my mother is 67 years old and has been hospitalized 3-4 times in the last year due to falls. She lives alone and my sisters and I are not only physically incapable of providing her with 24/7 care we are beyond frustrated that we are expected to do so because she simply will not do what she needs to in order to be self sufficient. Currently, my youngest sister is with her and has been for almost a month now. She told me earlier "mom won't let me leave" stating a few different reasons why she "can't". We are tired of this cycle and at a loss as to what to do.
There’s a fine line in caregiving between helping and enabling. In my experience, and I am certain many others, you give an inch and they take a mile. It’s important to have clear cut boundaries of what you can and cannot do and what hours you are and are not available. Otherwise, you will get completely taken advantage of.
67 is very young to need such bands on caregiving. Can we have some background?
67 years old is awful young to be needing so much help. If she's not able to care for herself then she needs to move into the appropriate facility as she could live another 30+ years. Are you all up for this to continue for that long?
And if she doesn't have the money, then she needs to apply for Medicaid. You nor your sisters should be spending your hard earned money on her, as you will all need that for yourselves as you age.
You and your sisters are all grown ups and need to learn to set boundaries and say NO to the woman who is using you all.
You can do this!
It sounds like she is the chief enabler. Your mother's abusive neediness is how she manipulates your sister and the rest of you to cater to her demands. Its the same manipulative behavior that alcoholics and drug addicts use with their enablers so they can stay active in their addictions.
You and your siblings need to have a meeting without your mother present.
If homecare is an option for mom, arrange it. Then all of you go together and tell her homecare is starting for her and your sister is leaving.
If she starts with the abusive neediness and the refusal to help herself on any level, explain what the alternative is.
She goes into a nursing home. None of you are going to live as enablers and care slaves because mom wants it that way.
It doesn't work like that and she must be made to understand that this is not going to happen.
You need to tell your mother that these falls at her age are NOT normal and she needs a medical checkup. However, though you might lead the horse to water, that doesn't insure she'll drink. And there is nothing you can do to change her EXCEPT to withdraw your support.
"I personally feel that the root of this is alot of depression going back almost 7 seven years when we lost my dad to cancer". Also,
"I personally feel like she (mom) has given up."
Trust your gut instincts - you are probably spot on.
Grief is real & can certainly impact mental & physical health.
Point out to Mom, it's OK to seek help. She can start with her local Doctor for a HONEST chat, about her struggles, what meds she has been taking, then hopefully this leads to a depression screen test, a medication review & referrals for psychology/counselling.
Point out this is the BRAVE to do. That this is chance to change her pathway.
The above is Part #1: Suggest.
She may need to be on ONE of them, but not both.
7 years of grieving is sad beyond words. Of course, grief is personal as it gets, but at some point, you do have to say "Mom, you need to move on".
My grandmother lost her precious husband when he was 62. I was 7 and thought he was SOOO old. Now I'm 66 and realize how very young he was. Literally had just retired and died about a month after retiring.
My grandmother was sp gracious and private in her grief. She lived as a widow for 36 years. Almost longer than she was married. I asked her once how she handled this devastation with such dignity and she said "When you have lost the thing you love most, nothing else can touch you. I chose a life that kept me busy and interested. My grief is my own." (She was fabulously in tune with life, w/o drugs or therapy or anything. She was just tough.)
Nobody put their life on hold for her. She was independent to the end and showed us by example how to hold your head up and not wallow in sadness.
Your mom has suffered losses, and I don't mean to dismiss the pain she feels, but we are all in a constant flux of new life and also death. Handling both with dignity is hard, but certainly can be done.
You should NOT put your life on hold for mom. Oddly enough, my grandmother spent MANY years shoring up my mother who NEVER got over losing her dad when she was 32. Probably never occured once to mom that grandma lost the love of her life---mom wasn't able to 'adult' really, ever again. Grandma lived her life fully.
Everyone is very, very different.