A year ago I was in a bad relationship. I since have worked very hard at learning how to love myself and be independent. I succeeded and started enjoying going out with friends. I even went to Ireland on a tour group solo. It was a big step. I have embraced my independence and was about to start dating again. I am a 53 year old women. I raised my son who is 26 and living on his own. I also am running a business.
The beginning of August my dad's health went downhill. After exploring every option financially and with insurance the only option was to take him in. I now am his 24/7 caregiver. He is in my spare bedroom on my second floor. He is very frail and cannot use the stairs. I am having to take all his meals and anything else he needs up the stairs all the time.
I have had to give up everything. I was so independent and enjoying my life and so happy. Now I can’t do anything. I am reading all the fun things my friends are doing on Facebook. I was at such a happy place. Am I selfish? Am I wrong to be so sad about missing my life? Is it wrong to hire someone to watch my dad while I go out? I used to come and go as I please. Now I feel like I have a toddler that I can’t leave or have only 1-2 hours to do something. I am so tired and so sad. I love my dad but I don’t think I can do this. What should I do?
I would keep an eye on this type of thing, it may be a pain, psychosomatic pain. You must set boundaries and not let him prey on your guilt. My sister did this kind of thing, holiday weekend, all of a sudden she's going to die, she just knows it and there goes our plans, only to hear, I feel better now, after our plans were irrevocably lost. Your heart bleeds for them but it is easy to feel used and abused when your needs don't mean diddly squat. Perfect breeding ground for resentment, bitterness and anger to grow. They are going to die and as sad as it is, it is the circle of life and we all are going to die in these old meat bodies. I pray in my time that I will be gracious and not try to take someone out with me, this is what my sisters behavior felt like she was doing.
If he receives a pension and SS this does not disqualify him from receiving Medicaid or whatever it is called in your state. It means he pays more of his care. If I am wrong, please correct me.
Have you checked around for board and care facilities that will accept what he gets as full payment, less like 100.00 monthly for personal needs? Oh by the way, he won't be happy about it, that's just how it is, no one wants to live at one of "those places"
You mentioned hospice, have you checked for a non-profit in facility hospice? Between Medicare and his income this may be a solution to his care. I know that people are not put on hospice lightly and that it typically means death is near, guilt trip. I am a firm believer that nobody has the right to ask anyone else to give up their life indefinitely to be the sole caregiver, it is selfish. I also believe that people need time alone to get their hearts right before they pass over. Being with someone all the time doesn't allow this and the more they demand company the more they need to do it. (I know that will offend some and I am sorry if my personal beliefs are offensive to you, but they are mine and can be discarded if they are not your, no need for attacks)
Trx making plans that he isn't aware of, give the aid, sitter or whomever is with him the number for hospice, be sure and let hospice know that the aid may call. Then go get some much needed respite.
Sorry for the book, I am just trying to help and I read your desperation. I get stressed out and the obvious is no longer obvious.
Hugs, you can figure this out!
It is not to early to look down the road to the day when your father needs more care than can be provided at home. Look into Medicaid, nursing homes, be prepared.
But above all, love yourself. You deserve it.
There are people here who are 24/ 7 caregivers and I don't know how they do it. (To me, that's something out of a Gothic horror story, as another said, a prison sentence.) And it's true that we could be stuck doing this for a long time. They are not going to get any better, and the demands on us will only increase.
Caregiving can wreck physical and mental health. Some will say take antidepressants - think about that, there is something very wrong when we're supposed to drug ourselves to cope with caregiving - and they don't work for everyone (I get all the side effects and they do not help at all).
There's nothing wrong with hiring an aide or a sitter for Dad so you can have a life. Doing that is the only way I can keep Mom out of a nursing home - otherwise i would collapse.
Check with Hospice about respite care. They should allow you time away. I think that Medicare allows for it when on Hospice. If not, ask if Dad can go to a NH or AL for a week (on his dime) so you can have a break. Use Dads money to pay someone to sit with Dad. Hospice should be supplying an aide. If you need more help, hire them with Dads money.
Maybe I'm completely wrong but if you had a voice in encouraging some gift spending by your father that makes him ineligible for Medicaid until repayment, then you also choose at least the risk that you would be taking care of Dad 24/7 for five years from that gift.
If you are trading your life in order to preserve an inheritance for you and your sister, then I think that's a less than optimal choice. Dad's assets should be used for Dad's care - there is no inheritance until after all Dad needs have been met.
Having a bedridden person living upstairs is not a good or safe choice. You either need to install a stair lift or move to a place with an entry level bedroom. Otherwise every time Dad needs to go out for a doctor's appointment or test, his welfare is being risked getting down those steps - to say nothing of any emergencies like fire or a gas line leak. The stairs may also limit your respite care choices as some care givers with a bad knee or not wanting to face trying to get your father out of the house/apartment will decline. And what about Dad? What did he do to deserve the social isolation of a single room?
One of my elderly family members told me decades ago that people are just about as happy as they choose to be. She realized if she married the man she wanted, they would never have much money. So she decided to be happy that she had a good man for a husband who was devoted to her and their children. They never went on expensive vacations, but they went on lots of picnics and camping trips and had friends in their house for dinner parties almost every week.
Whatever choices contributed to your decision to care for your father in your home, you need to step up and accept you made a decision and you choose this life. As someone who is also in their 50s who has canceled plans at the last minute to unexpectedly care for an elder or child that is not my own, I completely understand wanting to remain "independent"; however, when you make the choice to care for a needy person (whether elder or child) you are not independent anymore. You can choose to bemoan that lost independence and focus on everything you are missing or you can choose to embrace your chosen life and develop the possibilities it offers for happiness.
I encourage you to resolve whatever issue is preventing Dad's Medicaid qualification and place him in SNC - both for yourself and for your father. If that's not possible and you need to continue caring for your father, I encourage you to find a better living arrangement, get as much respite care as you can afford, and develop more activities you can sustain from home. Learn to find some happiness in the life you have chosen. If facebook only makes you feel envious of others who haven't faced your choices yet, then disconnect from facebook for a while. I host game parties for family and friends and I "escape" for in person dinners 2-4 times a month. One of those monthly dinners is with a group of high school friends who are or have cared for their elderly parents - we understand each other.
God bless you and your father during this difficult adjustment.
DebJoy, you have no need to explain why the finances have worked out the way you describe, but if you read all the other posts, you will see that most people find it difficult to understand. Perhaps if you did explain, you could get more ideas about what to do. Some of the questions and answers about Medicaid and Medicare are quite technical, without a need to provide personal information.
Unless the poster is clearly being nasty, it is better to accept that their intentions are good, and just write it off if it doesn’t suit you. You have enough problems already, without getting upset unnecessarily.
Best wishes to both.
Please find out what needs to be done to get aid, paying for his care out of his money will give you your life back so just do it.
You will never get this time back and the longer you are out of the picture the less friends you will have, nothing personal, life moves on and you are moving with it or you aren't.
Best luck getting him into a facility that will meet his needs and give you your life back.