I often wonder if I'm not spending enough time, but frankly, I'd lose my mind if I spent more than a few hours a day with my mom. She lives in my house (in her own apartment), but she's in stage 6/7 of Alzheimer's and she sleeps a lot of the time, and gets mad and very agitated when anyone tries to help her - which visiting her requires, as she needs help with most things. She doesn't wander, her stove is unplugged, and she has plenty of things to eat without any help - cups of applesauce, protein bars, cookies, granola bars, cheese sticks, etc..., and I make her things she can eat without having to use utensils on the weekends. She gets fed M-F at daycare, where she spends about 5 hours and I spend about 2 hours later in the evening with her on weeknights. On weekends, she gets about 4 -5 hours of my time split into 2 visits, once in the morning and once in the evening. She has cats, so she's not completely alone when I'm working or cleaning or running errands, all the stuff I'm doing when I'm not with her. Am I spending enough time? Am I awful not to spend more time with her? I'm trying to get her care organization to send home care people to her to help her in the mornings (when I can't), but they're cheap as hell and resisting doing anything extra for her. I can't afford to hire anyone.
Take care of yourself, too.,
Carol
I still feel guilty when taking time for myself........but I must. Otherwise, I will go crazy. at this stage our relationship has become more "clinical" that I would have ever expected. You are doing way more than me and you are to be commended.
But my mother has always liked her own company, and it sounds as if yours does too. There are such fine lines to tread, aren't there? Are you giving her privacy or isolating her? Are you helping or intruding? And that's before you even ask "how much time can a person of sound mind reasonably be expected to spend with someone who's not before she herself goes round the twist..?"
By virtue of the fact that you've given it thought, and you're doing a brilliant job of looking after your mother, I'd say the situation's fine as it is. If she were lonely or anxious, you'd hear about that instead of her getting annoyed when you help. I'm sure you'd know if she were unhappy.
I'm married with my own house to keep up and 4 pets to take care of, yet she wants me with her all the time. What am I supposed to do, just sit there and not talk? Mom needs help with almost everything and I pay her bills, take care of her checkbook and take her garbage out and go shopping for things she needs plus she comes to my house once a week for dinner and another day we go out to dinner, but she orders what I order because I don't think she can make sense out of a menu. I have one lady who cleans her house twice a week and another lady offers respite care a few hours a week. Sometimes I do feel guilty about not spending more time with her, but for my own sanityi just can't. I do what I can, because as this disease progresses, she does ger more self absorbed and if I spent time with her 24/7, it still wouldn't be enough. You are doing all you can. Get some relief, you deserve to have your own life as we all do. Good luck.
Any Time given to your parents is priceless, somegive none, I have heard it from the many cna's I have interviewed from nursing homesso pat yourself on the backand follow your gut, its always right.
I've started making her sandwiches for dinner (she eats them now - before she'd refuse because I made them) and I just got her some frozen dinners I can cook for her over this snowy 4-day weekend (we're supposed to get a foot of snow starting Wednesday night, so there'll be no daycare Thursday or Friday), and she's got lots of granola bars & applesauce for snacks. She's going through the Depends like crazy because she wads them up, closed, inside her pants - they absorb nothing, but get soiled and have to be tossed. It's ridiculous. If I try to help her put a pair on properly, she yells and shoves me away and tells me to leave her alone. The other night, I found her sitting on her kitchen floor (she must've fallen, but was unharmed), and she screamed at me for trying to help her up. I called my husband down, who can just pick her up like a doll and put her in a chair, and she wailed at him, too. After that, she seemed to forget the incident, and we watched the news and Jimmy Kimmel Live (she likes him) and things were pleasant enough.
Today, she's been alone since she got home from daycare at 2:30, and now it's 8 pm (I just got home from work and then shopping for supplies to get us through the snow days) and I'll be heading down to her apartment as soon as I put the groceries away and make her a sandwich. I cleaned her apartment on my lunch hour today - she thinks she's still cleaning it because it's clean and she never sees me clean it (so it must be her, right?). I just say, "Oh! That's nice!" when she describes a day filled with chores around the house that she performed.
I have a meeting coming up with her care organization (they take her Medicare/Medicaid in exchange for daycare and allegedly, home care when needed, but so far they've denied all requests for that), to talk about what we'll do when she needs 24/7 supervision - which given her recent fall and increasingly wobbly gait, is coming soon. I have 3 jobs, 2 of which keep me out of the house for hours at a time, so I can't sleep in her apartment or spend all day with her. My husband works, too - and I would never ask him to spend time with her that could require helping her change her Depends. That would freak both of them out. I hope the care organization "gets it" that I can't become a 24/7 caregiver AND keep a roof over our heads. It's all well and good to help keep seniors at home, but at some point, it's not what's best for the patient (so much time alone!) not to mention impossible for me as a person who works at least 50 hours a week.
There's got to be a better way. Thanks again! I look forward to any further feedback!