My mom has dementia, early stage but I am learning that her mind will never go where I want it to anymore.
The problem is that she was an impatient and not a very warm person in my growing up years. When I was an adult she seemed to undermine everything I did. I was always trying to be "good enough" in her eyes.
Well now she has dementia, she acts the same way towards me (not really a surprise) but I am getting impatient with this. I am "setting my boundaries" as an adult but am realizing that she no longer is able to understand this.
I ask her not to do something, tease the dog for instance. 15 minutes later, with the dog snarling at her, I once again ask her not to tease the dog and explain the danger. An hour later she is teasing the dog. She does not remember any of the previous conversations.
The issue being that she really does not remember previous conversations.
Anyone have ideas?? I feel like such an awful daughter.
Barb
If you have a parent in your life (or any other person) who has consistantly been a problem for you,,,, get them into a safe, controled living situation and then you just visit them ! You deserve and are entitled to a happy life ! My mom who is now 85 years old always said " Life is too short to be unhappy for more than one day in a row....but only YOU can change your life "!!!
Soooo, stop throwing pearls before swine ! These unappreciative human unhappiness machines need safe care but you do not have to "sacrifice" your life and freedom for people who have been mostly disrespectful and harmful to you your entire life ! You only owe it to them to make sure that they are safely cared for,,,by someone else !! Take your life back !!!
We all feel guilty we think we can fix it or make it better we cant we can just make them safe and comfortble while trying damn hard not to lose it ourselves!!
My husband and I live with his 90-something parents. We discovered that while he has dementia, she is the difficult one; probably from burnout. Possibly from the beginnings of dementia, We are learning how to deal with her; he is easy. No he doesn't remember much, yes he asks the same things several times a day, forgets that he can't stand or use the bathroom because of a stroke, but he is ever grateful, mostly cheerful and fun.
On the other hand, she takes everything very personal, as if he got dementia and had a stroke to spite her. She is stingy with him (wants to reuse diapers because they just smell!), cold, treats us like we are children who know nothing about anything (both over 60), and when we treat him nice or say I love you,, it's just for show. And his three brothers idea of helping out is disappearing or showing up for dinner once a week!
Patience is a learned skill and we are in an AP class!. I've been sick in bed for two weeks, so my hubby has been doing it all alone, Yesterday he blew up at everyone because we get no help from his brothers, and his mother was making matters worse. His mother, he and I later talked, firmly with love, about the situation and her behavior with semi-positive results. She actually apologized to me.
I used some Christian caregiver skills I acquired years ago to have that conversation. Like "When you ...., I feel .... Taking responsibility for my feelings while placing responsibility for poor behavior on her shoulders. I learned long ago from dealing with my mentally ill mother that a) it isn't personal, and b) I need to ask myself "what do I hope to gain from this?" and "how can I act to be sure I get it?" The answers determine my behavior. Not that I don't occasionally treat everyone to a taste of their own medicine or heir own words, but I try to keep that to a minimum. It doesn't pay well. :)
Everybody has their own way of dealing with their care receiver and since we are all different, nothing always works for everybody. And nobody can do it alone.
If you can't get respite care, contact your church and see if there are members who will/can sit with your parent for a couple of hours while you just get away. Or maybe a neighbor, friend, community group, ?? Be creative. You need it. You owe it not just to yourself, but to your parent!
CJHelper, your comments about Christian caregiving skills are good. Deep down in their being and beyond the dementia, our parents, siblings, spouses are human beings who want recognition, care, attention, and respect. But they often don't fit into our busy schedules! Their lives are at a much different pace!
For those caregivers once disrespected or abused by their family member, my heart goes out to you. Maybe, as someone commented, serving as a caregiver can help us learn to overcome what has hurt us. Forgiveness is powerful because it releases us. It certainly is not easy. But it can be empowering. I am still learning. (oh and I wasn't really abused; just as a female, my opinion is not near as important or valid as a male's is. Brothers got/get more respect. Partly his generation).
And Skeeter, ahh, you are so right too . . . when that works out. But there are situations where that isn't always possible. Also, I think it's important to realize that some people still want to care for their loved ones at home because it's important to the caregiver or the wishes of the loved one. They make the choice, but that doesn't necessarily mean the caregivers are happy with everything that occurs in this difficult role. And sometimes just getting out some frustrations or talking about exasperating situations helps deflate the stress balloon. After all, some caregiving is not dementia related, Some caregiving is with young children born with physical and mental challenges.
Still, attitude plays into so much doesn't it? That's one reason I also like the positive thread someone started. Because we can relate to one another's difficulties in caregiving, we can rejoice in those small (and big)
joys we experience.
I loose patience with her sometimes and "talk hard" to her. One blessing (for us) is that they forget what we say sometimes in minutes. I still feel guilty because I expect when she gets stronger physically she will remember what she needs to do. Some of her actions are just unbelievable. She can be inconsiderate of what I am going through in my life (husband with cancer) and yet expect me to not be irritated when she pulls her "pity me" act. She says "you'll be old some day", and I say, I'm 69 and like you, don't have the patience I need. I'm already old!
As they say on here, just keep on keeping on. When they are gone we will be glad we tried to be good to them. Doesn't make our daily life easier, but maybe then it will seem to have been worthwhile.
Donna
My mother will ask me at least 50 times a day, "has the dog been fed?" Now after answering her 30th question, I am ready to scream. I thought, okay I am typing up big huge notes "The dog has been fed" and taping them to the doors, walls, light fixture, on shocking pink paper. She will still ask me the same question, I will point to the sign and say "Mom I put these up here to remind you that the dog has been fed." She says, "Oh those things are up there all the time, I don't even read them!" After the screaming subsides within my head.... I say "Mom I just put these up after I fed the dog, you have to read the sign." She says, "It's just as easy for you to answer me!" No lie, this is crazy making!!!!
I took my Mom to a Gerontology Case Manager who prescribed a day and night medication for her that has helped with some of the troublesome behavior and is allowing her to sleep at night. It has cut down on the number of times she asks the same question but has not stopped it.
Most of us are living this scenario for this first and hopefully last time, so everything that happens is a new learning experience for us. I have found that I have to bite my tongue ALOT, I do not have to answer every question nor do I have to reply to every comment (my daughter is teaching me this one). When we had children we learned to tune out some of the stuff they said or did and now we have to re-gain that ability to use on our parents. It will help to save your sanity!
Never think that what you are doing is being awful, you are stuck in a very difficult situation and you are handling it the best you can, we all are!
Wordy2shoes, I totally do not understand the concept of how working our @sses off, being used, abused, and disrespected, and repeatedly being pushed into raging anger, and sacrificing our own lives and relationships, for these demented people, can possibly "help us overcome" the negative feeling of being neglected and disrespecting by them in the past. All I get out of it is more negative feelings, that now get spread out to encompass siblings who don't help and abandoned this burden on me.
And about your statement: "Oh and I wasn't really abused; just as a female, my opinion is not near as important or valid as a male's is. Brothers got/get more respect. Partly his generation" Oh my goodness, I shouted " Yes ! Yes! That's my life in a nutshell" when I read that. I think you must have grown up in my house. (Are you Italian by any chance?)
I had four brothers, I was the only girl. I spent my childhood shouting "It's not fair!!!" ..because it wasn't. I was never allowed to do what they could, go where they could. I was never allowed to have an opinion that wasn't put down and told I was wrong. And while I had to clean house, do dishes, cook, vacuum, etc. they were "boys" and that was "woman's work". Somehow, I don't remember the brothers doing much "men's work" (Mom mowed the lawn more often than anyone ). The boys were busy with school activities. I wasn't allowed. I don't remember ever having a conversation with my dad that didn't consist if him telling me to do some work, or that I was wrong or stupid or that what ever it was I was doing was just not good enough. Nothing was ever good enough; no report card, no gift, no cleaning or cooking job, nothing. But I remember hearing how wonderful my brothers were all the time. Now that Dad's needs ..well he needs and needs and needs just about everything, he doesn't ever ask them because "They're busy". whereas I only had a house, a husband and a nightshift job. What could I possibly be doing in the middle of the day that I couldn't run over and sort through his junk mail ...right now !
And that's the tiniest part of it.... Nope, can't see how any of this is going to "help" do anything at all. Except maybe help me into my own grave.
Donna1944: My dad once used that same line on me about "you'll be old some day". I shot back with the answer: "No I won't, because you are killing me
Boundaries
By: Dr. Henry Cloud, Dr. John Townsend
It saved me and gave me so many good ideas! It's a paperback and not much money....$12 or so? For Debralee and re: the phone....just remember, you can always 'get another call' and end it. I've found that I can diffuse a lot with my Mom by calling her on my terms and setting the boundary like: "Hey Mom, I wanted to call and check on you, because I've got to leave in 5 minutes for an appointment and didn't want you to call and not get me". I've also had some of her friends tell her that she simply should NOT call me 10-15 times a day, but should make a list of things she thinks I need to know. Now she's 'been trained' and she only calls once or twice generally. Since I am out of town, I always phone her in the evening, to be sure she is home and locked in for the night. Conversations are really irritating and non important, as you say you have....but sometimes, I don't even respond since she doesn't want an opinion....just wants to 'complain'. If she starts in on sounding like she wants ME to fix it, I give it back to to her, "Well Mom, how could you fix that? What could you say? What could you do about it? Is it even fixable?" She doesn't persist too much anymore with how I should do something about it cause she knows I am not going to 'bite' and take it off her hands. Like GayleV....I never did and never DO do it right anyhow. And when I have to do something, whatever I did do, she would have done differently once I do it. I am convinced that some parents want to lay it all on their kids, so that in case it doesn't work, it won't be 'their fault' but someone elses. When I am with my Mom, she wants me to 'make the call for her' because she cannot hear or something. If I don't agree with the need to make a call, I just say, "Well, here, I'll dial the phone for you..." She hates that. She wants me to talk while she stands in the background and says, 'tell them this or that'! Its cause she's hard of hearing and it's difficult to hear with her hearing aids in and she can't hear at all with them out! BUT....we're NOT going to spend any $$ on a new phone!! How much of it all is just a need for attention? A need to know that someone....anyone.....cares about them??? I don't know. But, with some parents' behaviors, they just make people NOT want to pay any good attention anyhow. They create the desire to avoid them totally. The caregiver 'child', however, has to be able to say NO and realize that there is no need to take abuse. I've told my own mother, that I HAVE to take care of myself, and she needs to help because if I am not in the picture, she has NO ONE LEFT! AND....I still have my father's issues, their bills, their money and my husband and my own business to keep up with. We have two daughters, with good husbands and families, who are stable and helpful to me, from out of state....thank goodness. It's a rough walk and there are many a day that I talk to GOD about that verse about HE doesn't give us more than we can handle!! I get busy telling Him that I need a little break; or a little more resources or a little more energy etc....if He is SURE I can keep on doing what I'm doing!
Talk to her about it again and again for a couple of days.
Take her once or twice to an assisted living facility and show her the beautiful apartments and surroundings in there.
This way, if she is impressed, you can set her up in a beautiful apartment within an assisted living facility.
take care to all
I understand the guilt feelings too. I get so mad at my mom sometimes and then I get mad at myself for getting mad at her!!