Anyone who comes to visit or help or clean or entertain this 80 year of woman only hears how bad she has it and that no one helps her. Both are factually untrue. She is extremely well cared for. It is impossible to bring someone to socialize with her because they feel they can never do enough for her. She had 2 hospital stays and my sister, an RN, overheard her telling aide that her'daughters are mean to her.' It is exactly the opposite. How to stop the victim mindset?
Was your Mom a lot different before this happened to her. Was she light and breezy and full of love and praise? If so, then this change brought on by her aging will be a shock. If not, then it is the same old same old.
I suspect that the only "mindset" that can be changed is your own. I doubt very seriously that your well cared for Mom convinced a nurse who had already visited with you, that your are meanies. What others thing is something that you cannot afford to take on, in any case. You are busy enough.
It hurts. It is unfair. Yes. Just like so much else in life. But ultimately it is just Mom. We used to have a nurse come in to work every night in a foul mood, complaining about everything in the world, and out of her hearing we would just tease. We recognized it as just a habit of hers. She was a good nurse and a good person with a bad habit. Had she chosen to break it she could have, but she was entirely unaware of it. And for your Mom it is not a choice any more. Her mindset is likely her mindset. Try to approach it with humor. Not much else will help.
This is a long term effort, but it would be worth it if she takes pride in something she's doing, and it can help overcome the self pity. She needs something serious to help her refocus her attention.
Sans dementia...we just get more intensely 'us'.
My grandmothers were just adorable and sweet and interested in everything about their grandkids and great grands. My kids do not appreciate the blessing that is for them--they were lucky!
Neither my mother nor my MIL give a rat's patoot about my kids and definitely not about my grands (their great grands). They are 100% concerned about themselves, other people are def on the periphery of their mindsets, and it has always been that way.
My mother is just happy to be fussed and catered to. My MIL is simply a mean old woman who hates everyone.
There's absolutely nothing you can do with a 90 yo who acts 3. we just keep boundaries really tight and we (DH and I) rarely see our mothers. Our kids can do what they want--visit them or not. (Mostly not).
The saving grace is that my grands don't GET that they are as important to their GG's as last weeks recycling. Seriously, they don't miss what they never had.
DH has spent hours trying to talk to his mother about the positives in her life and she simply refuses to listen. She actually stated that her PCP had said she has had the worst life of anyone she's ever met.
When my Mom entered her AL I found out that the head nurse was married to a boy I had dated 50 yrs ago. I told the Nurse this. On one of my visits, the Nurse came over to Mom and me to have a chat. She said to Mom "your daughter used to date my husband". My Mom, who suffered from Dementia said "yeah, she got around". I was mortified. It was far from the truth. My Mom was a sweety, loved her and had been married to my Dad for 55 yrs but before that she was married at 18, divorced, had me out of wedlock, then married Dad when I was 2. This was in the late 40s. And then to say I got around. 😊 I can laugh at it now but not so funny in front of a stranger.
I had a therapist tell me there are 3 kinds of people in the world:
1) people who were victimize, but see themselves as survivors.
2) people who were victimize and see themselves as victims.
3) people who are predators.
Now, the second group see themselves as victims use their victimize (poor me) to victimize others; therefore, they become predators!
Just something for you to think about!
My mother had a good life with my dad, but if you ask her she would say, "he was awful and her life was h3ll." She loves to play the "poor me" so people feel sorry for her then she uses and abuses the very person who believed her sob story. And somehow my mother is "Always" the victim!!!! The problem (no matter what it is) is "Always" someone else's fault!!!
I just quit trying to help her unless it is convenient for me or an emergency, then she can tell everyone what a rotten daughter I am and be some what telling the truth.
You must protect your own wellbeing and honestly, it doesn't matter what anyone else thinks about what you do or don't do for her.
Great big warm hug! You matter as much as she does!
It is what it is. Don't try to change it, just smile and walk away. I highly doubt others are believing her stories anyway.
Good luck!
The thing I've tried to keep foremost in my mind, because of course, it drives me crazy - not remembering anything nice: meals, trips, visits, phone calls, animal interactions, etc. - is that for her, it's all real. She is in the moment, 100%. She has no long-term or short-term memory, so when she whines that the cat never comes to her and that it doesn't love her it's because at that moment, the cat is not in her arms. I have dozens of photos where he is.
She has always had to fight her low self-esteem and self-worth, and this is a manifestation of that. For her, feelings are facts and sometimes I need to work through that with her and remind her of the facts. When she says "I don't remember any of that (the nice things) " I remind her she also doesn't remember who I am, where she lives or what she had for breakfast.
It's hard, but it demands compassion. Remember what she feels in that moment feels like it's been that way forever. For my mom, when she's having a good moment, it's been a "great day" and when it's a bad moment it's "terrible day."
Take a walk. Take a breath, and remind yourself, for your own sake, that FEELINGS are not FACTS. The fact is she is confused, hurting, scared and that can translate to angry and manipulative. But at this point, she's not going to change, can't change intentionally. You can't change her, and you can't change how it feels to you, but you can change how you react and what you do next. Sometimes all you can do is agree and say "that sounds tough."
Much love.
My 95 yr old mom is now on hospice in a memory care facility. We had a window visit yesterday. She barely spoke and stared fixedly at some point in space. But when she did talk, she would tell fragments of persecution stories: she wanted to do something but there weren’t enough chairs, the women would not talk to her, and so on.
My point- some folks just act like victims, as a way of being.
So, that was before social media. How about setting up a Facebook page in her name, or even using your own page, and posting photos and comments about her life. "Here we are, at lunch today. Mom had a nice salad. We shopped and got her new shoes. Take a look". Or, "Mom's residence let us know that they were having an outdoor BBQ tonight".
You need to get ahead of her and post good things that are happening, showing her doing fun/nice things, so that her complaints are seen as what they are, an elder basically unhappy with life in a way that you cannot fix.
Life has not been kind to a great many of us. We cannot keep letting the past poison our present or our future. Next time, take a deep breath, thank her for the gift (that's the polite and least hazardous answer). Do not discuss it. Just go on with celebrating your holiday.
As people grow old, the margins of their world contract. There are fewer reality checks (and those that do exist are not always readily accepted) There are fewer "new" things to distract them from old thought patterns. And they are not searching for "new", anyway. This is not the world that they once knew and it is scary. They want what is familiar, predictable... even if that sometimes means old unhealthy personal relations. Sorry, but that is the truth about human aging. Fight it though you may, It is what it is and there is very little you can do about it.
So don't feel responsible. Don't blame yourself or worry too much about what other people think. There is a limit to how much sympathy your mother's self pity can elicit... even from well meaning outsiders. Don't waste time dwelling on past hurts and misunderstandings. Take care of those closest to you. And congratulate yourself on trying to provide some comfort for your difficult-to-please mom. You are doing the best you can. Angels can do no more.
I don't think I'd realized how bad Mom's behavior had gotten until I got a little distance from it. She expects me to call her EVERY day and sit on the phone for an hour listening to her problems. Anything that might be going wrong with me or spouse is simply not on the radar. One day recently Mom mentioned to me it had occurred to her that spouse and I are actually going to get old ourselves someday and need care - like this was a real revelation, that we are actually human beings with minds and needs of our own instead of existing only as resources to serve her and her problems (!)
I probably need to take some of this to a message board I'm on for people who have narcissistic personality disorder - I'm not a doctor, but some of the symptoms I read of that condition have been occurring all my life. Now that Mom is elderly it's like they're on steroids.
Just jumping in to say I'm here and dealing with this in case anyone else is as well - I see my friend Chriscat from the narcissism thread, I'm sure we're going to have plenty to talk about here as well! xo