I relocated my mom from out of state and she has been living on her own only 5 minutes from my home. In March I took on a new job and relocated 2 hours away and when I visit mom, I am finding she isn't driving anymore, no motivation, forgetting if she took meds, not socializing, depressed, not eating. So my husband and I are going to bring my Mom to live with us. My sisters live out of state, so no support from them, just criticism. Just having her visit over the holidays has been an eyeopener of things to come, its been like a rollercoaster, she has up and down days. Today she hates me and wants to go home...I ruined her life! Yesterday, she was planning the color to paint her bedroom walls.
My new home which was our sanctuary, even though she's not a horrible person to live with. It's just so hard having another adult in your home and especially one that is hard of hearing in both ears so the volume on the TV is always set to 54! I am seeing that a lot of our privacy is gone and we never have a moment to ourselves anymore. Unfortunately, I don't have any other solutions for her care... Am I taking on more than I can handle? New job, new home, my own health is suffering... anxiety, guilt, hair thinning, weight gain... STRESS. Thanks for hearing my vent...
You sound like you are handling things very well.
Who diagnosed your mother? Has she been seen by a neurologist? The first thing to worry about with dementia is to be sure it's not caused by a treatable condition, like low thyroid or low B12. If she could recover and stop going down hill, you want to know that!
I don't know how they decide how much testing to do. My husband was 67 when diagnosed, which is a little young. He had a full Neurological Psychological evaluation at a major hospital, and an MRI and I forget what else. After a painful amount of memory and functioning tests, they said it was dementia of the Alzheimer's type.
We are close to the city, and we have very good insurance, so that may be why we got the full treatment. Also, they may feel that your mother seems to have typical Alzheimer's symptoms, and that no more testing is needed.
You might try to get your mother seen by a geriatrician, who specializes in the care of the elderly. As I understand it, they consider the patient and their abilities, more than any specific parts, and make very practical recommendations. Good luck!
Flutter: I had my mom for 32 years. The dr. told me she had mild dementia about 3 yrs ago. She would say things like your mom said, but then it would be fine. I knew she really loved me and she knew I really loved her. No help from my sibling either. I kept her at home for as long as I could. The past 3 years were getting harder and after a fall (and a short stay on hospice) I found out I could get some help from our County. I live in IL., and contacted Senior Services. She qualified for someone to come in a few days which was such a relief for me. Even tho she lived with me the service is provided for her living space. In our case mom had the whole lower level, which was a family room, bath and bedroom and a room we converted into a kitchen. If you can get any time of help from your state or county, I can only tell you it helped me tremendously. It gave me a chance to get out, or to have the girl take my mom out. (she always wanted to go grocery shopping!). It also helped keep any frustration down, since I knew it was building, especially since my sister didn't help much, but that was because my mom didn't want her, she only wanted me.
Now that mom is gone, I am proud to be the one she wanted, even if it was a little harder on me. I am the one who has no regrets. Get help if you can. If you can't deal with your mom in your home, perhaps she can be in assisted living near you. Something to check out.
Great suggestion on safe place. Thanks.
Shortstuff33, sorry about your grandfather, my Mom did the same thing 5 years ago and broke her hip, they lose their reasoning even though they can convince otherwise in the beginning stages.
as i started falling behind i started buying enough clothes for mom so that I never had to wash. This included pj's. i have clothes for 2 weeks as well as towels and sheets. .
Food: I buy and store alot of foods. since milk, eggs, cheese etc expires (mostly milk) I had stocked up on everything else; doubles of everything. that way i could zip into a 7-11 store to get more milk but i had enough food for 2 weeks. Lots of pasta, frozen sauce (back up in jar), several frozen meals, lots of canned varieties of fruits, puddings, jello. the first week was a healther week with fresh vegys and as the 1st week went on and we were running out i just relied on frozen or canned vegys. I had a variety of juices for mom to drink. remember i had to plan for mom's lunches as well as our dinners. on week-ends i had to have supplies for the picnics/outings we went on. I stored most of the extra canned items (and a jello pack that does not require refrigeration) in a special drawer in my room. i could always look in the drawer to know what back ups i had. mom loves bananas so when we ran out of bananas (along with the milk) i would give her baby food bananas served on a plate with her dinner. we only had to do this for a day or so because eventually i'd stop on my way to work and grab a new bunch.
I used alot of baby fruit so if we ran out of the real thing. sometimes those fruits when warmed well changed the taste of a porkchop (applesauce). If there had been a disaster, my house would be the place to be in terms of food. when the main foods got used up, i could go to the back ups and just keep rotating. baby food was a lifesaver; mom loved them. some of the graduate entries made good hot lunches if i needed somethhing quick. this house also had backs up of toilet paper and other paper goods, light bulbs. Therefore in short, I was so exhausted from work I could have not gone to the store frequently. there is a great shower chair; part of it goes over the tub so that the patient sits on that part, then brings their legs over the tub to sit on the tub portion of the chair so mom didn't have to stand up to get in the shower. then as she proressed there is a shower chair which is more like a commode chair without the holder that holds the pee and poop that mom can sit on so i can wash her private parts.....when u purchase these items keep you receipe because not all shower chairs fit in all bathtubs.
you will lose privacy. therefore i set up my bedroom as a small sanctuary. i even had a small coffee pot in there; when i planned to go inside i would pull the cream out of the fridge and retreat to my room (this was if there was a caregiver entertaining mom in the afternoon) because when i got respite i didn't always want to leave home. i suggest getting a television for your bedroom for you and your husband.
if your m0m likes certain magazines get a subscription for her. I had alot of dvd's that mom loved so i could have them play for her to watch (over and over again) so i could get paperwork done.
the key i believe is an abundance of patience,, organization and regular resite. by the time i figured out respite i was so tired that i would retreat to my room and sleep for 3 hours;;;not productive but i needed the sleep. the caregiver would be overseeing mom and then the caregiver would make a simple dinner so when i woke up there was food for me that i didn't have to cook!
Take care of yourself and good luck.
There is more than one way to honor your mother and take care of her. In your situation I don't think it is under your roof.