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2) Mind your own business, care only for those in your immediate family or household.
and
You are just as important as the one you're caring for, so please make sure you are caring for yourself if you want to survive the journey, which often times can be longer than you ever thought or expected.
2) Save for neurological problems that may be the cause, do not accept ongoing verbal abuse or being taken advantage of.
Respite care.
If she doesn't listen, be prepared to essentially give up everything, not have a life, and get very few breaks.
Accept that it is what it is...no fixing is going to happen.
Then provide comfort.
Don't make promise that you don't know if you can keep.
It is not sustainable, not healthy for you or the recipient.
www.mycareprints.com
If you do, please fasten your helmet so it won't fall off while you are beating you head against the brick wall.
Don't let the people you take care of, invalidate you. This journey is going to be more difficult than you could imagine. Things will change and you will learn more about yourself and your loved one that you sometimes care to, but do your best to find a healthy outlet, set up boundaries, and learn how to be there for them and show up for yourself.
You are doing your best, there isn't a manual for this. Sometimes, often, you will be the enemy even though you are doing the right things and protecting them. Keep your head up, the love is still there. Remember what you can control and concentrate on that.
Breathe, do mindfulness to emotionally regulate yourself and get some more tlc and therapy to help you along the way. It isn't your job to fix them, just help when and how you can. Boundaries=love, no matter how the other person sees it.