My mother cannot walk and has dementia. I live with her as her full-time caregiver. It has its challenges, but it's fine overall. She has great doctors, and we have home health care that comes in regularly. Some relatives--mostly my mom's sister--will NOT drop it that they think my mom should be in a nursing home. For example, I got this email from her today--with an attached ad for a dementia-care facility:
"Came across this ad in a magazine today. It's appealing because they try to inspire purpose which I feel your mom could use. She always says she isn't doing anything. I know you are doing a good job of caring for her physical needs but I still believe she needs skilled care with people who know about various dementias and can treat it medically, physically, and spiritually. We once had a friend who was in a place similar to this and she progressed well.
Let me know what you think."
I get these types of things pretty often from her and others. I am doing the best i can to honor my mom's wishes--we tried several nursing facilities in the past year and my mom hated them all. She hates rules and schedules. So we made the decision to buy a house big enough for us and things have been going really well.
But my job is hard--I don't need these damn passive-aggressive messages every week. I was feeling great when i woke up today--now I've spent the last 4 hours feeling hurt and angry. I would like advice about how to shut them down. Thanks!
So to grumpyotter who posted the original question: My answer was apparently wrong. The correct answer is to accept that your aunt is right. Your mom would be so much better off if you put her into a nursing home. That way you can live your life and not have to make any sacrifices. Besides, caring for her at home just can't be done. It is impossible. If you try to do it you will ruin your life and it may even kill you. So please don't use me and what I did as a model. Apparently I am a fluke; either that or I don't have as much on my plate as the normal person does, or I somehow managed to pool more resources together than the average person has access to. Nobody else could ever do what I did. So you might as well give up and get your mom into a nursing home asap!
But I am glad that it had worked successfully for you.
But it also helps to have been a home caregiver if you're also a "Health Communications Consultant" and can incorporate your experience into your professional life.
This is your website, right? .healthcommunications/
You present an interesting perspective, but I think what full time caregivers go through on a daily basis is quite different from your situation. It might be interesting for you to take some time and read posts from the people who are at their wits' end from caregiving, whether for a demanding parent, one with dementia, one with mental issues, or one with massive physical issues.
Caregiver burnout seems to be frequent, something which those of us in the trenches understand.
But let's take a look at this differently. This was a successful and rewarding time for you, so perhaps you could share some insights on issues such as these. Help us see how you would handle these situations so we can learn from you.
1. You have siblings who won't help; you're spending nearly all your time caring for someone who is mired in dementia. You listen to the same comments and questions repeatedly. Your loved one won't accept home care, won't cooperate with you, becomes hostile and physically defensive. How would you handle this situation?
2. Your loved one has a hoarding, or at best a collection and retention policy. The house isn't safe, it isn't clean, the heat is set in the 80s during the summer. You have respiratory difficulties from the poor air in the house; that affects your stamina, but your loved one still needs to be transferred from wheelchair to bed to bathroom. You're overworked, overburdened, becoming ill and emotionally challenged. How would you handle that? How do you continue to have the stamina to deal with everything when your own health is deteriorating?
4. Funds between you and your loved one are tight; you can't afford to pay for respite care but you're drowning in responsibilities. What do you do?
5. Your loved one still believes that he or she can do what he/she did 40, 30, 20 or even 10 years ago. She wants to clean house weekly even though she is reliant on a walker and has had a few falls. He wants to mow the lawn, maintain a garden, drive a tractor to work in his garden, but he doesn't remember the difference between a tractor and a lawn mower. Yet he's determined he's going to do these tasks. How would you handle that?
6. Your loved one needs to use oxygen 24/7 but has decided he/she doesn't need it and goes around huffing and puffing. He/she has fallen more than a few times but won't use a cane, walker or rollator. He/she is adamant about not doing what medical professionals advise is necessary. How would you handle this situation?
I look forward to your answers Instead of reacting to other posts, help us understand how you would handle some of these difficult situations. I'm frequently in a quandary and end up frustrated and can always benefit from the experience of someone who can handle situations better than I.
I'm supportive of the OP's keeping her mother at home, since that seems to be going well for her, too. And I am also a former caregiver who kept my mother at home, which is why I am now broke and alone and, since my mother's death, feeling existentially redundant.
But the point being made by the Don't Do It Camp needs to be taken on board: the fact that it *can* be done doesn't make it a good idea, or not necessarily anyway; and what you tend to see on the forum more broadly are countless instances of people who have embarked on caregiving and got themselves into horrific trouble because they underestimated the sacrifices involved.
There are pros and cons in the home or nursing home debate and no one is going to know what's the better choice for an elderly lady they've never met. As it happens, I agree with you that this OP's relatives are bang out of order sticking their noses in with that snotty attitude they've got; but that's not the point. Please have a thought for the dozens, if not hundreds, of possible readers here who are sinking under a burden of care that they really can't manage but feel obliged to continue to carry. Tell them to make more sacrifices and they will, but the outcome could be disastrous for all concerned.
Your story is almost too much to be believed but I will assume it's all true, I have no way, nor the desire to investigate it. But you must understand that it's not realistic for most people to make the sacrifices that you have. You are to be commended, and yes many people do caregiving at home until the very end.
I'm not mean spirited, a bit of a smart a** maybe, but you come off as a braggert about all these amazing caregiving miracles you have achieved and it pisses people off. Most of us are not capable of miracles and will put Mom in a nursing home the first chance we get.
This is far from the first time this issue has been debated here and elsewhere. As snarky as I can be, I appreciate your participation in the debate, you certainly have some experience and knowledge to share and I hope you don't go away with you feathers all ruffled. And your right, we should stop hacking at each other and get back to the question originally posed. Let er Rip......
I wish you had come on here before you spent your money for things. Prescriptions have magic power of making things free for us, though Medicare does have to pay (but less than what we would pay). Information like that is something very good about a support group.
I do think in future years that fewer people will be aging at home. People are more used to moving around now and are not as frightened about living in senior communities. But so much will depend on finances. Many, maybe most, people will not be able to afford the more intense levels of care (AL and NH) without government assistance. I don't know if the country could handle all the people needing help.
I do think we need to develop some community-based help organizations for people who are aging in place, either out of preference or because of money. I like your ideas. Perhaps it is why things went well for you with caregiving. It lead to something that you needed to do and may be part of the answer of "what to do about Mom."
That being said, I still think your nuts to have quit your job to take 24/7 care of your mother. But it is what you wanted to do and it worked out for you.
We even took pains and bought a house all on one level before my hubby ever needed it, thinking that one or both of my parents would move in some day, and when Mother Teresa asked "Why are they not living with you?" it cut me to the heart, because it was my ideal too. But, slowly, over time, I began to see there were valid reasons, that even I could have explained to Mother Teresa, respectfully of course. First reason - mom refused to move and lived 15 hours away; second reason - being yelled at and criticized non-stop while trying to give care; third reason - mom threw out three different home care company people who came to interview with her, it was going to be her living at home by herself or nothing, and she was going to do that when she could walk again, nevermind her making limited to no progress in therapy towards doing that...and yelling at me again when I told her I was getting the house set up for her to be there using a wheelchair. I did not really begin to give up the dream until she started to get delirium every time she had any infection. I had to deal with what was, not what I wished it could be. Then I finally had the nerve to make the decisions that had to be made...which finally led to her moving here after all, getting in at least some good grandkid visits and trips in the vehicle we adapted for her, and my being with her when she passed on.
I would be quick to agree that staying at home is the best thing for the elderly parent, but I don't believe that their interests are the only one to be considered. In other words, I don't believe the quality of my mother's life is more important than the quality of my life. I also don't believe that taking care of my mother is the most important life goal I could have. I think it's important for adult children to have the freedom to say that their own lives, livelihoods, health, goals, families and friends are just as important or more important that making sure their parents' preferences are honored in their final years.
It doesn't cost anything to work with a social worker/case worker to find out what your options are and how to make it work with what there is - regardless of where the care happens.
My mother needs help with a long list of IADL's (Instrumental Activities of Daily Living) such as cleaning, cooking, driving, bill paying, laundry, etc. These don't count for Medicaid long term care eligibility, though. I believe most LTC policies have similar qualifications, also. She doesn't have LTC insurance so it's moot in her case.
My mom had LTC insurance, but cancelled it years ago because "I'm not ever going to need it." If we could use emojis on this site, I would use the one where the little guy is hitting his head on a brick wall.
That was 4 years ago.
And then.....the reality of things swooped down on me quick, fast and in a hurry!
I shared on a thread about coconut oil and other things my mom is taking which is indeed helping. But still the level of dependency on emotionally and otherwise was becoming too much, particularly since my dad now is starting to really decline. Against her wishes, I started in home this week. My husband and I need a break and need the help and I made up a big lie and she believes for now anyway. Still too sharp and crafty so I have to have my ducks in a row.
I think it's great when anyone can devote that kind of time and care for a parent. If you have the emotional, physical and financial resources to make it happen go for it. It didn't seem the aunt was trying to be butt about it but I can understand getting annoyed to I suppose.
Now that I'm really into this, I learned a few things and appreciate now those comments that seemed so offensive at first. I KNOW I can't do it. My stress level was too high and patience level too low and I'm not under the same roof with them. I can only imagine if we were under the roof, yikes! I can't say it won't ever happen but I'm trying to do what I can to ensure it doesn't. Does that sound mean, I hope not? Just a clear reality check I had to come to terms with.
When I went to bed one night the left side of my face felt so tight I was sure I was maybe having a stroke. I'm only 51 and in reasonably good shape still. It didn't happen and it will be a cage match with my parents, but I got busy the next day moving ahead to get some help or else I may very well be in that 30-40% statistic of a caregiver dying while they're still here looking for help.
Each situation is different as many have said, but I'm glad I swallowed my pride and paid attention to those I didn't and sometimes don't always agree with. That's what makes the marketplace of ideas so great in this country and around the world!
Dougseubert, while we like to think that with a loving attitude all things are possible, reality is this isn’t always the case. The older I get, the more I realize a couple of things. What we think we’d do in a hypothetical situation (or someone’s else’s situation) is often not what we actually do when we are there. So I find it’s best to acknowledge that I don’t understand what they’re dealing with and not be presumptuous about telling them what I think is best.
That being said, you’re very fortunate that your choices worked for your family. But your choice would not have worked for my family or many others. It isn’t because we weren’t “willing” – it simply wasn’t possible. I have a spouse, kids, job, inlaws and at 35, when my parents first started their “time of need”, it wasn’t possible to move in with my parents. We did move my mom in with my sister and I for over 15 years (split time in each house) and it sort of worked till it didn’t. And yes, there were sacrifices not just for my sister and I, but our families as well. A few decades later, my kids are grown, I’m still working, my mom is still in her “time of need”, and so is my FIL and so is my husband. So again, it’s not possible for me to make my mother’s daily care my top priority. Oh, I tried to juggle and manage and one day, I found myself at the hospital, where both mothers were, trying to help my FIL and leaving my husband, who really needed me at home.
So think what you will, but my mom gets better care at the NH because they’re not battling over every doctor’s appointment, every test, use of a wheelchair and all the things my sister and I have had to deal with to get a totally non-compliant parent the medical care she needs. My focus has to be my husband and right now, helping my FIL as he approaches a transition in life. I respect your choice to do what you felt best for your family, so please respect that our choices for our families are just as valid.
Kevin
If they are suggesting she be placed because they believe she would get better care in a facility, which is what it sounds like to me, then I would ask them to specifically state their concerns. I might also provide them with some material on dementia so they can understand that a dementia patient is not prone to certain activities. Focus and interests in activities is severely impaired in dementia patients. Perhaps their expectations are too high for what your mom should be doing. If that's what their issue is, then they may have to just accept it. After providing them with adequate information, I would kindly request they stop bringing it up. I'd tell them it bothered me and I didn't need the constant distraction.
Of course, I take it that you are the Durable POA and Healthcare POA and the authority to make these decisions for your mom. If not, then I might take a different approach.
I don't think it's fair to have to justify taking care of your mom every time they visit or call.