My mom has begun to shadow me apparently. She is vision impaired along with the dementia, she is not following me around so to speak.
When I leave the room she has started to say " Hello?" "Are you there" "Where are you?" It is continual until she sees me, regardless of the fact that she can hear me.
She only does that with me, not my siblings or my spouse, or anyone else that visits daily. I am her caregiver 24/7, so I sense this may be the reason.
I have noticed that when I explain to her what I am going to do, the calling after me is much worse. I have attempted to keep her engaged in an activity while I take care of chores, cooking, whatever. I have also tried to talk to her from the other room to reassure her. Anybody have any suggestions in this regard? .
My mom was 96 and she passed away on Feb. 1st of this year. I wasn't there when she passed and it kills me inside that I wasn't. Somehow I think my mom knew she was dying and wanted me to be with her when it happened. I just wished that I was. I had so much to say to her.
I know how demanding it is to be a caregiver. You need time for yourself too. But go that extra mile and be patient with them. They do it out of need for you and they feel secure knowing that you are there also they fear that something happened to you. Just let them know you are around cause if they pass away and you aren't there, you will feel really bad, like I do. And don't forget to tell them you love them everyday.
Mine has a little trick when she hears me coming up the hall past her room, She will be watching something on tv (often it is the news, so it is not even appropriate to laugh at it) she gives this little laugh hoping you will stop and ask her what's so funny.....one day when we lived in our house and she was in her apartment upstairs and not supposed to come down stairs alone, I had gone outside to talk on the phone, turned around, and there she was, with a big smile on her face, because she had "outed" my location and discovered where she was........
I just had to stop this message because she came out to the kitchen to put her lunch dishes in the sink -- and guess what? here she was standing here in front of the computer, READING EVERY SINGLE THING ON THIS PAGE!!
I have to close out my windows every time or she will stand here and read everything - messages to others, my messages, pages and websites I look at etc.
She also has no compunction about looking at personal letters, greeting cards or especially bills and income tax papers that are NOT hers -- if you cross her on it she gets all defensive and turns it around on you -- "you always have to make a big deal out of everything".........EXCUSE me??
You know what this is? From what I have read on here, it is sense of entitlement -- she's always been a nosy busybody and not well-liked in our town. Obviously nothing has changed even now she is older!! It disgusts me. There is no privacy even in my OWN home.
FedupNow, you are so right about everything. Thanks for validating.
I don't think anything my mom does irritates me as much as this hovering thing she does. Particularly bad is when I am working and I turn around to find her standing there behind me. Talk about "stealth", lol. It happens so much that I think she's behind me even when she isn't.
I know I'm kind of making light of my situation in this post, but it truly us aggravating beyond measure and a problem I am trying my best to ignore.
One thing that helps is my Mom loves dogs! when she is at my house my little westie just sits on her lap for hours. This helps. I think if I became full time caregiver I will use that and say "Mom,I have to go cook now. Lala(our westie) needs to stay out of my way in the kitchen - she is a bad beggar- can you watch her in the family room while I cook? It would be a big help!" Mom also has a huge heart when it comes to her dogs so I could also say "Lala is really scared right now and I have to go take a shower. Can you hold her while I get ready for the day? Just pet her and tell her that it is OK that her Mama will be right back?" I am hoping this will help sooth herself as well.
Good luck! And maybe get a lap dog?
She will ask about conversations (private ones) I have had with my husband or children. She has a huge sense of entitlement which seems to make her feel that she should be privy to everything that goes on in this house. (NOT!!) It seems as if she is afraid to miss something, or to feel left out. I might add that she is very childish and immature, jealous of others, hypercritical, judgmental, bigoted,.......shall I go on?
The comments from those of you who truly love your parents are completely different from those of us who have suffered, especially in childhood, from parents who are controlling, overreactive, and overbearing, not to mention overly strict and without empathy. I doubt if any of you who have NOT had parents like that can even begin to comprehend what it is like to care for an elderly parent who feels that they own you, and that you owe them -- believe me, it's a whole different scenario.
Why, this afternoon, she came out to the kitchen with her lunch dishes, which was rare because she rarely lifts a finger, she'd rather be waited on (suffers from a "queen" complex). I caught her unabashedly staring at the computer screen - not the first time either.
As soon as you get after them for doing something they know they shouldn't be doing, they go on the attack: "You're making a mountain out of a molehill! You're too sensitive! Why is everything a big deal to you!" Excuse me, you just violated my privacy...........but I guess that's ok, because no one would DARE do that to you because they would be severely reprimanded for it.
I laughed when I read the comment about the mother who suddenly "appeared" behind the poster - I get this all the time. I call it the "Houdini effect". Mine has quite a few tricks up her sleeve. (she has always been this way, it hasn't just suddenly happened because she is old now, and she does not have dementia).
Mine will take her lunch to her room to eat, but the minute you get out in the kitchen to get yours, you turn around to get something out of the fridge and - hello!! There she is.....watching everything that you make, or take to eat for yourself. Of course, if you do that to her, you are "nosy" or if you come up behind her, you get "oh you just love to do that to me, don't you? sneaking up on me all the time".
There is no where in this house in which I can have a quiet conversation with anyone, if someone comes to the door she "appears" to see who it is, because she feels she has the right to know. She will also volunteer to go downstairs to get the mail, that way she can have control and see what you are getting. But you are not allowed to look at her mail. That is not acceptable!
One night my husband and I had a meeting with the landscapers...I thought I saw a shadow up on the second floor and there she was, hanging over the balcony to see what all the action was!
I also took note of the post that mentioned a parent listening in on the phone. I am accused of doing this all the time. I never do that but she will pick the phone up to listen in and see who I am talking to!!
I guess what I am trying to point out is that this "do as I say, not as I do" attitude of hers, which she has installed in us since we were small, is the heighth of hypocrisy to me. I could give you so many more examples of her detrimental behaviour. But most of you, I'm sure, are interested in this kind of behaviour connected to dementia, whereas my parent has exhibited it all her life and I have busted my head trying to figure out what caused it, to no avail.
FedUpNow, you are very brave. You have done a good job. You are able now to let it go. I am happy to hear you say that after their death, you can have some peace. I am patiently waiting for mine.
Yes, they lie, they steal, they manipulate, they belittle, berate, and throw their weight around,. It's called bullying and this is the only way they have learned how to get what they want. Others of course are horrified at me, because I'm her only daughter (there is one useless sibling) and how could I possibly characterize her in this way? There must be something wrong with me, right??
I have a feeling you and I could compare a lot of notes on here......I am sorry about what happened to you with the walker incident - but if your husband was outraged, what did he do about it? Did he call her on it? Doubt if it would have done any good anyway. I have tried my level best to set boundaries with this one, telling her over and over again, the same things she should not do, only to find her continuing to do them, because she feels she has to know everything and who are you to get after her about it anyways?
I really had my eyes opened when I went on the narcissist thread on here. Sounds exactly like your MIL although I would also hazard a guess that your husband was the "golden boy" for whom no woman would be good enough in her eyes. There is no way to win with these people so it's best to just distance yourself and control the contact (or lack of) with them. TOXIC!!
You are the only one who made the connection of the name I chose: FedUpNow (i.e. FUN). You truly do get it! Takes one to know one. Yes, I married the only son, the golden boy, named after the 12th king of Lithuania blah blah blah. I refer to them as the newlyweds. Of course he didn't set boundaries. He lets her get away with this stuff. He has always been tested by his mother who insists she is more important than his wife. And she is. I gave up a long time ago. FYI, when I got truly fed up, I booked a three week trip to India and left without telling my husband where I was going. Best time in my life--traveling with three other women. He was furious. How dare I leave without telling him. How dare he inflict his mother on me.
Payback is a bitch, and sometimes, it can even be FUN! ;)
I wish I could get in her mind to see what she is thinking. I think sometimes it's like a fight or flight type situation. It is as if they are trying so hard not forget things that it gets all jumbled up inside somehow. Fixated on something and it gets all out of order in their mind.
I appreciate all of the suggestions and I am going to try them. It's like they say, with Alzheimer's / Dementia, they cannot change, so we have to.