My mom had a stroke 2 yrs. ago when she was living in our home. It paralyzed her right side and she is unable to use her arm or leg even after therapy. She says she wants to come home, which makes me feel even worse knowing that she needs care that I can't give her. She is mentally alert and aware of what is going on. We have transportation to bring her home a couple hrs. once a month, but it does not make me feel better when she goes back. She is wheel chair bound and have to depend on public transportation for a little time at home. What can I do to accept this? She lived with us for 7 yrs. and my husband and I promised to take care of her.
Here's what l would do to feel better if i were you:
Paste on a big smile and go visit your mom and take her something beautiful or whimsical to make her day happier. Flowers, a picture or poster, a wreath, a music CD or a pretty blanket or pillow or lap robe or a new sweater, hat, or jewelry. Brighten up her surroundings as much as you can, and extend that to her roommate if she has one. No apologies out of your mouth for her situation. You didnt cause it, and you are doing all you can to make it better. Remember:
All you can do is all you can do.
Express your gratitude to the NH staff who care for your mom. Be profusively thankful because (1) they are doing for your mom the things you want to do but cannot, and (2) if they know their effort is very appreciated, they will do even better for her. If you can take them little gifts, that's great; it will make their day just to know you appreciate them. Look at how pleased they are for your gratitude.
Smile, even if you're crying, and remember that you have done the right thing for your mom and your husband, too.
Do something special for him, too. He has put up with you and his MIL all these years! What a great man! Give him some lovin' and tell him how much happiness he brings you. No whining allowed about how much he puts up with, just tell him how good-lookin' he is, talk about how much fun you have together, and how happy he makes you every day.
Sometimes I find that pretending everything is OK is the first step toward getting there, and I've never felt the worse for doing something nice for someone else.
You defined your life for years in a different way than it is now. You need a new and positive description for yourself that includes gratitude and happiness. Don't let that get away! Go get it!
All this being said, depression can be a physical problem, so if your best efforts to get past this don't bring you relief, by all means look for a support group and/or discuss your concerns with your doctor.
When our children are little, we can take care of much of their need for care at home if we choose not to work outside the home. Caregiving for an infant or toddler is intense, but mostly if we are young and strong, and can go without sleep for a couple of nights, all is well. Our children grow, thrive, develop new skills and need professionals to instruct them in the various subjects that they require to be successful at life.
My mother also had a stroke; then she broke her hip. She requires young, strong folks with specialized knowledge to get her from bed to chair, chair to toilet, upright to walk, aided and with a gait belt with a walker for 20 minutes every day. My mother also has dementia and becomes depressed, paranoid and has delusions from time to time.
I'm 63 years old; I have a husband with chronic heart issues. I have neither the strength nor the training to give my mom the care she needs and deserves.
I don't feel guilty at all. Sometimes, loving someone means getting them what they need, not necessarily what they want.
Nuts and bolts of it, what would it take for your mother to return to living in your home?
It's possible. People with the most severe disabilities live in ordinary, private houses, after all. But what, exactly now, would it take?
Make a list. Then you add up, how much would it cost? In dollars, in hours, in resources - where are you going to find the money, where are you going to find these people, how will you guarantee their professionalism and their personal trustworthiness?
What I expect you will find, at the end of all this, is that it would cost your mother, your husband and you *far* more money than it currently does to - and here's the real sting - provide a *lower* level of care.
And meanwhile you and your husband would be at risk of buckling under the strain. You think your mother's aiming to split you up?
She lives at the facility because that's where the equipment and the trained staff and the dozens of pairs of hands are; but you and your husband love her just as much as you always did, and you don't care about her any less.
Try to shed the guilt so that, instead, you can enjoy her company and her visits to your home. If your heart is lighter, so will hers be.
2. Remind yourself that her care needs are above what you can reasonably do.
3. No one likes being in a nursing home and they about all say that they want to go home.
4. Bringing her home once a month may actually be making things worse instead of better for both of you.
5. See your doctor and ask for an anti-depressant.
6. See a therapist about this irrational guilt for you have not done anything wrong.
7. Try to stop beating yourself up over things that are beyond your control.
8. Also, it sounds like you may be having anticipatory grief in anticipation of your mother dying one day. That's normal.
GOD BLESS YOU! your reply to Kaf1954 was wonderful. I have always tried to treat people with kindness and show appreciation in my life. I do have to ignore people who mean well, perhaps, and they are entitled to their own opinion. Perhaps those people are terribly unhappy and instead of showing compassion and appreciation they become angry and critical.
I don't try to change their opinion
I think I learned that when I was a young child in elementary school. The other little girls in my neighborhood and I had a squabble one day and they ran away and wouldn't play with me. My mother was angry at them and that didn't help me feel any better. I went to the back door of my young girlfriend's home. She was not home but her mother was preparing dinner in the kitchen. I told her about our squabble and she could see I was really hurt. Her suggestion to me was to comfort me and also to bring them a treat. I learned what a peace offering was from that experience. I went home and made bread and jelly sandwich and took them to my friends. I had learned how to be kind to other people when the inevitable bad times pop up. My mother never learned that. She was always jealous of all my girlfriends as life went on and her actions made me feel worse. My girlfriends mother taught me how not to behave that way.
rosepetal
You can be a Daughter first and an advocate for her. So you really are still caring for her it is not just the day to day stuff. If you do not have a place that is set up and you do not have the equipment then that makes it even more difficult. Not only could you get hurt trying to transfer her you could hurt her. And trust me even with equipment things happen.
And I read something that made a lot of sense to me.
Then someone says.."I want to go home" ..that often does not mean they want to go HOME it means they want to go back to a time when they felt safe and well. Often that is a childhood home or maybe when they were first married but it may not mean they want to go to the home were they most recently lived.
Another thought...your Mother probably would be the first to tell you that she would not want you to give up your life caring for her, that she would want you to care for your family first. I have often said it would have killed my husband to know what he put me through the last 4 years of his life. He would not have wanted that for me or for himself. I am sure your Mother would feel the same.
You did take care of her for seven years--please remember that--that is a long time. Way beyond what most adult children will do.
If I were in your place, I would consider other posters' suggestions to seek out a therapist or support group. You might find other facing a similar situation or at least people who recognize the difficult situation that you are facing. Good luck.
I think that the biggest problem for your mom and for you is the difficulty to accept the paralysis. Indeed, it IS a tragedy.
Uour mom wants to go home, that is to WHO SHE WAS when she was there. But it is not there any more. That "home" is gone.
Just try to make her life lighter, be there for her. This "there" is at her new place. Dont let her down "there".
Accept your limits as not being able to be the perfect nurse 100% of your time. Ot is not you. You would try that you would fail.
Go see her, give her some of your time, your love, your understanding, sharg your joy:
THIS is a wonderful gift for her and for you.
Scottdenny We come onto this wonderful Age / Action
Site to help and encourage and Our Fellow Carer's