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My mother calls me constantly--but at the wrong number (for instance, my home number when I'm at work or on weekends, my work number but I'm home) and it makes no difference to the away message, she doesn't listen. Yesterday I came home to 3 messages starting at 8am until 5pm--on my home phone. Her messages start pleasant but as the day goes on and I don't call back (because I didn't know she called in the first place), her messages start getting anxious, then angry then begging me to call. But when I finally call back, its "just wanted to hear from you." Mind you, I call every day. Thing is, she doesn't remember I call now because of the Alzheimer's so really makes no difference if I call or not call. There is really nothing to say on a daily basis. I get up, go to work, come home, rinse, repeat mon-friday lol yeah that's sad. I can't really talk about work because she is incapable of holding a real conversation or following one. I am going away on vacation for 2 weeks for the first time in over 15 years. Even though I tell her i'll be away, I can't imagine the panic she will have. I will be out of the country so no, can't call on a daily basis. I'm hoping my father will catch her making the calls and remind her I'm not home.

Funny thing is she doesn't bother calling my brother lol

My own grown kids don't call or text me every day. I don't expect them to. Where does this expectation and demand come from with our mothers? I think its very controlling.
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Cinderella, perhaps it's not a control issue but rather a loneliness issue? Your grown children have lives of their own and are presumably moving forward, not backward or standing still as are many elders.

Can your mother still drive? Go anywhere she wants? Work in her garden? Travel? Or is she limited by physical conditions? That physical mobility makes a big difference in the ability of someone to find her own interests and pursue them rather than turn to her family for companionship.
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Cinderella, yes, it starts with calling numerous times a day, it becomes calling five times in five minutes, twenty plus messages in your voicemail when you return from work. Eventually she will forget how to use the phone, or what a phone is.

It is lonliness, for now, but will become much more predominant as time goes on. Is she living at home? Maybe now is the time for her to move to assisted living, or independent living in a senior complex where she would have somebody else to talk to each day, activities, day trips....

If you see a move in your mom's future, when dementia is in the picture, the sooner the better. The adjustment will be far easier for her as she may have some sort of an idea where she is.
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Where does this expectation and demand come from?

Well, let's face it, some people are like that - but they're not the issue so let's gratefully ignore them for once. The issue is to do with people who have been more or less normal and reasonable in their behaviour previously, but who are now turning into phone stalkers who freak out if you don't instantly answer the phone. What's going on with them?

Sit in a chair and imagine that you have an uneasy feeling that you should be somewhere else but you're not sure where. Your thinking skills don't seem to be working; as you might feel, for example, if you'd gone without sleep for 24 hours and then were shaken awake just after you'd dropped off - you'd seem to be alert but decision-making and information-processing? Fat chance. You think your memory's fine, and the gaps where information is missing are something that you are unaware of.The only location you can picture with any certainty is a house you definitely lived in sixty years ago. The only people you are completely confident you have a connection with are your mother and father, who must be around somewhere but you don't know where to look for them, and your children; those are the physiologically rooted bonds that go deep into the heart of your being. You have a sense of dread and you're not sure why, but something isn't right. You must consult someone. Who you gonna call?
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Cat, you need your time, too, and it sounds like you already have a schedule you can adhere to. I would offer this, however...set your boundaries but monitor the behavior in case it gets worse.

My Grandmother (who was in an assisted living facility) began doing this with my Father. After talking to her once or twice a day, he thought he was setting boundaries by not answering the phone anymore that day. My Grandmother would continue to call and leave messages, slowly spiraling into a very horrid state of panic and anger. None of us had any experience with dementia or any other brain disorder. But looking back on it now I can clearly see she should have been tested. I don't know, because of the lack of diagnosis, if her mental state could have been helped with medications, but I do know that the problem got worse, not better. So please, just be wary.

Hugs to you for being a great daughter!
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Countrymouse, that was a very good and yet sad example of the potential of just what the Demented mind goes through while trying to make heads or tails of their thinking process. I pray that it never happens to me! My own Grandmother was a blank Tape at the end of her life, although they did find a latent Syphilis result in a blood test after a very disconcerting episode in which she had an upsetting disagreement with my Mother ( my Grandmother immigrated from Wales, to live with my parents when I was 12 years old), and she went to her bed, stayed there for 3 straight days, and my parents sent her to the ER via cabulance, she stayed in hospital until she was Dx'd with Organic Brain Disease, the precursor to Alzheimer's back in those days and she then went to live in a Nursing Home, as it became way too much for my Mom who still had 2 kids left in the home, and she had cared for her for 7+ years, and had had enough! There were a lot of other mental issues going on with Gma, that just weren't evaluated and treated way back then, and of course, I was only a kid, and don't remember all of the details.
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She's laying a guilt trip on you. DON'T let her! Let me tell you for about the last 3 yrs of my mother's life, I did call her every day; sometimes even more than once a day. A disaster! While I was speaking, she would be, too! I said "mother, it does not work when we both talk at the same time. So I'll talk first and now it's your turn." Response= silence! She clammed up like 5 y.o.!
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One time she didn't speak right away. I'm ready to call 911 on my other phone, thinking the worst! Her response=I was getting situated! Scared the h##l out of me!
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Garden, Glad, Country, when my parents were well they were very polite. They knew instinctively when to call and always let you off the hook if you were busy. How lucky was I? They even frowned on the intrusive behavior of some of the parents of my friends. They are different people now due to dementia, ill health, loneliness, and isolation. Now dad calls nonstop some days and is very demanding. He wants it now! Mom is super needy, child like, helpless, and hungry for company. I'm trying so hard to keep them happy which is impossible, and still work, sneak in a little fun, and rest. Thanks for letting me vent. You are the best!
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I understand completely how you feel. I have been the sole caregiver for my mom since my dad passed 27 years ago. My husband and I bought the house across the street from mom the year after my dad passed. Mom hasn't needed a lot of help until the last 8 years or so. I have to say, it is sometimes "all consuming". I also work full time as an IT specialist for the State, so I work on average 50 hours a week. I still call and/or go over to see mom now every day. Yes she is demanding, a drama queen, a hypochondriac, and very selfish at times. However, she has also been through breast cancer twice, back surgery, a partial knee replacement on one leg, and a full knee replacement surgery on the other knee, which ended up being 3 surgery's in 4 months time because of osteoporosis and broken bones. She had to spend 8 months in a rehab facility. Do I like having to deal with her attitude (which is awful most of the time as she has been dealing with depression for many, many, many years), her drama and her countless demands? absolutely not... but I don't see any other choice. Thankfully my husband is very supportive and doesn't complain that I have to spend so much time taking care of mom. Two weeks ago I went for a walk after work (my exercise and stress reliever). while I was out walking for 45 minutes, mom called my phone 8 times and left me 4 very nasty messages because I didn't come right over after work and get her trash for her. Wow... needless to say, I was not happy. She always apologizes later for her behavior, but the apologies get old. I'm 50 years old now.. I want a life too... but I just cannot stop caring for her. No one else will, and I sure cannot live with that either. The only advise I can give is hang in there, give yourself a break as often as you can.
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I am the go to person for my 102 year old mother and she does not have dementia or alzheimers (she remembers everything). She has been in an assisted living facility for about 3 months because she is frail and needs help with her daily needs. There are caregivers available 24 hours a day if she needs assistance with anything. Needless to say she is very demanding and if she wants something outside her home, I am expected to get it asap. If she has made a doctor's appointment on a day I have other plans, I am expected to cancel them.. I can't put my life on hold to help her with her daily so I have set boundaries for her to follow. Each week I put my schedule on her calendar, which she needs to work around and I visit her once a week. She has always been a social person and her facility has something for her to do every hour of everyday and there is no reason for her to be lonely. She is difficult to be around because "nothing" makes her happy, and I find myself treating her as though she was a child.
No it is not awful of you to not to phone your mother everyday. If you set some boundaries for her to follow, life will be much better for you.
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Thanks all, for your input. What I've learned from your comments is that I need to establish boundaries (which I have) and stick to them. It is difficult, though, when mom has a hissy fit when, for example, I say I can take her grocery shopping on a Thursday instead of a Friday. She would also prefer to go shopping first thing in the morning, but I usually can't be there until noon because I work in the mornings. This has always bugged her, but I have a job. She always has to be at her doctors' appointments a half hour early. If I happen to be 5 or 10 minutes late picking her up at the appointed time (when there is still lots of time to get to the doctor's office), she freaks out. This is what I deal with constantly. So funny that when my brother takes her places she treats him with respect and never gives him a hard time. And he's retired, so he has much more time to deal with mom's needs.
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Cat, I don't know if your mom worked outside the home while raising a family, but I think a lot of our ongoing issues are because our moms can't relate to the juggling act we do. Errands were fun and an outing to them, to us, they are a drudge that we try to consolidate and reduce. Appointments were made without thought to getting time off, and schedules for shopping, laundry and such were set in stone. We, on the other hand, throw in a load as we run off to tend to something else.

Yet another aspect of generational differences colliding.

As I asked my mom to adapt her usual routine and I adapted mine, I explained it as "helping me to be able to help her". So calmly, decoratively tell her that while you can still take her shopping etc., you'll need to do it on your schedule.

And yes, I've wondered if I had a brother if he wouldn't have gotten a pass on helping.
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Oh, I think you're totally right, Linda. Mom worked at home as a seamstress, so she was able to run our household on a strict schedule: Mondays, laundry and ironing. Fridays, housework. Saturdays, grocery shopping as soon as the stores opened at 9 a.m. Sundays, church and visits with family. Meanwhile, our generation does household chores when and if we get around to it. So, yes, it's always been difficult for mom to change her regimen to suit my schedule.
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Sadly for us Cat, your Mum's generation see men not as equal to us but Demi Gods to be worshipped & adored or overgrown children who need cossetting in case they over stretch themselves.
Where as women "the weaker sex" (lol) in men's eyes of that generation, run homes and look after their man/men.
It's frustrating but too late to expect them to understand equality :~(
You're doing a grand job though :~)
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@LucyCW: Also a good point. I am not really a nurturing person, even though I am kind and compassionate, if that makes sense. I'm mostly a feminist and have always had a career, so mom has trouble relating to me and my lifestyle sometimes. She waited on my dad hand and foot. I remember at the dinner table all he needed to do was point at the salt and pepper shakers and she'd hand them to him. Whereas, if my husband did that, I'd ask him if his arms were painted on. LOL
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Lol Cat me too!
Thankfully we're all different which means we can meet different needs.
Personally I am the kind of woman who'd have loved to have children, I couldn't so I raised other people's privately & as my career. Problem solved :~) Though I still have my "feminist moments" :~)
I believe that unless we're choosing to deliberately damage others or the planet, then we should be free to live our own style of life as far as possible, within the confines of our society. You shouldn't need to apologise for not having a nurturing nature & wanting to have contact boundaries. I shouldn't need to apologise for having a nurturing nature & wanting contact boundaries.
Rejoice in our differences, celebrate our similarities and stay as safe in ourselves as we can! For me that's the way to go :~)
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