I moved my mother into my husband's and my home in November of 2005. She had fell at home and broke her hip. She was not able to live on own any longer anyway. This gave us an excuse to move her into our home. She was a very independent woman before the accident, but things have changed in the last few months.
Her short term memory is not good at all any more. She can not wheel herself around the house any longer.
She just got out of the hospital back in June about a 2 week stay with a blockage in her colon and then she contracted VRE. That is not fun to have in the home. I felt so sorry for her.
I am starting to have crying sessions it seems like every other day anymore. I do not see my mother any longer I see a person declining quickly. I am feeling overwhelmed and I don't think my family sees it. I have told them I need to get away for a few days, but that never seems to happen. No one has time to watch or be with mom except me. I am the only child so this is all on my shoulders. Her brother is not any help they have not spoke in several years now.
I do not know if I am just going through a stage or if I am starting to get depressed. I am with mom almost 24/7 except when a homemaker comes in daily. A person can go to Walmart just so many times to get out of the house. I seem to have lost my friends because I can not get together with them anymore.
This on-line discussion is a life line for me. This way I can communication with people and see how they handle different things that come up in their caregiving also.
So if anyone has advice please let me know how to get myself under control.
Losing Control
sometimes I just want to get into my car and drive forever. Sometimes I think I am losing it...I am so glad to find this aging care site so I could talk to someone who understands just what I am talking about.
I'd like to make some suggestions that may help instead of turning a family problem into a bureaucratic nightmare.
1. Call SPCA or local animal control about the dogs - either they get help and are cared for, or your mom has to sign over these beleagured pets. It is unfair to letthem stay in those conditions for even one more day.
2. Regardless of the emotional issues it is time for you to grap a camera - borrow a digital or even buy a disposible at the drugstore and go take pictures. Share those pictures with your brother & sister and MAKE A PLAN. Stay focused on correcting the problem and caring for the parent - not assigning blame or fighting.
If there is denial, then go to area agency on aging and ask for an MSW to help visit / mediate and address the behaviour's root causes.
3. Make an appointment with a geriatrician to evaluate your mother & take her there. She needs to be assessed physically and mentally - when people descend into the squalor you have described there are many reasons. Health, nutrition, etc. For all you know she may have cataracts and not be able to see well enough, but can function alone in her own environment and not wanting to change, clean or move things.
You have a very big job - but there are services that provide clean-up for hoarder households, services that will help guide families through the problems, and ideally enough maturity between you & siblings to care to sort it out.
My heart goes out to you, but don't walk away and don't give up.
You may want to put an anonymous call to the health dept about the bugs. Since your brother and sister has all the pull they may be charged with elder abuse or the neighbors may even turn her in as being unfit to be alone.Either way whoever has the POA may get into alot of trouble if something is not done and soon. I know how frustrating it is to have people there that should help but don't. Just remember that you are doing the best that YOU can do and that later down the road you will find comfort in knowing that.
Barb
I'm assuming you were already registered. The first time you log on, if you have been off awhile, you will get that login message, but your message should be saved to submit. What I've done to be certain, is select and click "copy" on my replies (I don't paste it, but if there's is a glitch, I still have it).
Again, I'm so sorry. The frustration - when you are already frustrated and looking for someone to listen - is really bad. Please take care, keep coming back, and I'll let the tech people know about this.
Carol
Since you didn't get any sense of being valuable in your family, you should be very proud that the strength of character, dedication, learning curve, selflessness and focus to manage caring for your mom for 8 years would probably wash out more people than drop out of medical school - or for that matter the marines. Being isolated makes everything that a caregiver do harder, because many times we are invisible. No badges of honor, no creditials or white coat, no professional societies and no public recognition. It sucks, but we have created a society that encourages and promotes the importance of 'experts' and ignores those who wholeheartedly are the "Doer's".
Carol commented on another posting that when she was writing her book, she was told she was not an expert - despite all of her years caring for elders in her family.
I know we all have had similar experiences. I'd just like to share with you a doctor, who is a geriatrician recently told me he felt that many long-time family caregivers have in his eyes earned the equivalent of a Master's Degree in the trenches, and he wished that more people who are or have been caregivers would consider staying in the field professionally.
Regardless of what your mom thought in the past, or your family thinks now - you are valuable, talented, and honored in this group of your peers. So I hope you will hold that in your heart and stay on this board to share learn and make it through another day.
be well - Cat
Carol
I've read a lot of the posts now and although I don't have any answers, it helps somehow to hear others in my situation. When all you have is work or home (even more work!) it's easy to become isolated and completely alone. I don't know how many times I have screamed at God, only to come back later and beg forgiveness. Sometimes I just feel like I am at the brink of insanity and slipping quickly. It would be easier if I had loved my mom, but she made it clear all my life that I was just the 'spare' in case her son died, but since my brother didn't, I was Cinderella without the Fairy God Mother. I'm just so angry that I was treated like that and yet I'm the one stuck taking care of her. Well, I'm pretty sure this is the final turn in the road for my mom, so I'll just stick it out. I've made it almost 8 yrs, I think I can hold on a little longer. Maybe it's God's way of trying to make me forgive. It's a hard lesson to learn and I'm still fighting, but maybe soon I'll get the hang of it (smile)
Big hugs to all of you!
Jill
Good luck to you though, I can imagine how frustrating it is to be in your situation with your siblings not helping out at all :(
Let me know please, I would appreciate it :)
Be Good,
Susan
another caregiver tried something a while ago that might get you some more support. Share this site with your brother and sister....if they are in healthcare perhaps seeing a different viewpoint - one of us caregivers - might make them realise that it is time for them to step up & help even a little.
I forget who suggested it, but it worked a bit for her & maybe it may help soften your siblings hearts to your plight. It's easy to get jaded when you work in healthcare - time for both of them to gain insight & humility by sharing your world at least online.
take care,
Cat
Nursing home is out. I'm one of those people who believe my word is everything. My parents were divorced when my dad had a massive stroke (I know, bad genes, right??!!) and went to a nursing home. I told my mom the horror stories and she was a basketcase, begging me not to ever allow anyone to put her in one. Even though our relationship wasn't much of anything, I promised I wouldn't...now I'm stuck. Even if it kills me, I have to do this. I will check into the state aging services dept, thank you!
First you are not terrible and you are not whining! This is a terrible situation for you and you need to help yourself. Please call your state aging services department and get the name of your area agency on aging. These people can help you. It sounds like your mom may need a nursing home. She'll get decent care - you can oversee it like you are now, but this home agency isn't good, you can't do more and your health will go. Please take care of yourself. Get help. And please come back here and let us know how you are doing.
Carol
Please help,
Susan
However, be firm and explain that you need your life, too. If she still complains, let her. Be kind, but detach and do what you must. She knows you love her and you have done a lot. You'll keep helping no matter where she is. You are a kind, wonderful person. I'm happy you've found new love to round out your life.
Carol
Good for you - bringing your mom home again is a wonderful thing to do. You deserve alot of credit for being self-aware enough to be able to separate the irritants from the bigger picture of your mom's care. I hope you will see the benefit of remaining kind, yet keeping your relationship with your mom on a more adult / equal footing.
I was just reading posts before turning in after a fairly long day - reading your post was really nice. It's nice to see how others handle things and know we are not alone.
Anyway - all the best & welcome to the charmed circle !
When she finally went to the assisted care facility she seemed to be o.k for awhile but then she started complaining and whining constantly about the place. After a year of seeing her unhappy and realizing that she was at the point where she needed a little more than "assisted" care but not yet in need of "skilled" nursing care, and adding to all this the stock market was draining her finances at a rapid pace, so I made the decision to bring her back home to live with me. This will happen on Dec. 20th..She was so happy with my decision that she cried. In the mean time I am getting the rasberries from everyone for doing something that they are sure will be a big mistake for me that I will very soon regret....Mom and I had a heart to heart talk and I gently explained that things would have to be different this time around...Before she went to assisted living she would never allow me to get hired help in to be with her if I wanted to get away for a long weekend. I explained that this would have to change and that she needed to stop complaining and trying to manipulate me OR it would be off to a skilled nursing facility. I really want this to work for both of our sakes as I love my mom very much but she has to realize that I am a grown up woman who can make my own decisions.
I won't write anymore as it is starting to look like I'm working on a novel here. I have read a lot of your postings and I know you all share in the same problems that I have. God Bless all of you and I will keep each and every one of you in my prayers....I know you will do the same for me....Love. Jan
PT.S usually do ok with amutation with P.T. they get good strength in their upper body and do learn to transfer into w/c sometimes with a sliding boardmatm first as lonf as they can treasfer in a car or w/c they do well.
thanks, that is so sweet of you to say. I wish that you did live near me - coffee pot is always on if you are ever on the west coast!