Mom will be transitioning to assisted living where I live at which is 3 hours away from her own home. Initially she was to be placed closer to her home but my brother just said he couldn't help with her so now the plan has changed. She wants to go to her house first but I'm reluctant to do this because I fear it would make it worse for her when it is time to leave. I am so torn and on the verge of tears because I'm not sure what is the best to do. I am new at all of this and I have so much anxiety. Help.
Thank you for sharing that story about your brother. It brought tears to my eyes. I can almost picture him sitting on that porch. That is the way I will say goodbye to my house when I have to leave it.
I still remember taking my mom to her nursing home, and she stood at the car and cried, "My home!" as though she'd lost her mother. It was awful, but as someone else said, a home is like a sentient being, and when you've been with that home for 50 years in my mother's care, you can't walk away easily.
The mistake I did make was taking her back to the house once because we were out together and we had to go to the bathroom. The house was close, so I took her there. We didn't leave for over an hour, and she wandered from room to room, distraught.
We had planned to bring her home each week to have a family dinner (her nursing home was less than a mile away), but after that one pit-stop we decided it was like sticking a dagger in her so we never brought her back.
Your mom may also get distraught going to her house one more time, but I think she deserves that one time.
1) Take a lot of photos of your mother’s house, as a permanent record for both of you about how it was when she was there. These days, you could make it a phone video, or you could even hire one of the people who makes videos to go on internet real estate sites. If you don’t take her there, go through the visuals with her soon after she’s gone to AL. I’d really suggest that you do this for your own sake anyway.
2) If you really want to take her, do it after she’s spent at least a week in AL, seen your visuals, and fixed in her mind that it is her ‘old’ house and she doesn’t live there any more.
3) If you suspect that the visit may backfire on you (and her), don’t take her until you have started packing it up. Don’t tidy it up much – cupboard doors open with the contents emptied out, packing cases on the floor in the living room, and of course gaps where you’ve taken furniture for her AL room. Perhaps you do leave a garden chair with a nice view - that’s not enough for her to think she can move back in.
Best wishes and good luck. However you do it, it will be emotional. Yours, Margaret
See All Answers