i need time for me, mom won't go along with respite (dr. suggested location). Mom wants inappropriate relatives instead. These people are not dependable, that's why we'd like two weeks of year for her in respite so we can take vacation to see our kids in another state. We live in FL winters. Mom has her place we have ours. We bought our condo so we could be nearby. I don't mind having her in FL and part of summer, but not all the time. We take care of all her needs, including being at her place overnight when ill, afraid, etc. We drive her everywhere all the time. For summers we care for mom in our home. Her health is failing, she is becoming difficult and demanding. My sister is poa and exec of the estate and will not take care of mom. I'm getting angry that I care for her and she won't help be for two weeks by going into respite so I can have a decent respite for me. We are arguing, I finally told her to shut up! I don't deserve her carrying on about her wishes that won't work and will ruin our plans when her people back out (This has happened before a number of times). My husband has interceded for me so at least I have that. My sister,POA and exec, has been a real jerk. I want to know if I can put mom into respite without mom or sisters input. Sister will not take her, mom doesn't want to go.
My mom just passed away on Friday. I am an only child and got little to no respite. You must at all cost take respite. You have your husband for support. Think of being on an airplane where they tell you to put your oxygen mask on first before you try to assist others. Any opportunity you get for respite you must take at all cost. If not, it is only to your detriment.
Please, take care of yourself, and helpful responses raised valid points. Folks only do to you what you allow.
Blessing and hugs...
Blessings
In my opinion, making hard decisions is the responsibility of the Health POA holder. It is also the responsibility of the family to assist and support where ever possible. It sounds like you are doing more than your share of caregiving right now. Your sister needs a reality check and telling her the dates you will be gone and actually leaving sounds like the wake up call she needs. If you are the person that is reluctant to see Mom in permanent assisted living/dementia care perhaps you need to support your sister with that decision. In my experience, people with dementia are unable to think so far ahead as to consider the impact of their decisions and immediate desires on their loved ones. The person stricken with dementia is often so involved with their own woes and ills they really cannot make good decisions with respect to their own care and balance that care against the welfare of others. Again, that is the disease, not your mother.
As her caregiver, you have to recognize a couple of things. First, you are doing angel's work. How many people would put their lives on hold for a parent? Would your sister? Obviously not.
Next, your mom is becoming (or already is) selfish. It's part of growing old. One's universe gets smaller and smaller and smaller until the ONLY thing we care about is getting our needs met. That's it. And we will do anything and say anything to GET them met. Your mom doesn't CARE that you need respite. She doesn't CARE that you're sacrificing your own independence to help her keep hers. She isn't thinking clearly anymore. And you've got to realize that.
When it comes to MY mom, "I'm the boss, Applesauce." (I love that expression; you'll read it a lot from me. And mom HEARS it a lot. Ha!) I'm a benevolent dictator with mom since she moved in with me a year ago. Maggie! How can you say those things? Let me tell you why. (And remind you why you should, too.)
I get up twice a night so mom won't have urine-soaked briefs on (which would aggravate skin lesions and could contribute to bedsores as she sits in her wheelchair 15 hours a day.) I generally STAY up at 4 am because I can't get back to sleep. I cook all of her meals -- from scratch because she has heart failure and salt is her enemy. No processed food. No restaurant food. No carry-ins. I dress her. I do her laundry. I'm her little feet as she can't walk across the room for a glass of water. Or a Kleenex. Or a cookie. Or....anything. I belt her up and walk her to the bathroom five or six times a day. I walk her to the front window so she can peer out. I organize her meds; liaison with her doctors; take her to her appointments; pay her bills; watch over the home she left to a tenant; work with her therapists; put salve on her butt; wipe it; wash it; change her Depends 3 times a day; laugh with her; visit with her; joke with her; arrange social outings for her; try to keep her busy and happy.
And for being her willing slave? I know I deserve respite. I don't care whether or not she's happy about it, because she's in her own small little world. My "real mom" would be mortified with her current plight. But right now? She sucks the life right out of me and doesn't care. Hahahaha!!
I'm listing all of these things (and, believe me, there are plenty more, as you and others know) because you need to realize how VALUABLE you are to your mom. And that you are entitled to whatever respite you want and need. You cannot take good care of your mom if you don't take good care of yourself. Period.
So. My advice to you is to get your mom's POA and HCPOA; call senior social services in your area after that's done and tell them you're having trouble with your mom about respite care; if she has money, start spending it on her care and your respite; if she doesn't have money, get a reverse mortgage on her home so she does; and pat yourself on the back for being a wonderful, loving daughter. Because you are.
Back to the problem, if you are being pressured by the family to go on vacation or if you need to go on the trip, I think it would be better to just interview some live in home health aides from a respectable agency. Try to select one who seems to click with your mother. Pay for it out of your funds or your mother's savings. If it is a problem getting the money from your mother's savings, tell your sister you and she will "share" the cost. That should get a rise out of your sister, she will likely refuse to use her funds but perhaps she or one of her children can "free themselves up" to spend some "quality time " with your mother.
Going forward, if you wish to continue to care for your mother--respect that but don't depend on an undependable sister.
Caregiving (even if in separate houses) is demanding. For over a decade, I never took a vacation as I needed to be with my aging father. It is what it is.
After they are gone, you have all the time in the world to travel.
Good luck get the home health aide in there while you go on the trip.
You're wise, you're wonderful.
So - decision has been made, and it is likely the right one. There is no hard and fast rule. Either preparing a person with visits and pictures and meeting people in advance if they are reasonable enough to benefit from that and accept the transition is needed, or just doing it when the time comes if attempting to prepare them will result in nothing but anxiety, anger and digging in of heels and possibly making the trip impossible without the use of force. The people who know her best should probably decide this, maybe with some input from the facility...but beware advice which starts wtih "its ALWAYS better to..."
The poster above who compared the situation to having a disagreeable cat has a point, but that analogy has its limits. If the cat was clawing and hurting people, you could not keep it. If it was just disagreeable, you'd roll your eyes and snap a funny picture when you could and post it on Facebook, but your whole life would not be consumed by it and its care the way it does with a fellow human being.
As for respite care - no - do not ask your mother if she wants to go. You never ask someone with AD if he or she WANTS to do something because the person will usually say no. Just arrange it and if need be, tell your mom a fiblet about where you are taking her on the day you do take her. I bet she will have a much better time than she or you realizes!
The thing is, I'm not clear why you and your husband can't cross your fingers, go on vacation, and let her take the consequences of her own bizarre choice of caregiver. What's the worst that could happen? Certainly, if your mother has capacity, then I think in your place I'd be prepared to wash my hands of her, temporarily of course, if she rejected her own doctor's recommendation for respite care. Moreover, this is really for your mother and your POA sister to work out between them, isn't it?
It comes down to that thing of your carrying a responsibility without having the authority to manage it in a reasonable way. You can't order her into respite care. You can't insist that she selects caregivers you feel are up to the job. Ok fine, if she won't allow you to have that authority, she can have it her own way; but in that case neither can you be responsible for her while you and your husband have the break to which you are entitled.
Your sister, on the other hand, has willingly accepted POA. Mm-hm. Sounds like she needs to be reminded that that status DOES have implied responsibilities, don't you think?
in my case, it took a threatening letter to the family doctor - threatening class action from all the neighbors in our block of flats if a tragedy occurred. That got him moving. Mum wound up in hospital where they found her dementia was so bad, she should have been put in care five years previously.
mum is now in permanent secure accommodation. Fortunately she needs help to use the phone, otherwise I would have no peace.
but I had to revert to drastic action to save my own life.