I'm 23 taking care of my 51 yr old mother. We're trying to figure out what's wrong with her. It has to be something in the frontal lobe because of how much her personality has changed. We had dementia ruled out, but I think he misdiagnosed her and we are searching for a second opinion. She has an IQ of 71 and her mental and emotional maturity varies between a 4 year old and a 13 year old. I can't go anywhere without her wanting me to buy something for her. She also has no judgement of what is socially acceptable. The other say we had a couple walk by us who were speaking spanish and she loudly asked me if they just spoke spanish around us because they know we can't understand it.
And another day when we were doing laundry at a coin op and she asked me if I would have sex with her.
Now, she's also not respecting my rules or personal space. I told her my room is off limits, but while I was away for a weekend on business she went in there and moved things. I have an old baby robot doll she's obsessed with and wants to have to sleep with, but it's just too creepy for me to let her have it. I have to lock my bedroom door in my own house. For now, she can take care of herself when I have to go away for a day or two. I check up on her every two hours and the place is still in one piece when I get back.
She's trying to get disability right now, but it's going to court and won't be resolved until august or later. I've been looking at homes that would take her and they range anywhere from 2k-7.5k a month. I don't know if I can make it until august, but I've only just started my career and I barely make 2k a month. What avenues can I look into? I have no idea where to start and I want to cry because I have no idea what to do.
The term “wet brain” is not scientifically valid, but refers to a very real condition known as Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome. This chronic brain syndrome is caused by long-term alcoholism and is accompanied by a triad of symptoms: (1) mental disturbance; (2) confusion, drowsiness, and paralysis of eye movements; and (3) ataxia, or a staggering gait. A primary cause for this is a thiamine (Vitamin B1) deficiency due to severe malnutrition and poor intestinal absorption of food and vitamins caused by alcohol. The wet-brain person acts much like the Alzheimer’s victim with loss of recent memory, disorientation with regard to time and place, confusion and confabulation, or telling imagined and untrue experiences as truth.
If the condition is related to the long-term alcoholism, it may not be diagnosed correctly if she does not tell doctors truth about her addiction. If you check online or call Alcoholics Anonymous, they can give you some more info on this. I speak from experience - it does not always get diagnosed because alcoholics lie to their doctors. hugs to you for your work - but get her the help she needs through social services. It needs serious medical help.
She's incontinent,and wears pads and depends. She says she doesn't realize she has to pee until it's too late, like her brain doesn't know (her words). This was one of the first symptoms she had. The next thing to start was her personality. She went from a person who was negative and would throw tantrums like a child; to being happy go lucky all time, even when she gets mad at me for not letting her have her way, it only lasts 10mins. I should note she was heavily abused sexually before the age of 6, which can account for some of her prior personality problems. She also used speed for two years, but hasn't done it at all for 20 years.
She's been on an anti-depressant for a few years now. We are seeing a new Psychiatrist now who thinks she might have frontal lobe dementia brought on my alcoholism and drug abuse. My mother also has a delayed blink (I call it her dead stare, she'll look at me and it doesn't look like their's anyone behind her eyes, some days) and the doctors who did her IQ test say it takes her about 7 seconds to process auditory information, I don't think this is true for visual. The Psychiatrist says it could also be Parkinson, or Huntington's dementia. Her mother had Alzheimers and ALS,which she died of at the age of 74 (in 1992 when when my mother was 29). I believe her grandmother also had either dementia or ALS, I'm not certain. It wasn't both though. Both her parents were heavy alcoholics, only quitting a year or two before their deaths.
We saw the head of Neurology at University hospital who told her it was all in her head, like someone who loses function of an arm or leg, but it's not because of a medical condition. I think he's full of crap. I wasn't with her when this one going on, it was with her ex partner. I just learned last week that this doctor is also a specialist in Dementia, so I have no idea now. The Psychiatrist wants her to see a Movement disorder doctor.
She has medicaid, but i don't know which plan it is and she doesn't know either. I have no idea how to do any of this stuff. I figured I would have time to learn when I had kids. I'm so thankful I don't right now, I don't think I could handle it.
I know I sound immature, but I really hate this responsibility. I want to focus on my career. She barely took care of me as a child, I have a mother complex due to her. Friends and my dad have to remind me not to mother them. My dad raised me on his own from 11, when he divorced her, and I'm starting to feel like she doesn't deserve me taking care of her. I can't throw her on to the streets, I don't have it in me, and for a few months I felt guilt over putting her into a home and her being so young. She cries when ever bring it up (I don't want to blindside her) My therapist said I have complicated grief due to the bond that was made with her as a baby, and since it wasn't broken before the age of 6 I still feel some sort of wired in loyalty to her. I'm getting over the guilt when it comes to a home now. She's just crossed too many of my personal boundaries.
Thank you all for the helpful advice. :)
Since your mom is so young, I'm not sure if she'd qualify for senior service help, but you could call your local Agency Area on Aging to see if she might. Another avenue would be to go to the National Alliance on Mental Illness at nami.org and find your local chapter and see if they might be able to give you some support as to next steps to get your mom some help.
Freqflyer's suggestions are good ones and I'm sure you'll get others. Please keep us posted on what you're able to do - this is a wonderful support platform and we all learn from each other. Hugs to you - you're a wonderful child to try to support your mom through this.
I would also go to a new doctor to see what medical issues your Mom has... if dementia is found, sound like your Mom might have dementia since your Mom has lost the ability to filter what she says, that would help you with Medicaid to find a home where Medicaid will help pay for 24-hour care.
Whatever you do, do not stop your career unless all avenues are exhausted. Keep looking, even if it means going back to the beginning and asking again.