Mom had a partial colonoscopy about 4 years ago and has complained about it ever since, claiming the operation messed up her digestion (she is subject to almost chronic diarrhia). She has some trouble swallowing, I would like her to go to an ENT also, and she is way overdue for the dentist. She refuses to go, convinced she is going to be dead soon. I have been hearing that for the last 7 years... I really can't pick her up bodily and take her even if I make the appointment (tried that once, didn't work, she is stubborn as a mule and twice as cantankerous). How can I get her to go?
Did you inherit some stubborn genes? Everytime she complains about her digestion, say "That sounds bad. I'll make an appointment with Dr. Smith for you." If she complains about her swallowing, say "That sounds bad. I'll make an appointment with Dr. Jones for you." Do you think that if every time she complained about an ailment you replied pleasantly but persistently with an offer to make an appointment she would either stop complaining so frequently or would relent and see a doctor? Either one would be an improvement for you, wouldn't it?
In many ways there is role reversal when children care for an elderly parent. But a parent can insist that a nine-year-old must see the dentist. You can't really force an elder who still is competent to make her own decisions to comply with that kind of request.
I suppose you do have some ultimate bargaining power if you want to exert it. What does she need from you? "I'll take you to your hairdresser if you also let me take you to the dentist. No dentist, no hairdresser." But that kind of power struggle might just be too ugly for the benefits.
I guess she is entitled to neglect her own care if she wants to, but then she should stop expecting you to listen to all the moaning.
Just curious -- how do you deal with all the moaning and complaining now? I think that would wear very thin very fast!
Just an idea, good luck. My thoughts are with you and your mother.
I've just been thinking of a few years back when Mom was in a TCU after hospitalization for a fall. A test that they did for other purposes revealed an ovarian growth of some kind. This wasn't within the scope of what she was being treated for and they advised her to make an appointment for followup. They gave her name to the specialty clinic and a week or so after she was home that clinic called to set up the appointment. No thank you, she did not want an appointment.
I took her to her next appointment with her geriatrician. The doctor said she saw the recommendation for followup but not results. Did she make the appointment? No, Ma said. I'm not going to. It isn't bothering me and if there is something wrong I don't want to know about it. The doctor said she totally respected Ma's right to make that decision, but she was obligated to make sure she understood that if she did have cancer it could be treated, and if she didn't have treatment it could be serious or fatal. My mother said, "I would refuse chemo. So what is the point of worrying about it? I have lived a good long life. If this is my time, I won't fight it." The doctor asked me if I was OK with that. I said that I was OK with Ma making her own decision, and that I was comfortable she knew what she was deciding.
Mother has MCI now and a case could be made for taking over some of that kind of decision-making. But knowing her beliefs and attitudes I would still respect her right to refuse treatments or to refuse tests.
DT, I think that your situation is a little different. Your mother complains, and there might be solutions that would give her a greater quality of life. I can fully understand why you would want to presuade her to try to find solutions to her complaints. But ultimately, it really is her decision, isn't it?
I am really impressed that you can avoid taking it personally.
If you can get the New Testament on tape she might feel comforted after listening to the book of John. Just a thought. I like John 14.
I hope that the doctors can provide any care that will ease her discomfort. Maybe it might work better if you call the doctor and have the doctor call her to check up on her. I'm very surprised they can't get that diarrhea under control.
I go through the same kind of things with my mom and my live in relative. It makes me nuts.
DT, you have written that your dreams have been dashed. Have you grieved the loss of those dreams? We can get stuck if we don't. Can you make some new dreams/plans for the time when your mum passes, where you can meet your own needs. Having something to look forward to may help.
Wishing you all the best
Joan
As far as the refresher French, and Italian, one of the Expectations (much, much more than a dream) I have for my own future is that I want to go to Paris again, and I still have Rome, Greece, and Egypt to do before I go to the big sleep. Time is running short.
As for my 'skillsets and passing them on, not much interest around here in it. One of my ideas for my retirement might have been a hobby and craft shop, but again, location location location, and money that I do not have. What the young never seem to realize is that they could learn a lot from old people. Mom, for instance, learned to cook on a woodstove and still has favorite recipes that she cannot pass on because they are the old pinch and dab kind. Also, as far as classes go, I want and need the classroom interaction. At this time I cannot even have an intelligent conversation with mom - she has no intellect. I have mentioned that living with her is like living with a not-too-bright 7 year old.
Finally, you sem to have done much of what I always wanted to do,but my circumstances only dictated that I had to just scrabble hard for a living, let alone toot off to another country to live for awhile. Others have done it, I never could see how I could. Too late to worry about it now. Not going to.
D.
Regarding the skillsets I was thinking about schools and sharing there (my background I suppose). Of course this would not bring in any additional income but the young could learn from the old. Interesting that you have some of your mum's old recipes. Could you record them? People share such things in blogs online. I have a few from my mother which came from her grandmother - "Take a jug of good milk..." There might be some interest in them even from the historical perspective. We had a neighbour who cooked on a wood stove while I was quite young. I have done so at my grandfather's camp in the north which we visited in the summers - even baked a rhubarb pie the pastry of which was rolled with a hand-made rolling pin!
As far as my travels are concerned, my parents sent both of us overseas for education, so I was not responsible for most of that, but have very much appreciated it, I did return with my ex and children years later. You mentioned a return trip to Paris which would indicate that you have been there. Where ever I went, I particularly loved the art galleries though I never saw the Louvre.
I am sorry that you are so lacking in intelligent company and conversation. One needs it. You do appear to be very "house bound" with your mum. I have found it more difficult to have people contact since I retired though not for the same reasons as you. When working, people contact comes with the territory. I miss the students and a few of my colleagues.
Life is not fair nor is old age, and, as Bette Davis said not for sissies. I do plan on looking for that movie - have had the flu the past few days and not been anywhere. Wishing there were some solutions for these limitations.
Take care
Joan
Dale - BTW who is your fav actress to protray Miss Marple. I am guessing Margaret Rutherford.
Lilli - the humorous side of imitating my mother to her would not only fly over her head but she would take dramatic offense at it. Like joan, she would deny it.
Joan - yes, I am using the big guns - Roundup - and distroying weeds and anything else that is in the way in certain places, using a big sheet of cardboard to shield anything nearby I want to save. Any stragglers I hope to get by hand. When I was in Paris I went strictly for the museums, Louvre, Orsy, Picasso, Rodin, Carnavalet, etc. I spent nearly 18 hours in the Louvre alone (which Rick Steves called in-seine, though it was intoxicating to me), fell in as the doors opened, got swept out with the other trash in the evening. Side trip to Versailles, Eiffel Tower on the day I went to the Rodin, Montmartre. Was not able to see the Orangerie, it was closed for rennovations. Next time along with the Orangerie is the Lalique and the Baccarat, retrace footsteps in the Louvre and the Carnavalet, but then get out of town and see Vaux-le-Vicompte, Fountainbleau, and Malmaison. If only...
Don't worry too much about Now Voyager - it is more about the situation and storyline, and as I said, mom is definately Not Gladys Cooper (I play the Bette Davis role in this one). But, if you go on an old movie binge, get 'Picnic' with Kim Novac, mom is most like the mom in that one, find What a Way to go with Shirley Mclaine, a little dash of the mom in that one applies too, a little Shirley Booth in Come Home Little Sheba, (a couple more apply that I am not thinking of right now). Mix together well, bake at 350 degrees, cool before serving, garnish with early Bette Davis, and you have a sort of my mom.
Geraldine McEwan was definitely good. I always liked her. I saw all of Joan Hickson's versions. She was, perhaps, my favourite, though I love the feistiness Margaret Rutherford brought to the role. I would have to go back and reread Agatha to assess which one was closest to the book description in my perception. I haven't seen the Helen Hayes you mention though can imagine that she would be good.
Your "recipe" for your mum is very amusing and creative. I can see why you are interested in taking a creative writing course and encourage you to "plunge" into the world of writing. Not all successful writers have taken courses. Interesting that that one bowl triggers your mum’s memory.
Re the round up - I was a little too enthusiastic while using it last summer and several rose bushes have suffered. They are coming back, but are not blooming as usual. I think I will have to cut one back and hand weed around the roots where the tansy has established itself. If left, tansy will overtake the garden. I have a clematis with a small white flower which has threatened to do that too. Left untrimmed, it covered and downed 3 large blue juniper trees. I had a Virginia creeper which covered the side of the house and "dripped" down from the porch overhang. I loved it until the leaf hoppers came – nasty little creatures who fly in your face in swarms. That problem was solved when a young man, who was doing some work around the house, was too energetic with a chain saw and cut the main stem of the vine. The whole thing died and had to be ripped down. The good news was that the leaf hoppers left. A new one was planted last year which is only inches high. Such is life. One makes gains and has losses. Even though details have been forgotten, the individual has made their impact. “all the world's a stage...”
This might not help, but I'll share it anyway.
Years ago, soon after Mom had some gastro surgery I can't remember right now, she kept moaning and groaning. At first I dropped everything I was doing because her discomfort seemed legit. Then I realized her pain didn't hurt anymore, but she used it to manipulate me into catering to her every whim.
I did some research around the 'hood and heard of a senior citizens center serving Hispanics, so I dropped by. On one corner 4 Puerto Rican ladies kept calling me "papi chulo" (which I didn't mind at all). On another there were about 8 legends in their own mind locked in a testosterone contest. They talked about sports, women they never had, and the 15, 16, 17 children they fathered but never supported. ... So proud of themselves, they tried to teach me how to be a "real" man.
Next to the refreshment table, I found a mixed group talking about everything painful and scary. Their knees, hemorrhoids, lumpectomies, santeria, spell to ward off evil spirits, "bad" children that don't want to visit them anymore, people they've buried, cheating part-time husbands, mistresses. ... Some kept quoting all that "God said" from a Spanish Bible they had never read either to get little attention, or elevate themselves from the miasma. A product of the Brazilian Catholic school system, for some reason I wanted to nail these "papeleros" to a Cross and pave their way to sainthood. In sum, their lives were pure agony -- whether real of imaginary -- and all were enmeshed in a twisted version of the game "Can You Top This."
I don't doubt for a second your Mom is in some sort of pain. If not physical, her soul is searching for ways to cope with all that existential angst until her time comes. She needs to vent, purge, and see for herself that problems become smaller when shared with others that have been there and done that too.
I used to drop Mom off every Sunday at 12 and pick her up around 6:30. She found a boyfriend there, but he had a stroke from too many trips to the cuchifrito and all those heart attacks on a plate. It sure made her rethink her diet and regain that zest for life. One night, as I drove her back home, she said "The best revenge is living well, looking good, and outliving all those cucarachas who said I wasn't going to make it. ... I'll show them."
Well, she's still here. A victim of poor fashion, her wardrobe needs to be re-examined. And she's doing what she set out to do. ... Way to go Mom!
You call a certain bug a leaf hopper. I have been plagued with a little black bug we call a gnat, they want to fly into my ears and nose, where you can't spray OFF. I wonder if they are the same thing. I do not encourage crawling vines on the house, they can be invasive, other than clemais, which is not. Some clematis need to be cut back every season for they will not bloom on old wood, others need only to be thinned out. I had one once that had the little white flowers, I forget the name, but it bloomed well for a couple years then just up and died one spring. I have had bad luck with roses as black spot lives in my soil and eventually even spraying has become ineffective, and the last 3 years we were plagued with Japanese Beetle, which loved my Queen Elisabeths above all things. So far, I have hopes they moved on, we have not had the onslot we have had in the past, though today I saw one and instantly killed it, and I got something from the greenhouse in the spring - she told me that it would help with both the black spot and the beetles, and by Jove, I think she's got it!. I do not remember the stuff, it was granuals out of a bag by a well known brand name, but I do not remember right now, I will stop out and find out. Anyway, the Queen Elizabeths have been blooming as they have not for years. You said something about northern Canada once?