I confess: I totally lost it and yelled and slammed a door at Mom's MC today, which I know you should never do in such an environment. I had just arrived to take her to lunch and shopping, after spending several stressed-out days waiting for a COVID test (negative, thankfully) because of exposure to someone who had tested positive. And the first thing she said was that she had no Christmas cards to send folks because my husband had stolen them months ago -- the same delusion she has had all year and that has caused an irreparable rift in the family. I don't know how others manage this type of insanity, but I feel like I am out of coping mechanisms. This combined with an incredibly stressful job has given me new medical problems in the last 6 months, and I feel like the ONLY alternative is to reduce visits, but I am all she has. She 100 percent depends on me to meet emotional needs that I could not meet even before she became ill, and it is worse now. Meanwhile the need to keep up with all the administrative business of her care and bills and concern about the future is ever-present, like a dark cloud that won't go away. My husband really resents how this has taken over so much of our time and emotional energy. I'm not even sure there is a question in here, because perhaps there are no answers. Maybe I'm just hoping I am not the only one to lose my temper and behave badly, but I'm also fearful that now that it's happened once, it will happen again.
i love, love what you wrote.
and i love your last sentence. what a great philosophy/way of life:
“One thing Mom told me my entire life is that you will never regret being kinder than you're expected to be.”
I've been managing her life for over 10 years now. She's fallen 90 times that I know of over the past 5 years, 49x since she's in Memory Care alone. I take calls constantly from the MC, just yesterday I took THREE. To say I'm burned out is a gross understatement. So my DH and I take measures to protect ME nowadays. Because if I'm sick or in the hospital myself, then what?? The reality is I'm the only child so it ALL falls on ME. There's nobody to pick up the slack. So I'd better take care of ME o/w who's going to look after HER?
You also need to realize that you will NOT be able to meet all of her emotional needs now b/c that's impossible, especially with dementia at play. Those 'needs' constantly change as the days pass and she changes her criteria. Are you supposed to be everything to her on a daily basis? Come on! Not happening! Come to terms with the fact that you can only do SO much for her and then let the rest go; rely on the MC to meet most of her needs and then you supply the rest. Bring her some cards and ignore the nonsense about your DH stealing them. As soon as she gets ranting about such things, leave her presence. That will ensure you won't blow up and escalate the situation to where YOU are feeling badly at the end of the visit.
I feel your pain, dear one. I'm in the same boat as you are and both of us are doing our best to care for our mother's while being human at the same time. Burnout and compassion fatigue are very real, too, and should never be discounted by those who don't understand. Take care of YOU throughout the coming days b/c you matter too. Sometimes we get so caught up in the needs of the elder that we forget that fact. Best of luck
Consider getting help to accept this thing that you cannot change. You aren't going to change your mother, but it is imperative that you attempt to change your own reactions.
The serenity prayer may help if you are a believe. It has helped me even as a NON-believer, because it's truth is so universal and profound.
And remember, you aren't super-human. A slammed door hurts no one as long as you are able to own it and apologize for disturbing or frightening others.
I would like to suggest that you change your expectations. So with the Christmas cards. So what if she accuses your husband of stealing them? Of course, he did not do so. But it is VERY common for people with dementia to accuse people close to them of stealing from them. Let it go. How did this cause an irreparable rift in your family? That's just plain old sad. And unnecessary. Hopefully it can be repaired. Unless the people in the rift are not willing to be reasonable, which is their right.
Since she is in a facility that is meeting her basic needs, I think you should consider backing off a little bit. You can't meet all her emotional needs. Cut back a bit on how much you are visiting. Either number of days and/or minutes per visit.
Put some time and energy back into your marriage.
You are definitely not the only one to lose your temper and/or behave badly. Been there. It's hard dealing with this! You are sorry and very aware that it was not your best moment, so I doubt that it will happen again.
Don't be too hard on yourself! Best of luck as you continue to work on finding a good balance.
Please tell yourself that over and over before losing it again around her. You are her lifeline to what's still familiar, and if you go off the rails, it's terrifying to her. She can't help what she says and does, but you can.
I remember consciously telling myself that my mom was MY mom, because she wasn't my mom anymore. I never lost my temper with her because she never did anything to warrant that, but for me, keeping in mind that this stranger was my mother and to treat her as I'd treat my mother took real effort. I knew that she didn't know me as her daughter anymore, but the way I talked to her told her I was a friendly, familiar person.
You aren't going to get what you want from her any longer, but try to find it in yourself to be at least something of what she remembers in you.
BTW - my husband passed away October 24 after 4 months in memory care, and I now look back with regret and wished I could have handled certain situations differently. However, I cared for him, visited him every day in MC and loved him until the end.
I have been where you are now. Know that you cannot possibly meet all your mother's emotional needs. Know that you cannot possibly make "everything right" for her. Know that you are only human and may lose your temper.
Christmas cards are cheap. Buy your mom new ones. Your health is not. Is there anyone in your family who'd be willing to assume the administrative aspect of your mom's healthcare, permanently or temporarily? This Covid issue has placed everyone under an additional layer of stress and anxiety, not to mention the Christmas season, etc. This is all very hard. Reduce your visits, at least for awhile before the stress kills you. I had to cut back for the sake of sanity and discovered my mom didn't know the difference between weekly and monthly visits (or whatever duration you determine is sufficient to ensure her care is being managed appropriately, which is why she's in memory care). Wishing you a peaceful Christmas and the answers you will find within. (((Hugs)))
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