I was given Tegritol for it. Is all the stress causing this, can it cause this? I haven't been sleeping very well, my mom won't let me go to sleep at a decent hour because she doesn't think she can go long without me being around so I'm lucky if I get to bed by 12 or 1 a.m. I feel like I'm constantly being grumbled at for something. I have been told not stop that I'm lazy and selfish. When I told mom that I wanted some help to care for her, she told me she only wanted me to take care of her--then I got a speel about how when she was young and had 4 kids she cared for all of them and the household and never once complained. Someone please help-I feel like I'm going crazy!
I don't know whether stress is causing your health problems, but it sure as heck isn't helping any.
You certainly don't need your mother's permission to go to a mental health clinic. Go. It is very hard to take care of your mother and of your own health at the same time. Hard, but essential. If you have to slack off a little with your mother while you focus on your needs for a while, so be it.
When your mother was taking care of you, did she ask your permission to bring in a babysitter? You need help. Your mother doesn't get to dictate how many hours you have to devote to her. You are the decision-maker in this situation. Seeing a mental health counselor will help you establish boundaries and to take an adult role even if your mother still sees you as a child under her control.
Your sick mother is experiencing a lot of stress, too. It is very admirable that you are committed to helping her inspite of her poor behavior. I am not at all suggesting that you stop caring for her. But you need to do it on your terms. Get some help -- first for your self, and then to help you care for Mom.
You are not going crazy, you are just caught up in a crazy situation.
A big hug to you and have a blessed Holiday!
On a good note for Christmas my daughter and son in law gave us a night stay at the JW Marriott (this swank new luxurous hotel in Indianapolis) and they are going to come and stay with mom so we can get away for the weekend. Ahhhhhh, it is a dream come true. You have to get out. I hire a caregiver service for the important things that I can't miss. I have missed so many of my grandkids events, but no more. But I just started doing it lately, because doc said I need to get out. So long story.....whatever it takes, try to get respite care and get out. It is very hard to to, sometimes almost impossible.
DO NOT neglect yourself like I did. I'm paying for it now.
It looks like you're heading for a stroke, and the only way to prevent that is to serve notice you're taking charge of your own life. If she doesn't like it, then give her a phone so she can make other arrangements as it looks to me she's recovering quite well.
Heaven forbid you have some sort of breakdown. Instead of taking responsibility for it, she'll try to make you feel guilty for that too. After all, how dare you have a stroke when there are so many things you're supposed to be doing for her? Her needs, her wants, her whims: who's going to cater to them?
Best Xmas present you can give yourself is taking your life back.
Now my mother is in full time care (much to her horror) but with support I learnt exactly how to deal with it. I no longer have headaches or that tiredness and depression and I am happy again. We deserve lives too, and the more you give to your mother the more she will expect, once you can deal with the guilt of putting your foot down and saying 'no more' you will find your health will slowly improve, but when you're stuck in it you won't can't think straight.
My mother is behaving so much better with the little digs now and again which get ignored and not tolerated anymore, I am free now to put my life back together and live this life I've been given, once you take back control, it is an incrediable feeling. Oh and she has 24/7 care and is well cared for where she is...a win win for all in my opinion.
Last night I made the decision to have my beloved prof placed. He is in a manic state and has been brutal towards our 17 year old son. I placed him several (3) days in a behavior observation unit hoping medications would resolve our issues. While it has only been 3 days, the severity of the behavior totally impeded my faith in keeping us safe. He had been in a tyrant for two days, sleeping very little. Moment by moment the intensity increased. He literally seethed in anger. He was particularly paranoid that evening, a behavior I thought I was becoming accustomed to. He lined up all his things on his dresser, hiding his most precious things (his keys and his wallet) in another drawer under some clothes. When he opened the drawer, he has a small collection of knives. He began to fondle the knifes, lining them up in the drawer. Then he pulled out his favorite knife, one with an etched bone handle. This one is about six inches long, very sharp, very pointed, and is kept shined at all times since i have known him. We've been married 24 years. He pulls out this knife, and begins to stroke the knife, then turns his eyes and glares at me, strokes the knife, glares at me, hate permeating in his eyes. This lasted for five minutes. He finally carefully puts the knife back in his drawer and pulls out a bullet, and lays it on the dresser. I slept very little. The next morning he woke me, still irate from the night before. After a couple of hours and a phone call to his dad, he finally took his medications. I slipped him an ambien, hoping it would break up his behavior. As he began to mellow with the ambien, I talked him into taking a hot shower and change clothes, loaded him up in the car, and began our venture to find help. After an all morning adventure, he was finally admitted to an ER, was all ready beginning to show signs of agitation, so the ER sedated him again. He was admitted to the psych unit for a med eval.
I was covered in a cloud, walking around like I was in a mayonnaise jar. I thought and prayed and thought and prayed and went through every emotion from guilt to hate for being put in this situation to questioning what if this medication appeared to work, he lapses with no warning as he has been doing, and tries to kill or kills his family: his son and I. I have gone from crying to feelings of pure relief to feelings that I have failed.
I was driving to pick up our son. The hospital wanted to observe Prof with Jack and I before (are you ready for this) they released him today. I was praying and crying, and I don't know what happened. Maybe I just shut up and listened, but a voice in my head clearly stated, 'the knife changes everything.' That was it. I made my decision. It is the saddest thing I have every had to do, but it is the right thing to do.
I'd appreciate your prayers. We are so young, but no matter what age, this is a very painful act. Hugs to you all, today. I'll be popping in through out the day until I finally drift off today. I did not sleep at all last night, but do feel a peace this morning. Namaste, Lyn
"When caring for someone, how much stress is too much and what does this stress do to our bodies?"
...anyone asking this question has probably already experienced too much stress - to the point that is the stress is affecting their physical/emotional/spiritual health. If your primary care doctor is recommending professional mental health services, GO! Typically, primary care doctors only recommend such services in the most extreme cases (this may or may not be true for your doc.) Also, find and participate in caregivers support groups in your community. Also, remember that no matter what you do, whether you take care of yourself or not, your mother will probably still call you selfish and lazy. It's not about you and you cannot control her thinking. You can decide how much power you give to her negativity. Blessings to you both.
This state of affairs may not last perfectly. You may need to remind Mom ocassionally. But it sounds like you are on your way to lowering the stress. Good for you!
Friends and family told me to get help for months and months. I discussed help with Mom and friends came and told her that she needed more help. Her pleas and insistance that she would not accept the help was clear.
There comes a time that you MUST look at yourself.
My life finally turned upsidedown.
I had left my wife and family 1000 miles away to care for Mom.
After a reasonable amount of time my employed released me and my position.
My arthritis was getting to be a difficult health issue.
My mental health was squashed.
You need relief.
I called hospice and they had a list of caregivers that worked by the hour.
I think there was a 4 hour minimum and you could chose 1-7 days a week.
I found an "aide" for 4 hours 3 days a week.
The premise was to let me get groceries and do errands around town.
There was real resistance at first. I had a long discussion in the interview that told the aide that Mom was resistant and can be a pain in the ***.
The reason I suggest hospice is for many reasons. You can ask them for different types of care and they can choose from their pool.
They have a person that will just sit and read a book, and they have full care staff. The money is not much different.
Their caregivers have experienced angry Alzheimers and Dementia patients. they have terminal non-ambulatory patients. Some cook and do light housekeeping. Some do more.
Talk to hospice and ask for help 3 days a week 4 hours a day for 2 weeks (with possible increase in hours and days) For about $250 a week there was a ton of stress lifted. The first 2 days were mean, disruptive and angry, but Mom somehow decided that it wasn't that bad. The caregiver gave Mom foot rubs and fixed her hair and pampered her a little and I would not. I think it also let her get another person to boss around and thus giving her more "POWER".
We did have a discussion if bad and worse options. Get help for me or I will leave and hand her over to social services. If she would not go to a care facility, then she would need to get help at the house. I lost a year with my family and nearly lost my marriage. It is still quite turbulent.
After her death it took 3 months to clear up the necessary probate and etc. after 18 months now I am still having to deal with probate/insurance and other matters that arrive. I am home now and have had therapy and mental help for more than a year. I will never get my life back to what it was. It is the NEW normal.
Do the right thing and seek help (house or mental health) now. When you are alone and close to the problem, you can't see the facts clearly.
Use the experience of others. It SEEMS like no one has lived your problem, or has the difficulty that you do, but you will find hundreds that have done this before and they can all provide counsel.
There are support groups at local Senior Centers in your town. The help is great with word of mouth from real experience. Get a little professional help to balance the stories.
It will come to you if you look for it.
Go to a city park. get out of the house and into the sun.
Refresh yourself.
Try something and after a month change if you need to.
Find peace
Phil
My parents are also hoarders. I've cleaned up a good bit, but like the house of so many hoarders, this one has a lot of work that needs to be done. I've decided that it is not my responsibility. It would take a huge hunk of my retirement savings to try to bring it up to acceptable. This is money that I could not fully recover if I sold the house. I figure that my best bet is to put it on the market as is. The house has a good location, so it should sell for a modest price, and my savings won't be deleted. I don't want to spend my security paying for a lifetime of neglect here.
I have to mention that my blood pressure has increase 10-20 points since I've been here. It used to only be high when I was anxious. Now it is often 130-140/70 even when I'm not doing anything. I have to stop eating all that salt that they love and take more of the long walks that are so relaxing. And I really need to find a primary care physician -- one who believes that drugs are not the answer to everything.
What you need to do if you really want help is to figure out what you want or don't want in your life, you have to either put up with her bad behaviour or say listen here mother dear, pull your head in, these are the new rules which include you being respectful to me. If you dont adhere to these rules I will be gone, you will be in a home, end of. Don't enter into debate or get drawn into the woe is me bullcrap.
Personally I would be booking her into a nursing home asap, and you need to take care of YOURSELF....good lucks, be strong...
MOM IS KILLING YOU. ALL OF YOU.
i'M STILL IN LONG RECOVERY.
i HAVE READ AND LISTENED TO ALL OF YOU AND it;s teh same story that I have lived for 2 years. It took two years for her friends to come cleasn with what they saw.
I cared for her for 2 years and now it is done with her death it has taken 2 years for me to face the problem.
it is her abuse of the system. I took everything to help her cope and we always tried to keep her happy.
I have dealt with the guilt and caring for her.
She was hard to comfort and hard to care for.
I had given up 2 years of family and life to care for her and it has taken a toll on my family and my life.
Now that she has passed on, it is still very difficult for me to deal with all of the other stuff. nearly 2 years and I am still dealing with medical and tax problems. she is haunting me from the grave. not her fault, but be over prepared to cover and dweal with all of the issues of care and finance thaqt could be imagined.
I hope that all of you see and elder law attorney to plan to manage all of the little things.
With elder people the spouse may not have the ability to handle any of this.
Good liuck with all of theis.
I finally broke down and looked at nursing homes. Yes, I had to get mom admitted to the hosp in order for Medicare to pay for the nursing for 100 days but with all her ailments it wasn't hard to do at all. She's been in a nursing home only 1 week now and already I am transferring her to another one but.....and here is the rub....I am free. She may call me 3x a day, she may not love it there, but she's getting used to it. She's moving cause the place she was at was too far away from me. This one is a stone's throw. But...she's NOT hating it completely. Complaining? Yep each day but you know what? I can now listen to it cause I know that I can go home to peace and quiet. I have freedom! It sound sooo ridiculous but it's just so freeing to know that when I get home, it's just hubby and I. Peaceful. Quiet and stressfree (yes we have a phenomenol relationship I admit). Please please think of yourself. So easy to say and so hard to do. Once I listened, I felt a complete peace come over me. You will too. Get help and don't let her guilt you into always being there. This was not meant to be your whole life. She's mom and you need to keep her safe. Happy may not be in the cards anymore for her I'm sorry to say. I'm sending you best wishes and hope you and everyone else can see the light soon and think of yourself for once.
Thank you also pjsmithres and Bhenson for your support on this. My mother has dimentia and Alzheimer's but otherwise is in good physical health (better than mine). She won't be dying anytime soon, I think she may outlive me, and I am 57. Thank you again everyone for your very supportive words.
Thank you for your well wishes for my cancer--so far so good--I'm two years into it, through with surgery and radiation and on chemo.