Mum resists all suggestions of things that would help her. She fought me for 2 d*mn years over hearing aids and getting her to use a walking stick. She's no major health problems but she resists things that would assist her in staying independent.
I want to get her a walking frame, for when she has "wobbly" days. She refuses, says she's not ready for that. Next time we have a trip out, she wants put in a wheelchair. She weighs about 17 stone so there's no danger I can push that about.....
Just one example.
Any techniques to get her to help herself? I'm guessing the best one would be to be unavailable, but she's an excellent manipulator and I fall for it every single time.
not able to function without help and these aids. It is humiliating and beyond frustrating for these patients. On the other hand a carers lot is pretty awful too.
I am thinking of getting the doctor to tell him he must use these aids and do the exercises or the carer will collapse and he wont have anyone! People-especially men take notice of doctors when they wont listen to their spouse/partner. I found this when he was drinking gallons of beer -He only stopped when the doc. said you will be dead within a year if you dont stop now.
I had been to AA several times for advice but he refused to go. Then there was the smoking..... Its so very hard to change people.
My feeling is that if rainbow22's mother doesn't have dementia, then she will make her own decisions based on what she wants to do. It won't always make sense to rainbow - but her mother deserves to make choices. I believe that rainbow is a truly concerned daughter, but she may have to say, "Mum, that's your choice but I can't take you to ---whatever---unless you agree to use some form of support so that you don't fall.”
Then leave it to her mother. Often - for any of us at any age - when we are left to choose between admitting something we don't want to admit (like hearing loss) and whether or not to do something about it - we'll make a choice to do what needs to be done if we aren't pushed too hard. Stepping back can often accomplish what nagging fails to do.
This is the hard part for people as they age as it is for their adult children. Most adult children mean well. But adults of all ages deserve the dignity of making their own decisions even when they are "wrong" from the daughter/son's point of view.
With the focus on dementia, these days, it's easy for people to assume anyone over 65 can't think for themselves. Nothing is further from the truth. Becoming stubborn about feeling pushed into making decisions is often the next step.
Dementia, of course, changes that.
Good luck, Rainbow22. Your mother would likely be better off with hearing aids and a walking frame. I hope that she will eventually see this. Meanwhile smile through gritted teeth if you must. And please check back with us.
Carol
She has dementia but is functional as long as she has some control of her life. It is the small battles that she wins that gives her purpose. My charge prefers I do everything for her. I lovingly botch up her demands so she feels the need to do it herself to get it right. Maybe in your situation the lovingly botching and PT would help. Don't give up retreat, regroup and try again.
This is up to you, if you feel you can't push a W/C you don't have to. If she is capable of using a walker well she uses it or you don't take her. It really is as simple as that, you hold the power these days so use it.
Fairly able-bodied, she shouldn't have it both ways. Don't let her pull your strings so much.
Rainbow, 238 lbs is possible but not easy to push in a wheelchair. My mom was close to 200 and I could manage, could even get her up a manual ramp to our adapted vehicle, and it was an old of clunker of a chair. And she is likely expecting to be pushed rather than to push. That might explain the vote for a chair instead of a walker, though a walker is a lot less "dependent" than the chair and would be seen as helping with balance but maintaining strength and independence...maybe in some weird way the wheelchair seems more like a temporary convenience and the walker like some horrid old people thing. Maybe something pretty and high tech that you could call by a different name??
adaptivemall
tasmobility
Please use my Mom's example, maybe it might get through to your Mum. My Mom didn't want anything helpful for herself, nor for my Dad. Heaven forbid if a doctor said to her "it's age related". Mom would furniture/wall walk about their house, she was so unbalanced being in her late 90's. She even refused to let my Dad bring inside the house his new rolling walker.
Mom started to fall, trips back and forth to ER. Still refusing to help herself, or Dad, she had a serious fall and is no longer walking anywhere as she is bedridden in long term care on hospice watch. What did her stubbornness gain her, nothing, just heartache for those around her.
Dad is now using the rolling walker inside the house and hasn't fallen in months. And he is allowing the paid caregivers inside the house, Mom had refused them.
I know that I had issues with my cousin using her cane. It was a huge deal and I would constantly discuss it with her. EVEN AFTER SHE FELL and suffered fractures, she would make excuses for not using the cane. She was disabled due to arthritis. Later it was clear that she wasn't just being stubborn, it was dementia. She wasn't capable and had to be constantly supervised. She then went to a walker, but would forget that too. She then went into a wheelchair after more falls and fractures.
So, I would say that there isn't any real way to convince someone to use a cane, walker etc. Sadly, it's only when they are forced to go into a wheelchair that they stop falling and having fractures. It's sad to know that if she keeps being wobbly, it's likely to result in a fall. The only solution is someone to live with her and constantly remind her do use it.
I'd get her an Emergency Alert button she can wear to call for help in case she falls and can't get to the phone.
I looked it up and see that 17 stone is over 200 pounds. You should still be able to push her in a wheelchair at that weight. She may be safer in the wheelchair.