Hi Everyone,
I've been having a really difficult time as of late, and needed somewhere to get some advice - this seemed like a very supportive forum!
My Grandma is 87 and she suffered a stroke in mid-January, where she is no longer able to move her right arm and has troubles with her right leg (she still uses a walker). Fortunately, her speech and memory were not greatly affected. She lived (pre-stroke) in our basement suite (I'm 24 and live at home with my mom) and moved back in with us in mid-March.
She remained in the hospital for two months, where she received physio from Mon-Fri. I was up to visit everyday to help with her exercises and meals. I felt like she was making so much progress... I would spent at least a few hours there visiting each day, while also trying to balance my schooling and social life (I'm currently in graduate school and have been more flexible in terms of my schedule).
However, then COVID hit and the hospital believed that she would be much better off at home, and they discharged her slightly earlier than we anticipated.
I have felt just so extremely overwhelmed at points. I'm not trained to be a caretaker by any means, but I've been trying my best to help in any way I can. She has really been struggling with her emotions and hasn't been hungry at all really. I've been trying to help with her exercises, but most of the time she wants to stay in her chair. I would absolutely love to take her outside in our garden, but she just doesn't seem to want to (I think she's embarrassed that our neighbours will see her in her walker... she is very very stubborn and proud...).
It is very much so an emotional rollercoaster - I've had some really difficult days. It has been extra stressful while attempting to manage my coursework and research at school, while also making sure she is taken care of... not to mention the pandemic! My mom is also slowly beginning to work again, making things a bit more stressful (I feel even more pressure to be home to take care of her).
She has been such a huge part of my life and I love her so much - I would do anything to try and help, however I'm finding myself feeling very down because she doesn't appear to be improving (she seems to have gotten even weaker since being home). I feel guilty saying it, but I just feel like my life has been halted altogether and I'm having a difficult time focusing on anything else.
Any advice or ways to cope with this situation would be greatly appreciated, thank you very much to all those who read this fully!
Blessings!
Has Grandma been seen by a Speech Therapist? Confirmed OK for normal texture diet?
Stoke can affect the swallowing muscles. If she splutters, drools or drops food she may be too embarrassed to eat or drink in front of others.
Was she right handed? Learning to eat with non-dominant hand is hard! Spills will happen.
If meals need to be modified (or softened, mashed, cut) try to do before it is served to her. Provide a normal adult napkin (no bibs). Some cup shapes may be easier than others for her left hand to manage. Bowl instead of plate to stop food running away.
An OT will have lots of info to help Grandma improve her independance with meals.
In this case I suggest you get your grandma to her PC and have all her team of doctors check her out full physical, bloodwork, Brain scans.....everything THEN see what is BEST for her. In the meantime just LOVE HER SEE HER, HUG HER TELL HER YOU LOVE HER HAVE ALL HER GRANDCHILDREN DRAW FLOWERS PRAY and of course check her for the virus...God Bless
It would be depressing to go from mobility to having parts of the body no longer functioning like they used to overnight. Accepting walkers and wheelchairs is difficult. Try having a real sweet/low key talk with her about getting outside to enjoy her yard like she used to. Kind of give her the choices - stay indoors and locked away or get out and see some different scenery. Either way the same number of days still pass, so do as much as you can. Don't cut yourself off. Maybe she will understand it would make you happier to see her getting out. - Not a conversation for several people to have with her at the same time because it can be overwhelming when several are telling you what to do. Hugs to you for wanting more for her than she wants for herself right now.
Then research various exercises that she can do either with you or by herself. Buy those elastic resistance bands, for instance to use for both leg and arm exercises. Consider hiring a physical therapist to come in once or twice a week to help her.
Take some tips from Beatty, and call on any local groups that can help stroke survivors. You and your grandmother both need some help with this challenge, and there's no need to face it alone.
I could bore you endlessly on this topic (I have a fair bit of stroke in my family) but I'll try to contain myself to 5 things to start.
1. Have you got a local Stroke Foundation to call? The US, UK & Australian sites all have great resources online if that suits you. Info on moods especially (apathy, emotional lability).
2. Learn the term *Stroke Survivor*. Not stroke victim. Maybe it will help you or Grandma to refocus from 'this bad thing happened to me' to 'I survived'. Yes it is bad. It's a brain injury (another term to learn). But it happened, so now we work towards what recovery is posible.
3. Stroke can vary so much, each person will have different effects & recovery.
So DON't compare to others.
4. More help. You can't do it all. Hopefully a social worker is still attached to Grandma's case, or Office of Aging? Assessment for what care is required regarding ADLs & how to get it. I'm talking paid non-family aides coming to provide this hands-on care in-home. If you work/study & Mom works then you will most probably need this help.
5. Responsibility. To be continued if required... but in a nutshell, it's not up to you to provide ALL her care.
Just love her. Get the professionals in & get a real picture of her needs to start.
My mother had several strokes. What I know now that I didn’t realize then was that the apathy she developed, the not wanting to cooperate with exercises, not enjoying activities as before, was caused by depression brought on with the stroke. It’s very common. She was greatly insulted by the word depression and we walked on eggshells around it and didn’t seek proper treatment. We should have insisted that she be given a medicine for it. Talk to grandma’s doctor about this, along with what you’ve told us you’re seeing. Take good care of yourself
Hopefully when life gets back to some sort of normalcy, you can have a physical therapist come to your home and work with her, and perhaps even an aide to come help as well. You need to be concentrating on your studies and your life. I'm sure as sweet as your grandma sounds she would not want you to be putting your life on hold for her. She's lived her life. Now it's time for you to live yours. Best wishes in all you do. Hang in there. you are not alone.
First of all - huge sympathy to all of you, to your grandmother, your mother and you. I'm sure it doesn't feel like it at the moment, but I am glad for you that your grandmother was taken out of the danger zone and sent home. If you feel as though her progress has ground to a halt, I can promise you that the isolation and unintentional neglect she might have undergone if she hadn't been discharged - not to mention the higher risk of infection - would have been much worse.
So: here you all are, four months post-stroke, and feel like you're wading through treacle. Two busy people attempting to do the work of an entire rehab team comprising health care assistants, qualified nurses, physical and occupational therapists, speech and language therapists, dietitians, psychologists, medics... are you feeling a little overworked???
Take deep breaths, and then think: patience.
It takes months to recover fully from a stroke, and the older a person is the longer it takes. Where you are at the moment can easily feel like the doldrums: grandmother made rapid progress at first, now seems to be going backwards and isn't co-operating so well, and you're discouraged and overwhelmed.
This year is just the most awful time for families in your situation. The main medical services are under so much pressure they're not accessible for the kind of sustained treatment your grandmother should ideally be receiving; and the allied professions - dentists, chiropodists, PTs and OTs - all seem to have gone into hiding. I saw three clients yesterday who desperately need a podiatrist not because they fancy a pedicure but because the condition of their toenails is affecting their gait - we're really discovering how essential these services are!
It *is* easing up, you will be able to access therapies and support again soon, but meanwhile all you can do is keep on keeping on.
To keep sensible boundaries in place at home, so that you and your mother don't break under the strain of trying to be your own rehab unit, Do A Schedule. A big, colourful, weekly timetable that can go on the kitchen noticeboard and that fits in with your own commitments and needs.
With diet, exercises, personal care routines, activities of daily living and enrichment activities: offer, encourage, facilitate, assist, but #1 NEVER force and #2 don't allow yourself to become despondent or discouraged if/when grandma says no. It's okay for her not to be okay. She is in recovery, it will take time, and the key is to keep up constant, gentle, forward pressure to support her.
You do want to watch her mood: acute clinical depression is a risk post-stroke and is ugly. It isn't the same as the fatigue and apathy that result from the brain ring-fencing all her energy to heal itself: if you notice changes in her such as "flat affect" - a total absence of positive or negative emotional responses to anything - or deep misery with no clear cause to it, then flag it up and make her doctors pay attention.
But just wanting to stay in her chair... insist (nicely) that she occasionally move and stay in her bed, her chair, a different chair, the sofa, wherever... because she needs to mobilise and she doesn't want pressure sores; but the reason for this is that she's more tired than you can easily believe. Resting is part of the recovery, it will very gradually improve.
What are your mother's thoughts? How is she coping?