My mother, 86, dementia and in a memory care facility for a month, cusses and screams at me when I leave after a visit. She tells me never to come back and that she has always hated me. She does this to my two sisters when they leave too. What can we do to ease the drama when we leave?
Mom is getting the same way. If it is dessert, it must by good, well if it is sweet, that is....
not sure how you do it. My mother is now passed and I care for my narcissistic father
who is manipulative, deceptive and demanding, but does not verbally abuse. Thank god.
I'd second what everyone else is saying, just politely walk away when she acts like that. And don't worry about the facility caregivers, they are probably happy to have respite
with your visit and know how to deal with behavior like that. Unfortunately, many
Alzheimer's patients can become combative, they've likely seen it all.
You're doing above and beyond. Kudos to you for caring for such a parent and keeping
your equanimity.
I have sat next to her and tried to rub her arm or hug her and she screams DON'T TOUCH ME. I will try to put some lotion on her arms or legs and maybe she will allow me to do that.
SueC - yes, our childhood was a nightmare and I left for college after graduating from high school. She takes credit for getting me into the university which bothers me bc I worked hard to get good grades and she was not an encouraging type of parent but it's part of her narcissism. I am a teacher and she has told me many times she is ashamed of me bc I chose that profession when SHE hated school. This was before her dementia set in. I am used to it now but it did hurt my feelings as she brought it up every time I visited her. I liked school because I felt safe there and admired my teachers.
Moecam - I will bring her some hot chocolate and share it with her. I'm sure she will like that.
It's interesting to hear everyone else's stories. I know I am not alone.
Right now I find picking up a medium hot chocolate from Tim Horton's is what she likes - I bring 2 plastic Tupperware mugs so we can share - she was always asking if I wanted part of her treat so she feels better when we share - I get a large cookie there to & they will cut it in half for me to share too - I get this about 15 minutes before I get there in case of spillage so she doesn't get burned
Once she starts equating you with pleasure then start saying a low key good-bye with "what would you like me to get you?" so that she will think you are going to get her something BUT that's for next time - try it as it could make her feel when you leave it's for her benefit - good luck
I said all this to say she thinks she is ready to come home. She gets angry every time i leave without taking her with me. Either she can't or doesn't want to understand that she's not ready. She outweighs me by about 50 lbs, plus I have been disabled for over 20 years because of 2 failed back surgeries. She keeps telling me that i don't love her instead of trying to understand that she needs more therapy. She has not been home in 60 days and every day but one I have been with her no less then 4 hours and up to 16 hours. We also have a 15 year-old learning disabled son that I am raising. I don't get the yelling, but the guilt trip is terrible.
SO sorry that you had a mean (awful) mom. Mine wasn't mean just narcissistic and didn't really want to be bothered with a (whoops) kid. Your childhood must have been hell. You sound so calm and together for what you've suffered. How wonderful you and your sisters are for even having anything to do with her. You will be blessed.
What worked for my mom was the same as most posters--distraction and fibbing.
"I have to go to the bathroom,
I'm going to get a drink of water,
I left something in the car,
The nurse wants to talk to me"......
You get the idea. Since she gets "excited" when she KNOWS you are leaving, I would not bring up the fact that you are exiting.
Start with "I'm going to the ladies room". Discretely take your purse. (leave your coat near the door when you go in or in the car.) Hopefully she won't follow you.
Enlist the cooperation of the staff to assist you to leave. They're good at that.
Hopefully mom won't chew you out about sneaking out at your next visit.
To other posters;
Yes, my first reaction is-To heck with her-don't go back-don't visit. If she's always hated me then she can be by herself.
But, loving someone (as best as you can) IN SPITE of them hating you, is fulfilling what the Lord has asked us to do. Be the bigger person and show the hater how to love. We can be a model to them of how we are loved by God. Have compassion on their miserable souls, pity them for missing out on a life filled with joy and warmth and having a heart filled with hate.
God can't forgive us unless we forgive others. We need to be compassionate.
What about the Golden Rule?
Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
Also, let's not forget-these parents have a brain disease that is distorting their views and destroying their actual brain matter. Even IF she meant what she said, she's suffering now.
"The King will reply, 'Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.'
Matthew 25:40
There, but for the grace of God, go I.
Today, for the first time in a while, we had a good visit. I got us both coffee from the cafeteria and we watched an old movie in her room. Before I left, I wheeled her to the cafeteria so she could eat dinner with her “homegirls”, only one of them still has verbal ability to greet her, but I think they all communicate with each other nonetheless. I said goodbye with a hug and kiss (yes, we have always been demonstrative in my family - we’re Latinos and we live in the South where everyone hugs and kisses anyway). When I left, she said “Take care”. I had to go back and ask her to repeat what she said because I thought I had heard wrong. It has been a long time since she has expressed concern for me. I know that these good visits are rare, and the next visit might be another in which I am sad and crying, but for today, it was good.
Donsully - no I am using the handle bc it's easy to remember! LOL
Incidentally, did you get your handle (swright2) from Senor Wences?
Talk with the facility manager. Explain what Mom is doing and make a game plan.
Ask if Mom does the same thing with the staff.
If she doesn't, then perhaps the game plan could be a signal that you want to leave and a staffer will come in with an excuse that you need to leave. Say your goodbyes and leave.
My mother sometimes dozed off mid-visit and I would sneak out, but she never got surly or demanded to go home. Distraction worked well, I would give her a cookie or a magazine or little stuffed animal from the dollar store. "Here, Mom, this is for you. I am running out for a while, I'll be back soon." A true statement! She had no sense of time, I visited her for my OWN peace of mind once a week. She babbled nonsense and non-sequitors responding to me, I wasn't sure if she even understood what I (or she herself) was saying.... One time her ex-neighbor visited with me, and we said, 'we have to go now, they want us to move the car' and she followed us down the hall to the elevator in her wheelchair! "I'm going with you, of course!" Ah, a distant memory after seeing the neighbor popped up! They spent a lot of time together.... We asked an aide to distract mom while we made our escape, and when I next showed up a couple of days later, she didn't remember the visit with her friend, or by me for that matter, at all!
You just need to remember for your sanity that her words and behavior aren't really about you or the current moment, they are coming from her disease and as hard as it is try to detach from the personal reaction and emotion. Hope that made some sense... You aren't alone and more people than you realize are sending you emotional support. I bet everyone in earshot when this is going on, everyone of sound mind anyway, knows exactly what your going through, wants to help but knows there isn't anything they can do except stay out of the way. Most have probably been in some form of your situation, think about what you will be thinking/feeling when the new resident of the room next door is doing the same thing to his or her son/daughter. Hang in there and keep up the good work!
* One final thing to consider is even if you didn't have a particularly rough past with your mom, she still may not have wanted kids but only tolerated you because of your dad. Sometimes when we love someone, we must take the good with the bad, even if they have some bad habits or if they have kids that do stuff we don't particularly like. Something like this can actually cause resentment toward those kids if they happen to be step kids. If your mom happens to have married a rich man and expected him to go before her, she may be disappointed that because of her dementia, now she's in memory care and can no longer expect to cash in if he goes before her because now the nursing home gets all that money, unless he has something set up to provide for her when he's gone. Sometimes when a rich man has a death or divorce and remarry's and takes his kids into a new marriage, sometimes there is resentment over money but the kids really never know it until later. Another thing that can happen like with my parents is mom who had nothing married a rich man, my dad. We lived off of his income but I think the real reason why mom was secretly trying to knock us kids off is most likely over the money we didn't know dad had. I'll bet mom most likely expected dad to go first since he had what could potential he have been a very dangerous job on the assembly line so she most likely thought she would cash in and be the only living heir to the fortune because her plan was all of us kids would be gone and the whole entire fortune would be hers. However, God intervened knowing her sick plan and he took her first and now I'm the only one left. See how the tables turn when you have hateful parents? See how God intervened on my behalf and acted in my favor? Now I'm the only one standing and I'm the only one entitled to the fortune she thought she would kill us all over, and now this first song that comes to my mind is titled, another one bites the dust. I strongly suspect there was probably a problem with your mom that you all may not have known and I only speak from personal experience with my own parents. If you had a rough past with your parents through no fault of your own, they will more likely say hateful stuff to you later in life. If they kept their thoughts to themselves and just tolerated you but didn't really like you, it can also come out later in life if they land somewhere they don't want to be and they resent you for putting them there like in memory care. I strongly suspect this as a possibility having had hateful parents myself. If they really don't like you when you're young, they'll hate you when they're old and that's my personal experience
I read all the comments and some of them reminded me of what I did when my infant children would get upset and were unable to control their emotions. I would pop a marsachino cherry in their mouths and hug them while I sang a song to them. Worked every time. I also remember when my Aunt was dying at a young age of brain cancer. Her husband visited her every night and before he left he would hug her and sing their favorite song till she relaxed. A ritual that they got accostomed to relaxed them and they felt their world was going to be alright. Be patient but do use any tactic you can to distract her when you are leaving. Good to hear that the staff is helping out.
Hang in there - this isn't easy on any of us
Love,
RosePetal