Follow
Share

Hello~I am having a difficult personal inner struggle with moving 85 yr old Alzheimer’s mom into assisted living. She recently scored 5/30 at neurologist’s appointment. Dr said it’s time to move. Mom cried saying, "I can’t believe you are doing this to me." Heels are dug in to stay at home. Have home care Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 10-3 and Tuesday and Thursday from 10-1. She is talking good when I call her and wants her glider put out on her patio. She wants to stay in her home that she built with Dad. Eventually when 24/7 care is needed, staying at home won’t be affordable. I already evaluated 3 assisted living facilities and chose one. How do I do this to her? My heart is aching and I’m in tears.

Find Care & Housing
You do what is necessary regardless of what mom thinks. You have to do what is best for everyone and for now that means placing a woman with a diagnosed issue where she will be safe and cared for. Of course she is not wanting to leave her home. Did you want to go to school and take math tests? No, but she made you do it anyway because it was best for you. Now it's your turn to do what is best, not what she wants.
Helpful Answer (14)
Reply to JustAnon
Report
Sissy1221 Apr 26, 2026
Thank you very much for your words and perspective. Very helpful
(1)
Report
Memory Care Assisted Living is 100% the proper place for mom and you have zero reason to feel guilt. Grief certainly, but not guilt. The disease is the issue here, not you or the AL. "You" are doing nothing to her but your job of keeping her safe, fed, protected and clean. The disease is creating that need.

My mother lived in AL for 5 years and loved it, then segued into Memory Care for the last 3 years of her life where her girls treated her beautifully.

Best of luck to you.
Helpful Answer (11)
Reply to lealonnie1
Report
Sissy1221 Apr 26, 2026
Thank you so much. I’m hopeful she will adjust without any serious complications. She looked so sad and tiny today saying that none of her neighbors care about her. Well, I guess that’s about to change. I’m definitely feeling more determined and confident in doing this.
(11)
Report
In order to make the move you need to establish exactly where that line in the sand is and what will trigger the change. If things are going okay for now perhaps you can delay a few weeks or months, setting a date before winter arrives (September?) will allow her one last summer. If that's impossible then you'll just have to be strong and move forward, unpleasant tasks and responsibilities are all part of life.
On another point - you mention having found assisted living facilities but if your mom that dementia those may not be appropriate for very long, you need to be sure they will provide dementia related care or you will find yourself moving her again.
Helpful Answer (7)
Reply to cwillie
Report
Sissy1221 Apr 26, 2026
Thank you so much for your reply. Dr and I originally set Aug 1st. The facility I liked best cure has a 1st floor one bedroom available May 1st (it does have memory care unit). My thought is to go ahead and secure it and take my time setting it up for her. I have her exact same bedroom set that I’m not using, so move that in to make it more looking like her home. Meanwhile, have her caregiver take her over there just for lunch, not mentioning move at all. Thinking slowly introducing her to the environment. Her birthday is mid June, so thinking late June/July saying just for a trial? Saying to her that it’s like a cruise ship vacation on land? There is no playbook/instructions for this. Meanwhile, I do believe she is showboating with me knowing that I’m the one who will be making her move. I definitely want her on the first floor and not sure if I should let this opportunity pass. I really appreciate your thoughtfulness in responding 💕
(9)
Report
See 1 more reply
Give her some time to settle in. After a while she will most likely enjoy the relationships with the staff and with the other residents her age, plus the activities and the nice meals. Stay strong. You're doing this for her safety and care.
Helpful Answer (6)
Reply to MG8522
Report

I just went through this with my mom. I told her it was time to find a new home. Showed her the apartment I had found for her and listed all the positives of a new home. You have to be positive and supportive of the move. If she knows you are experiencing angst, then she will play the guilt card. Know that this is a positive move for her health and well-being.
Helpful Answer (6)
Reply to Albatross
Report

First I have to say this.
For the most part I am of the belief that a person with dementia should not be in AL but in Memory Care. At least when it gets to the point where you are worried about whether or not she is safe to remain at home alone.

In an ideal world we could all remain in our homes until we die.
And 50 years ago that was possible in most cases. "Mom" was home, not working. Most of the time 1 or 2 sets of grandparents lived near by and could help with the kids or the "senile" one, the would keep tabs on the one that would wander, might expose himself, might shoplift, or try walking into a neighbors house. (and even if that happened the neighbor would probably offer coffee and call "mom" and tell her "I got grandpa Joe"
Well now "Mom" works, the kids have all sorts of activities, both sets of grandparents are 1500 miles away or dead and no one knows their neighbor and if you happened to wander into a neighbors house you may be shot or cops would be called and you would be charged maybe with trespassing or worse breaking and entering.
Long way to say your mom can't stay in her home.

Now if she listens to her doctor would she accept that she has to move to a place where she is safe and has 24/7 care?
The other side of this is with dementia she no longer has the capacity to determine what is safe for herself.
I do hope that you have POA for Health and Finances so that you can make these decisions for her. If not it might be to late but you can try to get an attorney that will determine that she knows what documents she is signing. They will interview her alone to make that determination so make the appointment for her "best" time of day.
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to Grandma1954
Report

Scoring only 5 out of 30 is not good. You rarely hear a Doctor say it's time to move her into a facility. It's not your fault she has gotten old and has dementia.

Don't let her self pity discourage you from where she needs to be in order to be safe.

Assisted Living means no cooking, housecleaning or laundry, for starters. It's not a prison or asylum. She still has her own place, privacy and professional medical staff working there. Get her on the Wait List, since it will be much harder as she gets worse.
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to Dawn88
Report

I would emphasize she doesn't have to shop, cook, do dishes, clean or do laundry! That is the #1 reason!

Then emphasize she will not be totally alone, yet still has her privacy. Tell her it's not like the horrible 1950's places in movies, not a prison or asylum. Tell her the family thinks it's a good idea, so they can visit her easier with more spare time!

Sure she's had her house for years. We all have. But getting old happens to everyone. She would be protected 24/7 by a professional staff, and know she is not alone. Her late Husband would be pleased she is safe and will have an easier life without chores.
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to Dawn88
Report
Beedevil66 May 3, 2026
Not necessarily. Those "chores" gives you something to do to pass the time and keep you active;

it definitely beats sitting in front of the tv (which many residents do,)most if not all day mostly watching tv shows, some of which can be over 40yrs old with actors and actresses that have passed on.

Example, isn't it sad to watch say the Golden Girls knowing all the main characters have passed?
(0)
Report
I'm going through the same thing with my 88 year old mom. It's not easy, and it's even more unhelpful when people who don't know my family's situation have such rigid opinions on what should or shouldn't be done.
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to modernbird
Report
MTNester1 May 3, 2026
Just stay true to yourself. No one understands what it's like if they haven't dealt with it personally. You know that you have done your best, but there comes a time when enough is enough. If her doctor sees what the situation truly is, then take comfort in that. He wouldn't tell you that it is time to take it to the next level if it wasn't. My mom refused, so her doctor said she left him no choice but to recommend hospice, in home. She lived about 3 months. I was there with her AND I had a wonderful family as my support group. Not everyone has that. Know that you have done all you could and find peace in that.
(0)
Report
Wow so many different answers! I think we all answer based on our personal experiences. My mom was similar to yours--she had lived in her house for over 50 years. Rejected any proposal to move out of hand. Also had ALZ diagnosis. Was pretty happy at home but we became very concerned about the driving and engineered it so that she didn't/couldn't drive the car sitting in the driveway. Also had a part time caregiver to help with meds and drive her places, which she hated. Had a lot of debates among ourselves as to how to keep her safe. None of us lived super close--the closest was a 40 minute drive. My neighbor was able to stay in her house with ALZ until she passed in her late 90s but she had a full time caregiver and family in town. Big difference.
My mom's doctors also suggested AL long before we finally moved her. I suggest you don't let the score dictate. Also MC is very low functioning and maybe not the right choice even if there is cognitive impairment. If your mom can still tend to her personal needs it would probably be overly restrictive.
We did not bring my mom to look at different facilities. Two of my sisters toured and we chose the one we thought she would like best. We tricked her and told her it was a hotel--that was last year and she still thinks it is a hotel and occassionally asks about checkout.
It has made our lives easier in many ways and lifted a lot of worry since we know ahe is safe and well cared for. But it has been a tradeoff, make no mistake. AL is one thing for elders with full cognitive abilities who can amuse themselves but another for people with dementia. It can be cliquey and not as comforting as being at home. Another thing to consider is how is she socializing? My mom's world had become very small as her friends died and moved away. She didn't seem to mind but she spent more time inside and seemed a little depressed. It would have been different if she had a vibrant social situation, but you can't expect people who are fully with it to want to spend all their time with friends with ALZ. We later learned that her friends were relieved we had placed her and later told us that they were always worried she would wander away whenever they met up to go to a play or out to dinner.
Sorry this reply is so disorganized. I have never read a post that said my loved one with ALZ asked to go to assisted living. Many facilities have a one or two month respite program. You could try getting her into one of them and see how it goes. It might surprise you.
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to Jennyjenjen
Report

See All Answers
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter