This is a sincere question and I hope someone can advise me. My MIL has Alzheimers and I know "it's the disease." BUT I can tell that she knows she is giving me the silent treatment and she smirks when I ask her what I've done to upset her. I know that she knows what she is doing because she will snap right out of it if a guest shows up. She also refuses to respond when I ask her why she is not speaking to me. I can write this off to moodiness but my MIL has a long history of giving people the silent treatment and she is still quite the expert. Yes, I take it personally. I've devoted my whole home and life to caring for her.
Sorry, just having a bad day..........at least the dog likes me.
My mother can't keep this up for long ("Mother, dear, if there is a problem, Speak. Use Words. I am not psychic" when she gets her wet-Wednesday face on and looks wounded) but it sounds like your MIL is an expert. It's extremely childish. If I were you I think I'd feel more annoyed than hurt simply because it is so childish.
Is there anyone else you can ask to ask her why she isn't speaking to you?
However, once she began to suffer with dementia, her personality changed, and I frequently received the silent treatment which I know is a manifestation of her disapproval of my behaviour. This was obvious in three ways. 1) my mum would totally blank me when I walked into her lounge and refuse to interact with me in any way (if I was giving her a drink she would look right through me), 2) if I was followed in by a visitor she would switch from this behaviour into a very animated style where she would smile at the newcomer, and wave her arms around in a welcoming fashion, and 3) if I left her with a career and said I was going to the bank or the shop, she would say 'you went there yesterday' in a disapproving fashion, implying that I should not be going again.
I found all this very difficult to cope with but I had/have a dementia/reminiscence worker who supports me two afternoons each week for two hours and she observed my mum being awkward with me but engaging perfectly well with her. She said that this was common behaviour, especially with mothers and daughters where the daughter had become the carer, and that this silent treatment was borne out of frustration in the realisation that the mother had come to rely on the daughter whereas the daughter enjoyed the freedom not to have to rely on the mother. Essentially, this represented a loss of control on the part of the mother whose natural reaction was to try to get that back by emotional blackmail. My dementia worker dealt with this by telling my mum each and every time she made derogatory comments or negative gestures to me behind my back that this was not acceptable behaviour from her and that she was very lucky to have me as a daughter. And she also told me to tackle it in the same way because she said that in that stage of dementia, my mum was perfectly aware of what she was doing when she was giving me the silent treatment.
Now I look back and it fits completely. Before she had the dementia she would never have behaved like that towards me, and now that her dementia has advanced and she is much less in touch with reality, she doesn't do it anything like as much. It's at that stage where there's enough understanding of what's going on around a person that they use all their resources to try to get you to toe the line, and that line is simply to be at their beck and call so they don't feel incapable. It's all about fear. Just as a final point, I eventually came to handle my mother in two different ways depending upon my own levels of resilience at any particular time - I either said quite clearly 'look at me and concentrate on what I'm saying - it's not fair that you talk to me like that' and I would stand right in front of her, or I just took food and drink into her and smiled and left it. I think as your MIL progresses with her condition she won't have her ulterior motives of trying to control you and things may ease up! I feel for you.
Actually I would try to have "fun". I would make a plate with fresh fruits, put it on the table between two of us and start eating it while watching TV or reading newspaper. Or, you make two cups of tea -- put one on front of her and proceed to enjoy yours... Make an inviting gesture to join you but do not insist if she ignores you. Redirect her!
You know you did nothing wrong. Though that's your MIL's way to convey the message that she is not happy (with whatever!). Yes, some people are not happy does not matter what! At the end of the day you do not have to please her. Just please yourself by knowing you do good job caring for her.
I completely agree with DaughterOnDuty and wish I had that information when my mom was alive.
The summer before she died, my brother visited her briefly and told her that she was "killing" me. She backed off of her nastiness for a while. I kept telling myself and her that she was just afraid, but none the less her behavior hurt me. That didn't help as much as my brother's comment.
This is just a note to say I've felt the hurt. I thought I tried everything to stop feeling the hurt, but it never stopped... until a few days before she died. Mom was Ok with me then. We had some precious memories and I'm glad of that.
Also, as I've said many times here, the best advice I ever got was from someone who told me to tell my mom that I love her every day and hug her if I can, because one day she will be gone and I will never be able to do that again.
My heart goes out to you. You are doing good and noble work and I hope you can take good care of yourself and try not to feel the hurt, even though I know from experience that's hard to do.
Re-read DaughteronDuty... it's the best expert advice I've seen from her dementia caregiver.
The best approach is to just be yourself, going about your business cheerfully, ignoring her attempts to suck you into getting upset. She's playing a game which has only one rule: You lose.
Do you have a mantra? A favorite hymn or uplifting song? Repeat that, out loud if you want, gently calming yourself. Tap the strength inside you; it's there if you just look.
Good luck and God bless.
I know you are in pain, you are hurting, you are trying to be the best caregiver for her that you can be and you feel that you are being treated unfairly and you don't even know why. Sometimes it makes me wonder IF THEY EVEN KNOW WHY! Everyone here has given some wonderful words of wisdom and I hope that some of it will resonate with you and make you feel better and know that many people are enduring what you are going through....and it's okay for her not to talk to you....serve her a drink, medicine or food and if she refuses to talk, just walk away or say to her "gee Mom I am sorry that you don't feel like talking now, but I will leave you with your thoughts and be back later to check on you." You could end that sentence with....Love You! as you walk out of the room. You are not being hateful or spiteful you are allowing her the space to be the way she wants to be.
I began turning on Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra and Big Band Era CD's for Mom and she wants to sit on the patio in the sun and watch the birds and enjoys the music greatly. I have found that I enjoy it as well, I admit I have heard them so many times I can hear them in my head before I turn them on, but music does help bring people out of moods. I turned on my own era music in my room the other day and was dancing around to it and it made me feel wonderful again!
In the last year of my father's life he chose to sit in silence a lot. He had emphysema not dementia, but there was something about him just wanting to be quiet, no TV, no radio and no loud talking. I think he was preparing himself for death and I have no idea what he was thinking about but I assume it was his life.
I also know what you mean about the dog. My sister would like to get rid of ours since she is the source of many arguments in the house, but she is MY only salvation at times and I love her. The dog has done nothing wrong, it is my mothers OCD where the dog is concerned that is the problem.
Take care and know that YES it does hurt and we all take it personally at some point in our caregiving. You have done nothing wrong, this is her choice so let her have it, turn on music and entertain yourself while she is in her own world.
God Bless You and take care of you!!!
Now to my experience with the silent treatment....
My 93-year old father has mild-to-moderate dementia. My sister is getting married in three weeks and my father needed a really nice suit to wear to the wedding. Since everything he had in his wardrobe is from the 80's (or earlier) and/or doesn't fit him properly, and/or is butt ugly, my other sister and decided to rent a suit for him to wear.
For some unknown reason, he was dead against it. He kept insisting he could wear his tacky '80s blazer with the sleeves coming down to the middle of his hand and the hem falling practically down to his knees. And no matching pants.
I tried all the tactics to get him to acquiesce...including the one you think would have worked: "Do it for your daughter. It's her wedding and she wants you to be dressed in the appropriate attire. It's important to HER. "
Even that didn't work. He didn't care about her...only himself. "It's not about you" I kept telling him all the way to the formal wear rental place when he kept arguing with me. Soon after, he stopped talking to me. And kept on with the silent treatment in the rental place, refusing to give his opinion on the suit I was considering. So I stopped caring and rented the suit anyway. Basically I stayed cheerful, and kept ignoring him—finally taking my own advice to people to stop attaching significance to other people's behavior.
Eventually he snapped out of it. Look, I get it. He fears lack of control, he hates all these women (sisters) telling him what to do all the time. (I am going to post more about that later). But hey, it is what it is. It sucks, but he just has to accept it since the alternative for him would not be pleasant (a nursing home). It's certainly no picnic for us but of course he doesn't think or care much about that.
I do my best to pick my battles ...even letting him do crazy nonsensical things like cutting up a pair of shorts because he likes the way it feels at night; however, when it comes to how his actions are going to affect other people's feelings (like my sister's wedding) or cause harm to himself, I put my foot down. Do I like acting bossy? Absolutely not. Frankly, I'm longing for the day when I am freed from this responsibility so I can get back to my own life and not feel like a control freak 24/7.
Thankfully, in my case, this will be happening soon as one of my sister's is going to have him live with her.
I hate this disease. No surprise there...we all do.
Hang in there and read.