I love my mother very much and it breaks my heart to see her declining every day. I have always had a tendency to give her my all and ignore my needs in my personal life. I am 56 years of age and feel as if my life is slipping away. I am single, with no children. How can I balance being her caretaker and my personal social life without feeling guilty with time away from her?
I don't know about you but it's very easy for me to isolate so I had to force myself to have lunch with a friend occasionally or do other social activities. Purely for my sanity. I went back to church.
But my dad was able to stay by himself for short periods of time. Your mom may not be able to. It depends upon that.
But as able as my dad was, one morning while I was at my volunteer job he fell and laid there for hours before I got home. I had tried to call him when I was done at the job and he didn't answer. I thought me might be in the bathroom or something. He was very hard of hearing. But when I got home all the lights were off and there was no sign that my dad had been up and I knew I'd find him on the floor. And I did. This is the event that put him into a nursing home. And as I write this a part of me wants to feel totally responsible. It was MY fault that my dad laid there on the floor all morning. Had I been home that wouldn't have happened. But the other part of me knows that I could not be shackled to that house day in and day out and have no outside contact. Even my dad had social activities he enjoyed! I was not wrong in wanting that for myself and neither are you.
Without knowing your mom's condition I would strongly encourage you to get out and be a part of life. If you're anything like me, isolation begets more isolation. The more I stay home in my cocoon the more I want to stay home in my cocoon. Call a friend and have lunch. Donate some time to a worthy cause that you feel strongly about. Join a church. Put yourself in situations where you're around other people.
I was a caregiver to my dad for over 5 years. He died in May and I'm still trying to regain my balance, socially and emotionally. This site helps. I'm glad you're here, benson.
When you look back on this time in your life, you may consider it the greatest blessing of your whole life. I would suggest that you look on the internet for the things people accomplished later in life.
I think it was Grandma Moses, a very, very famous painter, who started painting at age 60 ish. I've been thinking about how nice it would be now to pick up a paintbrush and how simple. Laura Ingles, (don't quote me on accuracy) wrote Little House on the Prairie in her mid 60s. Roget (of Roget's Thesaurus) published that around age 70 and then added to it until he was in his 90s.
Those and other things are amazing to me.
My mom used to say, stay in the positive. Lay down only positive thoughts and experiences on your brain. Read good books, watch uplifting TV and movies. Look at a blade of grass or a flower and marvel at it. Each day, something positive can build up our brains to happy and fruitful lives. We can find something positive in every thing... for example, look at your current situation as a challenge, a great puzzle to be solved. Think of yourself as a mystery detective and search for clues to solve the challenge. Like a great skier tackling a steep hill, it's not easy... but it can be fun and exhilarating.
When ever I'm feeling down and doing something I don't want to be doing, I stop and think if it's possible for me to look at it in a different more positive way. I take a shower, do my hair and a touch of makeup, put on clean clothes and a smile and start again.
Joel Osteen said one day, we have all that we need right now. So, on that day, I took a look around and started to dig out the basement. I know there is a pony in there somewhere!
Good luck and put yourself first. It's a hard call but you have to. I was told this by the nursing home case worker. Put any guilt you have aside. You can only do so much.
Anksana-Moon
Even if it is only to take one hour of every day and get out
shopping, exercising etc. Keep in touch with your friends and family
even if you only have time to send a quick email.
One day your mom will no longer be there. You will have alot of time to do more
things as you once did, but you should always make your life and your health equally as important as you are making hers!
Do you know anything about Livia on the Sopranos?
My daughter is just home from college, and I'm noticing that I want her to get out of the house more because I like time for myself. She needs to start her life, not remain attached to loving but soon-to-be elderly parents.
Please push yourself to get out and get a life now. That is what your younger, healthier mother would want for you - your happiness.
I don’t have many friends, but the friends I do have are close to their mom, or their dad, or to both parents and truly value the time that they have with them. So although my friends are married, they understand my commitment and in some ways probably envy my “freedom.” It can be a very lonely freedom, but at the same time it has value. I think too often, people view a social life or the need to get married as the only life worth living—but it sounds like you have a good relationship with your mom, and that’s, as they say, priceless!
Enjoy being with your mom, but try to get out more—even if that means once a week during the best time to leave your mom alone (or in someone else’s care). It will make a big difference. And if you do one thing every day that makes YOU happy—then it’s a life well-lived. I know all of this is just talk and I know you have hopes for a different life, but I disagree with the idea that we have to wait until our parent isn’t here anymore to find that life. It’s out there---maybe not everything that you want, and maybe not everything at once, but who really has that? If you got married at the age of 60 and you lived to be your mom’s age—just think—you could be married 30 years! That's more than most marriages last today, so there’s still a lot of life left to live! I wish you all the best!
Anksana-Moon
Where I live, my grandpa's medicaid pays for his adult daycare for up to 5 weekdays and includes his meals. It's been a lifesaver for me. If it wasn't for adult daycare maybe I would have given up and quit.
The last resort would be to put her in a nursing home but you know you read all these negative experiences with nursing homes. That's if there's really no other choice and if you can not handle the burden yourself then yes, nursing home would have to be the last choice. But look into adult daycares first.
My Mum is 95 years old, 98% blind, barely mobile, lives in her own unit and has heaps of help from Blue Care, and of course moi!
She is demanding, hurtful, uncaring, selfish, narrow minded, argumentative, viscous when she wants to be, demands her own way 100% of the time, everything must be done "right here right now", is an expert in using emotional blackmail, thinks that the world (and I) owe her a living and to be quite frank, if I was dead on the footpath, she would walk over me rather than stop and see what was wrong! She is a "take no prisoners" old dear and it is her way or the highway. So, as a married guy, I am now on FOUR (4) anti depressant and anti anxiety pills per day, of which around 90% is a consequence of her fifteen years of bullying me, all of which I stupidly took without ever standing up to her!
If I even try, I am hit with the "oh you just like to hurt me, you don't care, you never help me, I'll have a stroke today, you hate me, you don't understand, I am 95 and blind (like I never knew!!), I'm going to kill myself, I'm going to sell out and live in a caravan, you'll be glad when I die and on and on and on ..............."
I have wrecked my health trying to look after her, my marriage was/is/might be in serious trouble due her constant harassment, but it has all changed!
'Cos on January one 2014, I changed!! I just stopped everything except ensuring her health was OK, her finances were in place and she was being cared for properly. I had called ID put on my phone and I don't even bother answering the 3-5 calls a day she makes - all with demands or bad news!
I visit her once a week, have a meal with her likewise, hang up the phone when she starts on me, let her ramble on with her crazy ideas, IGNORE her constant criticism of me and my failings as a son and you know what? It has worked!! But I do feel guilty treating her like this but you have to realize that the Mum you once had is gone! Her ability to reason, understand, comprehend and act maturely are all lost characteristics and you are simply the "whipping boy!"
The surprising thing is that she seems to have accepted it! I treat her respectively and lovingly but refuse point blank to be bullied by her and treated as a slave with no life to myself. And that is the hardest bit! You won't get it right first off but the more you try the easier it gets and I'll guarantee your Mum will slowly (and reluctantly) adjust to the new you!
You sound like a sole carer, as I am 'ços my wife hates her - and living with her must be sooooooo stressful!
My Doctor tells me he sees more Carers in need of help than the ones they are caring for!
Give it a go, you have nothing to lose! When you hits on you, get up and go for a walk and tell her you will be back when she treats you with love and respect, not as a doormat! It DOES work!
And of course I love her as a true seventy year old son does! regrettably, I live only a couple of k's from her unit - she is still independent in that respect - and happily sits in her comfy electric reclining chair - that I bought for her - and issues orders and demands 24/7.