Every morning and every day when I come home from work, I wonder if I'm going to find my father, my old cat, and/or either of my old bunnies deceased. I feel like I'm waiting for death. How do I snap out of it? This morning, I finished feeding all the animals and was ready to give my father his meds and go to the grocery store but I hadn't heard a noise from him. It was 8:20 am, and the latest he's ever gotten up in the two years that I've been medicating him was 7:45 am. I was afraid to go in there but I did and woke him up. It was a rainy morning so the darkness made him think it was night I guess. He doesn't look at clocks. I worry about death and think about after, and I have trouble trying to live today. There are many things I cannot do now. For example, the house is falling apart, and my father won't allow any work to be done. Having any people here agitates him to no end. I guess it's good that I have no friends for his sake but my only human companion is my mother's ghost. [She guided me today to use her UTI test kit; I have a UTI, my first, yay.] My brother never helps but he told me that I take bad care of my father because I feed him "crap" in his words instead of things like fish and Chinese broccoli. A few example meals I might make (not always from scratch): tacos, hamburgers, chicken, pork chops, green beans, lima beans, steaks, salad, spaghetti, crab cakes, and so on. I'm gone 9 hours a day, and do 40 hours of animal, house, and yard chores a week. I can't make daily gourmet meals. My brother also says that I should force my father to exercise. He spends all day in the recliner. I can't even get him to respond to most questions, use soap or shampoo, or cover his mouth when he sneezes spit all over the room. Should I be forcing him to do things? He would have a total fit. I put him on a waiting list too for a regular doctor as he hasn't been to one in a few years. They finally called after 8 months, and he said he didn't make an appointment because "there's nothing wrong with me." He is bipolar, has diabetes, had high cholesterol, and the list goes on and on. Why is it that he's fine but I'm a horrible person (according to my brother who is now showing clear signs of mental instability too when I went on a day trip, and he drove irratically while screaming at his nasty wife). How do I stop worrying about the future and live today?
==Religious groups like church, temple, etc. If you are affiliated with one, reach out to them and ask for help with repairs, yard work, errands.
==Cultural/Ethnic community groups who have a structure to call in volunteer help and coaching and support that would be much harder or impossible to access any other way. Make your situation and needs known so help can come to you.
== Social services can connect you to community and government resources for monetary support, in-home help, and other support resources.
== Be very honest with the doctor. If the doctor is not listening and blows you off, you have every right to use another doctor. Many family practice/GP docs are not trained on the specialties of aging and miss signs of things they ought to pursue. And let's be honest and say that there is still a lot of sexism in medicine where anything coming out of a female isn't taken seriously. Your job is to advocate for dad's best interest no matter what.
My mother also has bi-polar, diabetes, and advanced dementia. If it had been up to her, she would have preferred to remain in her filthy hoarding house, with no hot water, no telephone, and eventually no power because she had forgotten how to pay bills. Her food was rotten and her medication was all mixed up. She was manic a lot of the time from not taking her meds right, not eating, not eating safe food, and having chronic UTIs. The roof leaked and the hot water heater, dishwasher, washing machine, sinks, toilets were all rusted out completely. She had lost her reasoning to understand her unsafe situation. She was not able to correct it.
I had to step in and become her guardian, which meant overriding some of what she said was & wasn't going to happen. My goal was to be able to tell any judge who would look at her case that I had done every single thing in my power to keep her safe - even if it made her mad. I didn't want anybody to suggest elder abuse even though I was 1800 miles away.
Not sure if you've said much about your dad's financial situation, just know that, again, in their situation they make too much for any of the formal - means based - government resources. But is your dad, by any chance, a veteran?
Does he have a wheelchair? that is one thing they did get for him through his doctor but it took their son to do that and he's the one who did it himself, not her, to make it easier to take him to the doctor but she's running into that herself even though it's a female doctor - now she's the one with the ethnics - she's Indian from India, so wondering if that's what's going on or the not being trained because she had seemed to just dismiss her and him in pursuing anything except we were told she'd signed him up for their geriatric program but then we were told he wasn't but also we were told he didn't show up but she says they were never told so not sure if she just did it and then when found out just didn't take him or even cancelled. But she definitely would like something that would get him what he needs. So if you have something like that or if he is a veteran maybe you could go that route.
I didn't get the idea his house was as bad as sandwich's mom's and I'm assuming you're paying the bills anyway so that wouldn't happen but then if it's even just falling apart you might be able to use that to get guardianship but still not sure how much good that will actually do; think it would depend on how much help you can get anyway; sometimes it gets to a point it's just hard to get enough help even if you can get all you can; they're just past that point; that's why they wanted me to get it for my dad.
But she may have not done that to let it get like that so that she could step in and get guardianship; my dad did, of course, wind up in the hospital, more like your mom, and they're the ones that pushed the guardianship issue
Do what you can but don't stop living your own life. Caring for my mother is a whole different thing as she actually tries and fights for her health. If things went the other way around and he outlived her I wouldn't have hesitated for a second to put him in a home, as cruel as that may sound.
This is what I was thinking about when someone told them to "repaint your room," etc, etc ... the "falling apart" has to do w/more major things than paint, I'm thinking ... just like here.
So, whatever they are, hope you can get them dealt with since I noted that you do want to stay in that house. I don't. What I want/need to do is get back where warmth makes a physically nicer atmosphere. Missing where I lived in the SW.