My mom (84) has been going steadily downhill for the past few months. She has had 3 UTIs which landed her in the hospital and today her aide called to tell me there is blood in her urine again. (UTIs due to massive kidney stone that requires surgery, but she is never well enough to have the surgery). I have a constant knot in my stomach and am constantly fielding calls from doctors, nurses, insurance, etc. (She is at home with 24/7 care, in a wheelchair or bed all day.) I have been at my company for 7 years, but recently took on a new position that feels like a brand-new job. I have a new boss and there is TONS of work and things for me to learn. I did tell my boss that my mom has been ill and she was understanding, but, still, I am SO stressed out trying to keep up with everything. I'm an only child, so I'm it as far as managing my mother's care. WTF do you do in this situation? I am wrung out.
You are so right about playing roles. I wake up every morning wanting desperately to stay in bed, but I know that would only make me feel worse. So I get myself into my work "costume," and do my best to act like a functional employee. Then I get home and fall apart, and on it goes.
Then a good friend of mine, who had gone through a similar situation, told me "You have to look at your different duties and responsibilities as roles in a movie. when you leave one, like caregiver, you have to step out of that set, and put on the costume for the next role, employee. When the garage door closes, you consciously leave that life behind and take the drive as down time, a void, where nothing else matters, until you arrive at work. Then you are the employee, and you have decided to be nothing else, but an excellent employee. When the bell chimes and it's time to leave, you put on your errand girl outfit ... use your travel time, however short it is, as down time again to refresh your brain. This may be the ONLY time you have for yourself. Use it wisely and most effectively.
Best wishes.
I don't know what you do for a living, but talk to your boss; most employers understand these types of situations. Can you alternate your schedule, do some work from home, or possibly hire an intern or a volunteer to help at work. That way - if you need to focus on mom you can and the work is still getting done.
I think I found one for that hospital online, but it may have been sent to me.
You might ask if a discharge planner, social worker (often the same role) can get the forms for you, or the next time you visit, go to medical records and get the form, and complete it then and there. The issue would be whether or not it's available in that department, but I don't see why they couldn't access it on hospital computers now that literally everything is computerized.
It concerns me that she is completely uninterested in food lately and sleeping a lot too. I think these UTIs wear her out. Sigh...
Last, but definitely not least, your job. There is no getting around it. If you are an only child, and the weight of all of this is on your shoulders, it is going to be very stressful. You are worried, you love your mom, and you are not a medical doctor, so some of this feels like a foreign language. This approach helped me with my job: Think of your time at work as an oasis where you can be free from worry about your mom. Make a list of calls you will need to make during your lunch break, so you don't stress about that. But, just savor the freedom to concentrate on your work when you are working. If your mom is warm and loving, she would want professional success for you and want you to do this. You will have time--and it may not feel like enough time--to take care of her outside of normal working hours.
One last thing, see if HR can sign you up for Family Leave. That way if you unexpectedly have to come in late, leave early, or leave for a couple of hours during the day, It will be through Family Leave, and the company can't legally penalize you for this.
I hope some of this helps, and I think you are wonderful to be taking such good care of your mom.
I have 2 siblings, but they do not or not able to spend time with her. Talking from MY personal grief in this situation, I can tell you that the more you and she can talk on a "real time basis" about your lives and say with love whats important, not the things that don't make a bit of difference. I gues I may not make any sense. So hard to write what my heart want to say.....Would you like to talk more and us get more detailed? If so let me know.
Digital Banker, my mother has 24/7 homecare. She has excellent aides. She gets PT, wound care (for bedsores) and doctor visits in her home, which is pretty much all anyone could ask for.
Still, I'm in charge and have to stay on top of everything.
Marilyn, where did you hear of these bladder irrigations?? I can't imagine her dr would know what those are.
Having UTI's are very painful. You said that your Mother has an aide. Is your Mother's aide Licensed to take care of IV's? Not administer them, but take care of them and make sure the patient isn't pulling at them. If so, maybe your Mother's Insurance or Doctor could get a Registered Nurse to come out and get an IV started with antibiotic's in it to make your Mother feel better. To me, fielding calls from Doctors, Nurses, and everybody else you named might be more harm than good at the end of the day. In my experience, when I took care of my Moma before she passed, I always answered calls. I made a lot of calls too. My Moma was at home also, but I was Blessed enough that I didn't have to work. I told my husband that I was going to have to take care of my Moma and he said Of course. So I moved in with her. I wouldn't trade that last year with her for anything on this earth. She had Alzheimer's and that last year, we laughed, danced and sang to Anne Murray's Inspirational hits whom both of us loved. But when we danced, she kept telling me that I was trying to lead. :) We didn't have many days like that, but I still cherished everyday that I had with her, even the day that she passed, while I was holding her hand talking to her. Love your Mother, Pray for your Mother and ask God to help you get through these stressful days. A lot of times, people forget to Pray when they're going through hard, stressful times. You would be surprised at how much better you would feel if you would give your stress to God and ask Him to help you through all of this. That's what He's there for, to love, help and protect all of us. One more thing that might help your peace of mind, get a Security System and have it linked to your smart phone so you can watch what's going on while you're at work. That will give you a lot of relaxation while at work. That way, you'll be able to keep your mind on your job better because you can check in on your Mother any time you want to. And don't tell your aide or anyone else that you're having the Security Cameras put in because it's nobody's business.
I wish you all the Blessing in the world and you and your Mother will be in my Prayers.
If you can afford it, I would recommend finding and hiring a good geriatric care manager to assist you. (They now call themselves "aging life care professionals.") That person should be able to oversee a lot of the administrative and logistic issues. Usually, they are familiar with options for outpatient palliative care as well.
You will still need to make decisions. Also, if your mom is sick and going downhill, you will probably want to spend some quality time with her. But hiring a good person to assist you should free up some of your time and energy, which you can then put either to spending time w your mom or towards your work.
Another option to consider, if your mom is going through an especially bad patch, is to take some time off work while you sort things out regarding your mom's health. I find that sometimes family caregivers are stuck in the weeds, buried under a million details and obligations. This makes it hard to 1) step back, figure out the big picture of your older parent's health and situation, and figure out an overall game plan, and 2) set up some support structures, to allow you to manage the situation more sustainably.
Good luck!
And not everything is urgent.
I think the hardest part is getting a grasp on everything that has to be done, prioritizing it, especially the conflicting priorities, and allocate down time to handle the issues. Sounds easy, but it's not necessarily so. Different issues require different mind sets, and in caregiving it's not as easy to switch as it is with business.
I can still remember shopping center configurations and specific easements from projects worked on over 25 years ago, but sometimes I can't remember my caregiving priorities from one day to the next.
And everything's more complicated when the issues that aren't objective or solvable, such as anxiety over a parent's health, are factored in and become paramount.
You are not Superwoman or Wonderwoman. Only you can set the parameters you can follow. Delegate delegate delegate.
And pray.
I understand your concerns. I have been there and have felt similar pains and worries. I realized that there was a different way to look at that situation...
Spirit colludes with your inner growth and places you in relationships and situations that identify your weak points and thus where you loose energy - places that you are unconscious of and where you need to grow stronger as a human being.
In a similar situation, I recognized that I had weak boundaries with my Mom. I looked back at life and saw that having a choice between her peace of mind and mine, I had always chosen hers. I realized that I unconsciously allowed her to make my life decisions...not because she was stronger or demanded it. No. Just the opposite. Because she was nice and sweet, and overall had been a good mother. One who had made the sacrifices for her family.
When I could no longer care for her, I had to draw a very realistic line between my life and hers. It was, and at times still is, not easy. I had to learn to create limits and weigh in the same scale what was beneficial for me with what harmed me. I have to do this with each choice regarding giving my energy to my life or her life.
At one point, we all have to learn the difficult lesson of boundaries - our limitations - to choose between honoring, respecting and loving ourselves, and what we do out of obligation, responsibility or guilt.
Our parents deserve our love, not our guilt. And we deserve to choose a life not yet lived. We do not have the right to sacrifice our life to always support one which they have already lived.
I remember what a very wise being told me: Your life's mission is to honor, love and respect your heart. To honor your spirit an soul.
Do act from a balanced place where you do not sacrifice who you are for anyone else.
All the best!
PS: It's important to look at the big picture. A situation like yours is a turning point and you have to treat it that way. You cannot help her if you dissipate your connection to your soul, your energy and your light. You must be strong in caring for yourself as well as her, or she will have no one. Crutch time is over. Choose your heart.
It would certainly require a visit by a Home Health Nurse to set up, but these ER visits have to be costing much more!