Doc thinks she has dementia. I agree but just now reading a book about dementia. She wants to be seen/called daily, told everything, etc. I don’t want to tell her everything. It’s none of her business. I understand she is losing her mind, feeling confused, depressed, mad. She truly does not appreciate anything done for her. It’s like we should do everything for her. Have everything revolve around her and are supposed to be happy about it. She’s spent so much time lately being mad at me because I’m grown, have a life, and physically ill. I’ll need surgery in a couple of weeks. I don’t know how she’ll handle that. She’s mad at me too because she doesn’t have any friends. But she is not friendly though. We’ve tried setting her up with friendly outgoing loving elderly ladies to be friends with and she refused to talk to them. I’m at a loss as of how to handle this.
Maybe you can make 1 day a week (give her a choice of days .. like 'Mother, Tuesdays or Thursdays?'), the same day (or every other week.. whatever works best), and you always make it happen. Tell her that's your day with her to do whatever she most loves, misses.. shop, eat lunch out, scenic drive.. whatever. It gives her something to look forward to do with just you regularly. It may help ease her anxiety, loneliness, anger and give her hope for those special times. You may find it to be a day you, too, look forward to.
Getting it calm in there is important to your successful recovery. If you can't do the special day yet, you can still tell her your plans and ask if she'd like to do that once you're well .. and for her to be thinking about and making a list of the many things she'd love to do and things she misses, that you will make happen.
Take care.
Nothing I can say will make your situation better. Just know that you're not alone, as this seems to be pretty much a universal problem. I think it's all part of the aging process. I watched my mother change from a loving, giving person to someone different. She didn't stop loving us, but made our life a living hell the last couple of years of her life. Here's what I learned. Be the best caregiver a child can be for an elderly parent. Love them, care for them, and often times that means being the brunt of their anger at losing their health and the life they once knew. One day, when she's gone, you'll be glad you did.
Evil 🦹♀️ at times.
I finally got her pants off to clean her & changed diaper...a miracle. I need a Valium. & It was a relatively pleasant day since my brother & nephews & the dog 🐶 came to visit..& she had to make it miserable for me ...all I know is if I cannot get her back into bed, then I’m not going to take her out of bed anymore.
Tend to legal issues early on. Get a durable POA of Healthcare and a financial POA. I recommend Pay On Death benefits of checking and saving accounts. This document does not go to probate and will help with paying off medical and funeral costs.
Remember to take care of yourself. You will need your own physical and mental health days. She may not like it, but if you have an established care giver, she will survive. Her attendance at an adult daycare 1 to 5 days per week may result in friendships, easing your burden as the center of her attention.
Don't make my mistake: I was my mother's care partner 24/7 for seven years with only two days off. It wore me out, deteriorated my own health and created friction with siblings not interested in care giving and destroyed personal relationships. On the other hand, I got to know my mother as a unique person other than "MOM" and I acquired an immense understanding of family dynamics.
In the end, the journey was exhausting and yet I felt honored to have cared for my mother. Somewhere along the way, I realized that she really had always loved me. That knowledge made the entire experience well worth my time and effort.
Good Luck and God Bless.
tend to lega
Remember to take care of yourself. you will need time for me to rest physical relaxation annu and health issues here
I was kind of hoping as my mom's dementia progresses she will forget how to push buttons. But yours is in memory care and still does it, Ugh!
I've done this & really got a lot from it - especially the videos links with personal stories. I think there was a forum too.
A work friend also did the course who was struggling with her self-centered Mother (pre Alz diagnosis). She was being run ragged as Mother lived in a rural area, was no longer driving & needing more & more help (but refusing all non-daughter help). It literally took a village to convince her to move to AL, neighbours, relatives & her trusted Doctor. By the time she moved, she was malnourished, skipping meds, confused & getting paranoid. Her daughter supported her Mother wishes to stay in her home as long as possible but her own health suffered badly through stress, anxiety, sleep problems & more.
She said if doing all this again, she would not enable anyone to live beyond their own capabilities. If they cannot manage - get professionals (Doctor, Social Worker) in to advise them. She has been a terrific support to me helping me to avoid that slippery slope she was on.
All I can suggest is have a good think about where your stopping point is. 1 X shopping a week? Daily phone calls? 7 days morning & evening visits? How much will you be willing to support Mum before you become a broken record saying "It's time to move to assisted living".
Also you need counseling to help you understand where your mother is coming from. This is NOT about you! It is about fining people who understand how this illness progresses and changes how a person acts and thinks. She is afraid , she does not understand what is happening to her and why. She is not attacking you!!!
Find home nurses, home helpers, psychologists, church groups that specialist in Hospice care..
YOU MUST NOT TRY TO TAKE CARE OF EVERYTHING NO ONE CAN IN THESE SITUATIONS..and pray! You are not alone you can email me IF I can help Best to You! Dr Jack Grenan
She needs assistance from others. I can empathize with her on that. I am not heartless. Help can be provided by a non family member. Remove yourself from this burden and I guarantee that you will feel as if a heavy weight has been lifted off of your shoulders. Look into future care for your mom and gracefully step away. Start living for you again. You deserve it.
Best wishes to you. Hugs!
This may very well be one of the hardest things you will ever deal with in your life. I feel so bad for people who are just beginning this journey with a LO and I'm so sorry you are facing it. I have been there and I am not exaggerating when I tell you it is horrible. When vascular dementia started out of nowhere with my mother, it was like being hit by a freight train. It knocked us down and chewed us up!! It wasn't any fun for her either, I will add. She knew something was wrong but there was nothing we could do to make her understand what was wrong. We couldn't even make it good for her. Nothing we did helped her or made life pleasant for her. Reading all you can to understand this will help but it isn't going to make it easier. Even though I would have patience with my mother because I realized she had no control over what she did, I would still lose it occasionally and have a crying breakdown.
If I could give you any advice it would be to go ahead and look into memory care facilities for your mom. Even if you can keep her at home in the beginning, there will come a time when you probably can't handle it anymore. We tried keeping my mother at home and taking care of her but it was killing us and it was also more expensive than placing her somewhere. We had help because we couldn't do 24/7 but that comes with its own set of problems.
Did I mention this is horrible? It is exhausting, heartbreaking and terrible for everyone, including the person with dementia. Try to find compassion for her, even when you think she is doing everything she can against you. She isn't. She just can't help it.
I wasn't dying, and didn't. I expected a cure (well, remission) and I got it and a few months after I was done with chemo I made a short visit to her and let her know I was OK.
Luckily my mother cannot figure out how to use her phone and so phone calls are pretty much only when somebody wanders in to her apt and she grabs them and has them 'dial'.
I did feel bad, for a while, but when I realized how much more peaceful it was to not see her every week and deal with 'real mom' or 'dementia mom'--I'd do it again if need be.
Hey, My own KIDS grey rock me. My son is currently choosing that. Whatever. I told him if he couldn't be kind to me, to not be anything to me for a while, until he grew up. (He's 40, so I guess he's having his first midlife crisis, I don't know, Never got one, myself.) Better than him calling and yelling at me.
Watching my DH and his mom, who has turned the corner from 'nutty' to 'gone' has been heartbreaking. No love lost between us, but to see her treat him so horribly bad (that's not new) but to KNOW that the chance for them to make up is loooong gone. She's someone else, entirely. And she's not coming back----very sad.
HE expects her to think coherently and logically----and she couldn't BEFORE why he thinks she can NOW is beyond me.
I tell her as LITTLE as humanly possible because the more you tell these types of people the more fodder they have for the mill. My daughter is an RN and going back East for 13 weeks.............we are not even telling my mother! She will call her grandmother weekly, as usual, so my mother won't even know anything has changed. My DD will visit gma before she leaves and as soon as she gets home, and make up excuses in the meantime, if asked, as to why she's not visiting. Otherwise, I will hear nothing but 'worrying' and 'dread' and 'what if' scenarios for 13 weeks while DD is gone. Nope, not gonna have it.
Set boundaries with your mother now. Before things get worse, which they will with dementia, it's the nature of the disease. They get SO self centered, the entire world revolves around them even MORE than usual. So figure out when you are going to call/visit, etc., and when you will get off the phone or cut the visit short. My mother knows that if she gets too verbally abusive, it's time for me to either cut the call short or leave her room in the MC. Some things can be negotiable while other things should not be. Taking verbal abuse for long periods of time should not be something you're willing to negotiate.
Remember, you can't make an unhappy person happy. You can, however, keep YOUR sanity throughout your mother's disease. She's only 73 and you may have a LOT more years of nonsense ahead of you. Establish boundaries NOW and you'll be a lot better off. Also, does the IL place your mom live in have a continuum of care option available? Can she move to AL or MC if the need arises? That's always a good option to have on the back burner. Plan B when Plan A falls apart.
Wishing you the very best of luck, my friend.