MIL packs al her clothes, pictures, toiletries at least 3x’s a week. She says she’s ready to go home now. I put a sign in her room telling her “you live here, don’t pack your clothes”. I explain to her she has lived here over a year, and this is her room. I have taken every bag, tote bag, Plastic bags, boxes out of her room so that she will have nothing to pack her stuff into. Instead she now just takes everything out of her closet and out of her bureau and puts them on the mini couch that is in her room. It would not be too bad if it was only her clothes she packed because, she can just use the mini couch as her bureau. But unfortunately she packed everything that is in her room, including all the toiletries from the bathroom, paperwork, hundreds of pictures, newspaper articles that were saved, you name it. I am just so tired of unpacking and re-organizing her room. Any suggestions?
As long as long as she's happy and not in distress let her go through her own process naturally
💌💌💌💌💌💌💌💌💌💌💌
I am praying that this trip will shift her actions and stop the packing up everyday when you get home.
And no, you are NOT a fool for trying to handle this in a way that makes sense to you - everyone tries to do this when dealing with someone with dementia, that's simply human. Thinking on the same level as someone with severely impaired thinking is not something that comes naturally or easily to us. It's taken me YEARS of 24/7 caregiving for my mother to just get to a place where I can let go of MY reality when dealing with my mom, but it has helped me because MY reality is no longer HERS.
Personally, I do not understand responding to someone going through this with condescension or rudeness. That makes me hesitant to ask questions or talk about my situation, which we caregivers very much need to do. The last thing needed on top of the stress and exhaustion and isolation of caregiving is judgment.
thank you for your insights though...Linda
It seems to help lessen her anxiety.
My heart goes out to you & hubby!
Blessings to you both for doing all you can.
Change to the sign to "I love you" or "I love the view from the window" (if she has one so it may refocus her to go to the window . . . or something soothing.
* Take away things that are unnecessary in the room.
* Let her do it. If anything is in the way and causing a potential fall risk, remove it.
* Do not pack and unpack and re-organize. Just stop. You are allowing yourself to be led around / dictated by a brain that no longer functions normally.
Skimming through more posts, I wonder if you could make a game of it, by packing for different outings and different seasons only, and leaving the rest. Pretend you're going on day trips. It might it might be more of a game, and less stressful.
I don't know if this could work, as she probably is packing for reasons she doesn't understand, but if you can combine it with outings (again, especially as Fall and the color changes advance), it might relieve some frustration. Is there also a way you could categorize all the things she's packing so she only takes nomimal "luggage" if you go on outings?
I think SueNWPa has raised a very insightful observation:
"She stopped the rearranging once there was less clutter in her room. I think intially there was just too much stuff in her room for her brain to organize so she just kept sifting and sifting through all of it. "
Thinking it through, Mom is responding to and acting on a desire to organize. Are there other things she could organize, to at least provide some diversification? Something like magazines? Books?
Make sure the boxes are clearly marked so mom-in-law can find what she needs as she needs it.
What's your husband's take on all this?
I was over to see Sis every week, sometimes multiple visits to trouble shoot-TV issue, doctor appointments and fun stuff-out to lunch etc. Each time I would put things back in order-sis would do the packing up over and over. About this time-sis became more confused, angry, started wanting to "escape" the community-she was getting frustrated with staff and herself-becoming combative-resulting in several trips to the ER-not a long term solution for sis.
Sis ended up in psych hospital for med evaluation. Had to place her some where new due to "combative" behavior. We edited her stuff big time-New place said less is better-not as distracting, confusing for dementia patients. We did cut down about 50%-in all categories as she was not using most of it, a lot of clutter, when downsizing on the fly.....sis did not seem to notice at all, was not asking for XYZ-at the new place-only said the room had been painted-when actually at a new facility and smaller room. I kept her stuff just in case she remembered or really needed something-pictures etc. I have been taking stuff slowly to Goodwill-she moved again where all furniture is provided, no storage really for overflow etc-down to items she will really need and use. It was a process for me-emotionally-each move to make more decisions to purge-i still have way more to go thru Christmas decorations etc. Sis could not do this-it was up to me. I am hanging on to the piano for now-Sis loved to sing and play-this will be a big item to let go for me too.
Now I feel the "shuffle" of stuff was her way of trying to control her life?? as her abilities and mind were now in a different place.
I remember my MIL doing this too, and when all the bags were removed, she started tying up her clothes in her dressing gown, securing it with the belt. Again and again. Then somehow she acquired some scissors and cut the pillow slips into strips to tie up her clothes... of course, to her perception, she wasn't where she was meant to be, and was doing her best to problem-solve that feeling.
I think Stiffkr's suggestion below to remove unnecessary items in her room, and give her a suitcase to pack, and unpack, and pack as any times as she wants - is a really good idea. I wish I had tried something like that.
This is a passing phase, even though it feels like eternity and purgatory. It probably feels a bit like that to your MIL too.
Wishing you all the best, be kind to yourself, breathe, and just do the best you can. And stay in touch with this wonderful forum for more support and advice, whenever you need it!
We'd also talk about her past, her family, childhood and young adult life. She enjoyed that.
We moved our mother to MC. She packed up items, mainly small items like pictures, knickknacks, wrapped in newspaper (she gets the Sunday paper!) They were in a bag, so I moved them to a little cubby in her room and there they sit to this day (she doesn't seem to go there.) I think she may have packed up clothes initially, but that stopped long ago. Staff would put the items back. She's just past 3.5 years there now.
The first 9 months she pestered my YB to take her back to her condo, where she'd been living alone prior to MC. About that 9 month mark, out of the blue she asked me to drop her off at her mother's and when I deflected that with "too late in the day" and "maybe tomorrow", she asked if I had a key to her previous home, sold 25 years prior! Her mother has been gone 40+ years. Last year she asked about one sister and when I said I hadn't seen or talked with her recently (mom is the only one left now on both sides), she said she's probably tied up with "that baby." I knew she was referring to my cousin's second child. Both were born with a form of MD, the second one totally disabled and mom's sister helped my cousin. That "baby" would be about 40 or so years old now (passed away after surgery error.) So, clearly mom is living her life from 40+ years ago. That will eventually slip back further as time and dementia progresses (she is 97 now, just recently had a mini-stroke, so she may not ever get back to a previous address.)
Although often it works to set up a room like one they had before, it all depends on what's in their mind. Even if it looks like home, it isn't and they know it. Reminders don't really help, and no arguing, explaining or correcting is going to change that. It will only frustrate you and perhaps anger her.
The best suggestions so far were to limit what she has access to. If possible, store only a few days worth of clothing, replacing them with others when the ones she has need to be washed. Limit toiletries and other items in the room. Keep just enough to get through several days. You might also take the suggestions about giving her bags or small luggage so at least the items packed up are "contained."
The artwork should probably just remain off the wall. Someone suggested screwing them to the wall, but she could damage the items, the wall or hurt herself trying to take them down. Since she is hell-bent on taking them down, they aren't doing much to help her "adjustment", esp since it's been a year already!
The less she has access to, the less she can pack and the less you have to "unpack." As staff has told other visitors at mom's facility, you have to live in their "moment." This is their reality and you can't change it, you just have to adjust yourself to it. For instance, if she's packed and ready to go NOW, gently tell her that it's a little late today, maybe tomorrow. Little white lies, vague time frames (they forget anyway!), something to assuage their anxiety and give them hope, even though you know it's a false hope. We use these fibs, little white lies, bend the truth to help calm them, not to hurt them. Real lies are told to CYA, hurt others or just spread untruths. This isn't the case with dementia. Often it's one way to calm them, until the next crisis arises in their minds! You can also just help her to live out of the suitcases, rather than putting everything back every day.
As annoying as this behavior is, it is rather benign. I would take that over those who become combative, aggressive, nasty, and those who refuse to do ANYTHING you try to get them to do, eat, bathe, toilet, meds, etc.! If she ever does start refusing to work with you, it might be worthwhile to hire someone to assist with tasks - often they will work with someone else, but not family.
Best of luck!
Here's a thought, that may or may not work. A neighbor had taken her Mom to the doctors. When she returned to her home, her Mom would NOT get out of the car. The neighbor was so frustrated that she was yelling, which caught my attention. I tried, but she refused.
I suggested to my very annoyed neighbor to take her for a short ride to go home. I explained to the Mom that her daughter was taking her home. And I would be there to help her get out. It worked! She had no idea who I was, but a very nice lady. I helped her get out of the car and her daughter and I helped her into her home.
You might try having her son take her "home". In the meantime, you can put most things back, but maybe save a few personal things for her to help you put them back, pictures, personal items.
Good luck. I hope this works.
"She's come to live with me and my husband (her son) since Jan 2019."
Yes, it is the most frustrating thing and a lot of work for you. But I'm sorry to tell you............things will get a whole lot worse than that. Bless you!
does your overseas’ family have an extra room? LOL
our mom does this all the time whenever she is alone. The only days she doesn't do it is when we have someone with her all the time, every second reminding her and even that doesn't work. She will laugh and say this is not my home.
we make up so many stories now - things that calm her down like ie. daddy left this house to you so we are here to help you take care of it. No note will work because they just don't get it anymore.
what i found that helped soooo much now is to get her attention away from thoughts. i bought an ipad pro - the big one and put on her favorite musical concerts - primarily andre rei and she sits there in heaven for hours and doesn't think about going home and we talk about stories of her life. I also bought google mini to play music quietly as it distracts her from thinking to go home - she sings along instead of thinking how am i going to escape. I do know that they can't be left alone with their thoughts as they are not current. It is a long road and an impossible climb but keep trying things and hopefully it gets easier. we did ask the doctor to prescribe a mild sedative - mild enough that she can function and so when she gets anxiety to go home - i give it to her teva-lorazem .5mg good luck