My 82 year old dad is in a group home. I stress myself out calling and going to see him, but the only time I hear from him is if he needs me to do something. I have 2 older sisters, but they are no help whatsoever so it falls to me and my husband. My dad can be very, very difficult to deal with. He expects us to be at his beck and call. We've told him time and time again we both work, have our own family and have our own health issues.
If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it is just not some sweet old lady talking.
This behavior must stop because not even a slave deserves that. Hire a housekeeper to come in just for that, instruct the housekeeper in front of your mother to just pick up all the tissues, bottles, empty the trash, and this nice lady here will be paying you today. Then walk away. Be sure to explain to housekeeper that you will be adding a little bonus for hazard pay.
And Jessie,, what sort of trash is she throwing on the floor? nasty smelling stuff or just papery junk? Maybe I would let it lay for awhile ( and I am OCD so I know how hard this could be)... But if she wants to sit around in trash.. so be it. If she gets on your case about the mess,, remind her it's her mess...LOL and if she wants to live in filth you will be glad to relocate to her liveing area, bedroom,, wherever she wants. Since she is sooo attached to it and doesnt think it belongs in the trash can.
You are right, advanced stages of dementia the person would not know any better.
Maybe I should have addressed my comment to Jessebelle, whose mother's behavior is imo redeemable.
I know that I don't like to see Jessebelle treated so poorly.
You should not feel guilty for wanting to have peace of mind and quality of life. You are not there for his every demand. The more you set boundaries the easier it becomes. Bravo that you cut out the Wednesday visit.
What can you do... sometimes I cry , walk away or answer back . It seems as if they lose any perspective on life but their own. Hope you can reduce your stress. I too dread calling him as it just unleashes more problems to deal with. Take rest when you can and step back.
I want to make sure everyone knows there is help like the maid suggestion but also eldercare options, like an aid or adult day care. Just like when you get on a plane, and they give the safety presentation about the use of the oxygen masks. Put yours on first then help those around you. My advice take care of yourself first, get them help if needed, then reach out to help if necessary.
I am "on duty" all day, every day. If I get angry enough and blow up, he will be "nice" to me for a few hours. The other day he told me I "need to learn to shut up". This is absolutely not how I expected to spend my retirement. I have Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome plus arthritis so bad in. Y shoulders I can't lift. Y arms above my shoulders. My husband weighs 350 pounds but I have to roll and pull him over, move his medical equipment and change his bed and diapers. I have a health aide once a week, but she is not there to clean up his diarrhea or deal with his verbal abuse.
I am seeing my PCP today, and I am going to ask her to provide the name of a counselor or I will lose it completely.
Know that you cannot be used unless you let yourself be. Dad is safe and cared for and you don't need to supervise him. There is staff for that. You have the opportunity that I don't. You have someone else to watch over Dad while you go on with your business of daily living. Distance yourself as you can from this. Keep in touch with his caregivers and don't worry so much! Good luck!
Many people need to allow actions to teach, reinforce the plan, and let the upset sit there, "I'm sorry, I can come on those days, and I'm glad to come. I hope you'll help me to know any items you want by my call on Tues AM."
A great social worker years ago helped me with my disabled brother that I helped to start adulthood. She asked both of us in the presence of each other, how often we each wanted to see each other. I said twice a week, he said every day. "Fine", she said. "Both of you take responsibility for the time you choose: Joe, you call Cassie and ask for anything you need or want; Cassie, you only call Joe the twice a week that you chose, and answer his calls as fits your time otherwise. Fact is, he never called - he just wanted to get me to take care of him as mother used to do - and I stopped feeling responsible for every moment during the week, focused on my time. The issue was to get ME to stop worrying if he got upset, just say, sorry you were worried, here's what I can do - and accept inside, for YOU, that you are doing a great and valuable job.
Every once in a while, there will be an emergency, and it matters to hear those - but don't give in on the phone right away, say, you'll see what you can do. Decide off the phone, and maybe it's, "I'll be there tomorrow instead of Tues" or you can get to know the staff and call and ask them to find someone to get what he wants.
It's a shame if negative attitudes build resentments. Worth it to consider, choose, and affirm often that you're glad to be in touch. Start your own list of names and numbers of whom to call if you can't do something soon. If you know you are paying steady attention, you are doing your best, and letting them fuss if you stick to a plan. They gradually come round!
No one is entitled to nothing just because of age. Warned him that if he doesn't start taking responsibility he'll end up in a care facility where no one will come running at his every call. I would put him in and understaffed facility let him see just how busy they really are with other patients. When reality hits, only then will he see just how busy people really are and he may actually start learning patience.
Years ago I knew someone who was in a local nursing home, she was transferred here at her request from a neighboring town. When she got here and I went to visit her, I was actually very surprised at how long it took the staff to get each and every patient out of bed in the morning. They were understaffed and they had to start going around very early in the morning and tending to each and every patient. They had to start at whatever room they started and slowly work their way around as each patient was gotten out of bed, taken to the bathroom and tended to, dressed and for those in wheelchairs, they were loaded into wheelchairs and taken to the dining area one by one. They could start as early as about 5 AM or however early they felt they needed to start. This was actually a very small wing but I don't recall just how many patients were in this particular wing. Imagine no more than 2 to 4 staff doing all of the chores and then having to feed each and everyone of those patients and tend to their needs at the table. When everyone has eaten, each and every patient was taken either to their rooms or wherever they wanted to go like the TV room. I personally wouldn't like living this kind of life myself, especially if you had to stay in your room most of the time or you couldn't go outside by yourself when you wanted to. Anytime you walk in as a visitor, you immediately feel the sense of a loss of freedom and the presence of death. This can actually make you want to run right back out because it's very depressing to the point you really don't want to be there. Therefore, I really don't blame people who fight against going into these facilities. I have a friend who was even able to smell a very odd smell when death was in there. Of course they didn't believe her and thought she was looney until 12 hours later, they found one of their patients dead. Yes, that friend can smell death 12 hours before it happens and so can I. When I got to speaking with her mom who is also a friend, it turns out me and her daughter have the same ability but we don't know how to really describe this odd smell, but we can tell you who it's near when we smell it. I really don't think the patient in your care would really want to be in a facility. In order to avoid going to a facility, he really needs to start proving he's able to live independently. If he really wants to keep his freedom and independence and stay home, he needs to take responsibility and start doing stuff for himself. If he really wants something done bad enough then he can just get off his keister and do it himself if it must be now. The next time he gets on you for not doing something right then, you can look him in the face in the eye and tell him, "if you want it done now, get off your lazy butt and do it yourself!" Then walk away. If he already has demands before you get there and even right as you come in the door, I personally would turn right back around and walk right back out that door, slamming it behind me. If I wasn't yet there, he wouldn't get whatever it was he asked for at the store, I would return everything for a refund and I simply wouldn't go to his house. In fact, I would drop off as his caregiver as long as he's acting like this, and I would tell him so as soon as he started asking questions. Just be upfront and honest. Setting boundaries doesn't necessarily mean you don't love the person, you're just simply setting boundaries that should be enforced. If he's going to start barking orders let's say about groceries, I just wouldn't take the groceries to him nor would I even go to the store as long as he's barking orders. If he has to go to the bathroom and is barking orders, make him take himself to the bathroom if he must go now as many of us who must go now and up taking ourselves. If he wants a bath now, make him do it himself. Whatever it is he's barking orders over, just tell him if he wants it done now to just get off his lazy butt and do it himself, that you're not catering to him as long as he's barking orders at you
By answering all the time, by calling HIM constantly, you are setting yourself up for just the abuse you're getting. I am not judging you, at all. I do the same thing with mother. She only calls me if she's got some awful problem (and they're NEVER awful)....so I am taking a long break from seeing her or calling her. My poor husband--he has been a peach through seeing me deal with my demanding, ungrateful mother--I keep trying to "fix" everything for her, and I suddenly realized, I CANNOT fix anything, b/c she is happy being miserable.
If he gets belligerent or disrespectful, walk away. Just WALK AWAY. This is the ONLY tactic that works with mother, if it even does. She's fine, I am spiraling into depression over her.
For some of the others who've answered here...one thing I tell myself constantly if "I'm not responsible for my dad, I'm responsible to my dad". Meaning I can't do anything to make him happy or change his attitude. I can order depends, buy things he needs, take him to an appointment. Hope that helps. It has saved me.
There was a very interesting book which, I think, came out in the 1970s about Transactional Analysis. There may even be explanations on the Internet these days, but the main thing is that if our parents are now behaving like 'children' we have to take on the role of 'parents'. In doing so we can take control of the situation by backing away from it and deciding what WE will do to solve the "childish mother or father's" acting out or tantrums. I have to admit that this approach doesn't solve my feelings of guilt and hostility but all the time but I'm getting better at seeing things this way.
"Emotions don't just happen to us, we choose them.
Thoughts, emotions and actions are the only things we really do control."
We can't control others' actions or speech, but we can choose to not let them be detrimental or enslaving to us.
This helps us to "place the blame" where it belongs, so to speak. If we allow or invite uncomfortable thoughts, serve unreasonable demands, etc., we need to examine our own motivations and make adjustments in ourselves. If others change their behavior in response, that may be good; but even if they don't, we will have determined our own destiny.
And.....Get plenty of sleep, because you can't think goodly when you're tired!
My MIL lives in an assisted living facility - they have shopping trips planned. A bus will come and take them to the local Walmart etc. Not sure if a group home does anything like this, but maybe you can hire someone like visiting angels, etc. Dad can keep his list of what he needs and then the caregiver can take him out shopping. It may turn into something he looks forward to.
If dad isn't mobile, maybe you can still hire someone once a week (or whatever works for you) to run errands for him. I think a lot of seniors are bored and then they have way too much time to think, when the rest of us are crazy busy. It may be a nice change in the monotony of his life.