I’ve been taking care of him on my own since September and didn’t feel good today so I lost it. I’m slowly getting thru the red tape, he’s retired navy, getting help from the VA, but how do you keep yourself from losing it? We’ve been doing so well. I’m so sad and feel so guilty.
Not long after that I found this forum. And also got a kitten, which helps my emotions feel more balanced.
I feel like I have my anger more under control now. Venting it out here helps A LOT. So does reading people's stories here about similar struggles....knowing I'm not alone and I'm not the worst person on earth. It's hard out there in the "real world" - people who've never done this kind of caregiving have NO clue what it's really like. Knowing it's not her fault she's like this helps a little. Knowing she'll forget whatever awful thing she said or did helps a little - in that I try to treat each encounter as a "fresh start" now. Kitten snuggles DEFINITELY help. Doing more things for me helps, like spending more time with my friends instead of turning myself into a martyr for eldercare. Telling my friends the TRUTH about what's going on helps, instead of keeping it all in the family (keeping family problems hush hush is how I was brought up, and how my mom was brought up, too). Their support is everything to me. Occasionally I'll buy something I don't need off Amazon, and the anticipation of checking the mail is uplifting! Also I learned to make soap! That was fun and a good distraction.
Also home support helps. I only have them in 3x a week, but those ladies are AMAZING! I don't have to struggle with things like hygiene or getting her awake and dressed for medical appointments. They come back at the end of the day to get her dinner ready and make her a cup of tea, get her in her jammies and put a warm blanket around her in front of the TV. They know what they're doing, and they are also much nicer to her than I am. She resented them in the beginning, but I told her they were for me not her. Now she enjoys the way they make her feel a little pampered. And I get that essential little bit of morning and evening time to myself, to collect my senses.
The thing I find is I have to accept my anger for what it is. People with dementia are often like bratty toddlers or snide teenagers, except they're ones you can't pick up and put in a time out. If you try to force yourself not to feel anger, it WILL build up until you snap again. It's OKAY to feel anger. Be angry. This is sh***y stuff we're dealing with, and it's not fair that even people in the health care system don't always understand dementia all that well, and sometimes don't seem concerned with the stress and workload dumped on us caregivers. But the tricky thing about anger is not using it against someone else in a hurtful or negative way.
A friend of mine recommended a parenting book to me, of all things. It just arrived in the mail (from Amazon!) yesterday. I never had children so I don't really know how to handle them when they get out of line. But that's exactly what my mom is when she gets in a bad way - like a child having a temper tantrum, or sulking, or whatever behaviour she's exhibiting. Anyway, I've been trying to use more "parent-speak" with my mom lately, instead of trying to treat her like the grown up she used to be, and that helps a bit. Parent-speak....not like being a dictator or an authoritarian, but the modern way people relate to their kids now. Staying calm and not just being reactive. I'm excited about the book. Oh, it's called "How to Talk So Kids Will Listen, and Listen So Kids Will Talk," by the way.
Saying he may get back to where he was before the fall after surgery. I was doing my best for him because I thought I was
helping him recover. He never recovered mentally from the operation. He is physically in good shape for an 85 yr old man
With a lot of hard living. He now ask me the same question over and over until I want to scream. I will tell him I am getting his lunch in a few minutes and he screams from the back room are you getting my lunch at least 4 times before I can make it. Every time he hears my phone ring he starts screaming every 4 or 5 mins
“Are you still on the phone.” If I don’t answer him he keeps on until I’m about to lose my mind. If I go into my room and he sees me he
Immediately wants to know what I am doing are starts asking questions about nothing? I honestly haven’t gone to the bathroom
without him screaming in months! I lose my temper all the time.
I don’t know how anyone would live like this with out losing it a few
Times! Don’t beat yourself up! You are making a very huge sacrifice to take care of her. I wish you the best. I am looking into AL in January.
Years ago, I totally melted down and tore my husband apart for acting "stupid". The next day, he was diagnosed with a huge, but fortunately operable, aortic aneurysm. So I know the frustration that you're talking about!
There are two really great dementia specialists, Teepa Snow and Naomi Feil; can you google them and watch their videos?
I'm sure others will be along shortly with great suggestions. Please know that we care and want to hear back from you.
Hang in there is all I can tell you and don't beat up your self when you react in a normal (?) manner. God bless you my friend. You have much company.
There are times when one must release pent up emotions or implode.. I sometimes do this when I am at the end of my rope and am immediately sorry. It happens....
Ren
The only thing that helped was when I was told how to communicate with her. First of all I was told to remember the problem was not her. It was the disease. Then I was told that most people with dementia do know what is happening but they don't know how to respond. So I began talking to her and explaining things without expecting a response. I hugged her and kissed her and told her how much I loved her. I was rewarded by her smiles. My only regret is that I did not know about communicating with her until it was too late
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