My husband (with dementia and living at home with mw) seems to have one little problem after another. They don't seem to be serious ones, but, of course, he tells me about them constantly. I get tired hearing about them, make an appointment with someone I think can help. After I interrupt my own fitness program to get him to the appointment, he doesn't know why he HAS TO GO. He doesn't remember what he's been complaining about. Not only is it embarrassing to me, but I'm getting tired of never having time to take care of myself. Although he seems to be quite healthy, he is now going to 3 doctors, a dentist (out of town) and now a physical therapist (every other day). The therapist gave him an exercise to do at home, which, of course, is another responsibility for me. I must keep reminding him to do it and he never understands, nor does he do it correctly. I am about ready to just ignore his complaints unless they are so severe that there's no alternative. I'm interested in knowing if others have suggestions on this?
Take care,
Carol
Can you try just writing it down in a notebook and waiting?
Sometimes it might be a preoccupation from boredom. Sometimes it might be an anxiety issue. Sometimes it's just normal aging.
She does not have any muscular pain or stiffness since she took the pills but she is tired all the time and depressed and she seems to be more forgetful than before.
Please comment if you experienced similar side effects of cortisone treatment?
Think of the time they put us in school for the first time and left us there at aged 4 this is our payback! sorry dosnt relate to husbands i guess but we need to just try it and see if they get used to it we are only human well at least i think i am somedays i wonder if im not superhuman!
Hugs this just gets harder and harder i have a headache after today as ive done too much again thankyou God for "sleeping tablets" im off now to lala land and my escape is my dreams and my cat snuggled up beside me!
First thing tom im getting her into some daycare as i need a few hours peace i was pushed to the limit today and im exhausted.
I think you need your husband to go to daycare for a few hours a day sometimes you feel like they are out to push you over the edge but its the illness not that knowing this makes it easier but at least he may get interesting in something at daycare.
Also i would lie and say the doctors busy or hell see you tom? when my mum gets obsessed like this i feel like screaming my head off. the last obsession was wanting to wash mounds and mounds of clothes and putting dirty clothes in with the nice clean ones i thought i was going to go crazy on the spot i was so mad as i have to clean it all up again.
Oh yes i think daycare is needed the nurse told me they were sorting it out and that was 3mths ago but i know now i just cant cope with this odd behaviour and need space for me! remember ME!
As for the person who said, "only 3 doctors, I have 9" I actually listed 5 including the therapist. Anyway, it doesn't matter how many, it's how many TRIPS you make that counts.
I guess I've heard enough on this subject. I didn't get on this website to get criticism. For those who understood my frustration and made suggestions that are helpful, "THANK YOU!"
To complicate, I look after the welfare of an 86 year old friend whose restricted license lets her only drive within 24 miles of her house. She lives alone and has no family left to help her. So we take her in to her doctors as well.
I think most of my life right now is spent in the car!!
He probably needs more attention and more people to talk to.
However, when you are the primary caregiver, expect to have your life interrupted. Basically, the elder becomes the center of the world and your life (work, relaxation, relationships)is fitted in around the elder's needs. After a bit, you will settle into a routine which works, but expect real health emergencies. Life as a primary caregiver is day to day.
Expect to have to change the routine based on his health decline and what he can and can't do will change over time.
Good luck.
His bowel problems and blood loss are major issues and very painful. You must take care of that. The other aches and pains, treat them with appropriate analgesics, creams, laxatives, etc. Any other extreme signs of problems need to be dealt with and you must put his needs ahead of your own. You'll find you will be doing things that you never imagined doing before.
Our plans for retirement were retire at age 60, go to Hawaii first and then make a trip every summer to some seaside or world destination. We were going to buy a small RV to make impromptu trips to every national park. We would continue our fitness class 3 days a week and live happily ever after. Then he got FTD at age 54, lost the ability to speak correctly, then had a TIA which advanced his dementia more rapidly. I had to quit my job early and wait a year before my retirement benefit would be paid. No more exercise classes for either one of us, no Hawaii, no RV. We did squeeze in 3 short trips before his mobility issues became too severe. Basically no meaningful communication between us for the last 8 years, as his speech was affected first. I would love it if he could tell me his finger or knee hurt. He is bed/wheelchair bound now. Neither one of us leaves the house on a typical day. I have a personal care aide in 6 days a week to help bath and dress him. I occasionally have a day of respite which I often use to see my dentist and doctor. This is the reality of living with a spouse with dementia.
Take care of his major health issues, take care of your health issues. Get some help or take him to adult daycare. If he is a veteran, check out their A & A and respite. If you are really overwhelmed and you can afford it, place him in a Memory care facility. Many elder communities have them now for dementia patients who are still in fairly good health. God bless you and help you.
Mom has a series---I mean a circular series of ailments. I have addressed ALL of them with her doctor. Over the past years she has brought up (and seen the doc for --- and not in sequential order): her broken wrist, her trigger finger, her carpal tunnel, her hemorrhoids, her teeth (still working on this), her warts/moles on her skin, her watery eyes (which she needs surgery to fully correct), her vision (erroneously bought her reading glasses which she doesn't use), her blood sugar (ongoing), her toenail (which we have half removed once), her back/hip (gone to doc and physical therapy and she now doesn't even remember having a back problem which went on for months), her hair (not a physical problem but part of the body), wrinkles on her skin and age spots, her stomach (have done all except 'scoping' her stomach. not gonna do that).
Not only do we re-visit these ailments over and over but once in awhile she will come up with a new one. Just yesterday we were in the kitchen and she starts slightly massaging her chest muscle and says something to the effect, "I need to go to the doctor about this 'soreness' on my chest". I say (naturally), "what soreness"? She proceeds to tell me about this 'tender or sore' area that she is experiencing. I will tell her that I didn't know about it. When did it show up? And this is the clincher. She will say to me, "Oh, I've had this thing for awhile...."!
Then this last thing that just happened was funny. I woke one morning to my mother calling me that she didn't feel good---she had an intense headache. I proceed to make sure all vitals are good and fix her pillows and body in her bed. I only had this essential oil of peppermint to put on her head and did so. I left the room for 5 minutes to go get a tylenol and came back to give it to her. I say, "here's the Tylenol for your headache". She responds, "What headache? I don't have a headache"!!!!
Have a good day all..
I just realize that these episodes are cries for attention. When she is not feeling well, we are all over her, trying this and that to make her feel better, and I usually sit with her just in case. If I ask her if she is feeling better, she will say, "yes, but just a little bit, not much better", I'm sure it's because she doesn't want me to leave the room. I understand it's aggrivating because it takes so much time and energy to care for someone like this. Try to find time for yourself, even if it's just a few hours. Maybe hire a companion for him, or a sitter so you can have a small amount of time to do what you want to do. Maybe get exercise DVDs to use in another room, a treadmill, or a weight set if you are doing any strength training. I'm ashamed to say, but I know on the weekends, I live for my MIL's nap time, then I can do whatever I enjoy or have to do, or take a nap myself! We have a pool, and really the only time I can swim or sunbathe/lounge in the pool is when she is napping. Seems very self-centered of me, but when you are a caregiver, you have to have something in life that makes you happy, that you are doing for yourself, and only yourself. It makes life worthwhile!
I agree with Pam in that some of these things are just aging issues which you can put off a bit and then see if he continues to complain over time.
You might want to look into adult day care for him. If he's better occupied, he may not find as many issues to complain about. That would give you time to do your health care routines, too.
It's never easy to know what health complaints need attention and what smaller issue you can let go. But diversion could help.
We would love to have your keep us informed on your life and how this is going for you.
Continue to take care of yourself - get help if needed.
Carol
on my second elder advocacy gig right now and i couldnt be more impressed by the changes occurring in medicine. my mother was hospitalized with possibly heart failure a couple of years back . the hospital has a job to do -- a thorough , often 6 day physical workup . any return to hospital for unresolved or undiagnosed issues in a 6 month time frame can result in severe fines to the hospital . mom wanted to do battle with the docs thru 6 days of testing -- not happning -- they knocked her colder than a cucumber for 6 days and ran their tests. they done a wonderful job . she left there with hospice assistance and oversight by aps to make sure the team at home was adequate.
aunt edna , more recently , 6 day thorough health workup , then 10 days in physical rehab , then followed home by a home care team . not hospice , per se , just professional help for the family team..
i feel like we could ask for and recieve any kind of help .
people want to go overboard with the advocating for yourself thing a bit these days . i know a bunch of hepc chat group members who think its cute to carry around a stack of charts and argue with world class liver specialists about silly numbers they know nothing about -- then occasionally one of them has the audacity to be shocked when a doc tosses them clear out of his office ..
i recently told my hepc treatment team that i feel better than i have in 30 years, i shant give a rats azz what your numbers eventually read . numbers , shnumbers .. put my trust in them , made them smile..