By proceeding, I agree that I understand the following disclosures:
I. How We Work in Washington. Based on your preferences, we provide you with information about one or more of our contracted senior living providers ("Participating Communities") and provide your Senior Living Care Information to Participating Communities. The Participating Communities may contact you directly regarding their services. APFM does not endorse or recommend any provider. It is your sole responsibility to select the appropriate care for yourself or your loved one. We work with both you and the Participating Communities in your search. We do not permit our Advisors to have an ownership interest in Participating Communities.
II. How We Are Paid. We do not charge you any fee – we are paid by the Participating Communities. Some Participating Communities pay us a percentage of the first month's standard rate for the rent and care services you select. We invoice these fees after the senior moves in.
III. When We Tour. APFM tours certain Participating Communities in Washington (typically more in metropolitan areas than in rural areas.) During the 12 month period prior to December 31, 2017, we toured 86.2% of Participating Communities with capacity for 20 or more residents.
IV. No Obligation or Commitment. You have no obligation to use or to continue to use our services. Because you pay no fee to us, you will never need to ask for a refund.
V. Complaints. Please contact our Family Feedback Line at (866) 584-7340 or
[email protected] to report any complaint. Consumers have many avenues to address a dispute with any referral service company, including the right to file a complaint with the Attorney General's office at: Consumer Protection Division, 800 5th Avenue, Ste. 2000, Seattle, 98104 or 800-551-4636.
VI. No Waiver of Your Rights. APFM does not (and may not) require or even ask consumers seeking senior housing or care services in Washington State to sign waivers of liability for losses of personal property or injury or to sign waivers of any rights established under law.I agree that: A.I authorize A Place For Mom ("APFM") to collect certain personal and contact detail information, as well as relevant health care information about me or from me about the senior family member or relative I am assisting ("Senior Living Care Information"). B.APFM may provide information to me electronically. My electronic signature on agreements and documents has the same effect as if I signed them in ink. C.APFM may send all communications to me electronically via e-mail or by access to an APFM web site. D.If I want a paper copy, I can print a copy of the Disclosures or download the Disclosures for my records. E.This E-Sign Acknowledgement and Authorization applies to these Disclosures and all future Disclosures related to APFM's services, unless I revoke my authorization. You may revoke this authorization in writing at any time (except where we have already disclosed information before receiving your revocation.) This authorization will expire after one year. F.You consent to APFM's reaching out to you using a phone system than can auto-dial numbers (we miss rotary phones, too!), but this consent is not required to use our service.
*If I am consenting on behalf of someone else, I have the proper authorization to do so. By clicking Get My Results, you agree to our
Privacy Policy. You also consent to receive calls and texts, which may be autodialed, from us and our customer communities. Your consent is not a condition to using our service. Please visit our
Terms of Use. for information about our privacy practices.
I haven't seen mom since the covid lockdown at her assisted living facility. I told her the other day that I didn't miss searching for her clothes so that I could wash them....she just laughed.
I believe that time helps with most pain...don't you? Start doing little things for yourself. It will take time for you to start thinking about yourself again. I think you will be just fine katiekay...just give it some time.
Caring for my parents as an only child since they moved here in 2011 has been quite an ordeal, as you can imagine. My father passed away in 2015 but my mother is going strong at 93+ and living in Memory Care Assisted Living. My cousins used to call to harass me about what I wasn't doing or whatever, until a couple of months ago when I made my political views LOUD & CLEAR, and then I never received another call! Yay! Guess what? I do not WANT these cousins in my life if all they have to offer me is more negativity than I already get from my mother. I expect nothing from anyone and so I'm never disappointed. I do what I can and I rely on my husband to help me, emotionally as well as physically. He's done all the many many moves associated with my folks, as well as 1 phone call per week plus he goes along with visits to my mother's every single time and acts as my buffer. When my mother finally passes away, I will be able to say that I did everything possible for her while she was alive, and then I will be free to live MY life exactly as I see fit. Without worry, guilt, fear of the phone ringing with more bad news, etc.
Create your new life, my friend, as YOU envision it to be. Let nothing and nobody stand in your way as you work toward achieving that goal. Put one foot in front of the other and take baby steps. One day at a time, one step at a time, you WILL recreate your own personal identity that way. It's never too late & you're never too old to do that!
Good luck!
Friends stop calling to ask if you want to get together for coffee or lunch because you always say you have to take care of "XXXX"
People in general are living their lives and "forget" to call and ask how you are doing, ask if there is anything they can do.
Call a friend and ask if they want to get together. You need to start being the one to take that step.
As for the people in your support group...Give one of them a call and ask if they want you to stop by with some coffee or tea. And just mention you are going to stop at the store and is there anything you need.
How many times when you were caring for mom or dad at home and you needed something but couldn't get out?
People all say.."If there is anything I can do to help let me know"..but we never say...I could use some company could you stop by around 1, mom is napping then I could use a cup of tea. And would you mind stopping at the store I need a gallon of milk and some eggs. People want to help they just don't know what to do.
Share this with your support groups. Share what you have learned. If you have found a better way to change a sheet with someone in bed, share that. If you have found a way to get mom to take a shower..share that. If you found a better "solution" for constipation share that. If you found a better way to do anything share. The knowledge you have learned is valuable it might help someone that is having the same problem.
Everyone is at a different spot in the journey as caregivers the problem one faced a week ago will be one that someone will face in a month. They will remember what you say.
Your personal identity HAS changed. Because YOU have changed. You are better for what you have learned. No one is the same person they were 25 years ago, or 5 years ago as we mature that wisdom that we have is so valuable, use it to your advantage.
Call a friend you have not talked to in a while and go get a cup of coffee or tea...(maybe an Irish Coffee..or a Long Island Iced Tea....)
Good luck. A great future lies ahead for you.
Mom passed in 2017, the nicest thing any of them ever said to me was that Christmas when ts2 said to me that mom would have been better off at home. It might have been an effort to make me feel guilty, but I have chosen to believe that she finally realized all that I told her about mom and her behaviors was in fact the truth. I will never know and maybe I don't want to.
You have done very well through it all. Now it is time for you and you alone. Think about book clubs at your library unless they happen to be reading something about dementia or caregiving. What about a bridge club or mahjong? Something completely away from caregiving. There are so many opportunities to volunteer. Refurbish that old train at the museum? Yes that actually is one opportunity that I have heard. Caregiver support group will not cut it. I am not saying give it up but don't make that the only group you participate in.
I could read much of this to myself, I could do better. But the four years was completely exhausting and I have needed just time, space and quiet for me. I had to completely reinvent myself, finding work after caregiving was very difficult. I had to leave my home state and all that I knew to work again. Now I am back in my home state and grateful.
Best wishes to you and just be patient with yourself.
I am so thankful for your post! My good friend and I just had this same discussion. We feel like we have completely lost "ourselves" during this caregiving journey. It is a strange feeling to describe...and we have not been caregiving for 10 years like yourself! It's interesting... and I am working through forgiveness on this...that the very relatives you think a will help you in a crisis...disappear! My friend and I are both only children. It can be so lonely. I don't have any answers, but I am trying to make lists of things that being me joy. I am starting with little things (like my caramel flavored coffee, a scented shower gel, etc..). I am still caregiving, but I am having to totally rediscover myself. I pray that you are flooded with God's wisdom, insight, clarity and peace. Thank you so much for your post.
Every little thing you can do for yourself is great.. yum.. caramel flavored coffee sounds good.
I moved my mother in with me so I could oversee her care personally.
By doing so, I can see how she really is not how she thinks she is or lies to me about how she wants me to think she is. I don’t have to spend my time traveling back and forth to her house.
I work closely with her doctor and have gotten her on medication that manages her so she doesn’t have so many peaks and valleys of moods, nastiness, combativeness.
I hired a caregiver from Home Instead to come in three mornings a week to take her out in the fresh air for a walk or a drive, cleans my mother’s rooms, gets mom to laugh, play a game, etc. Things she refused to let me help her with. These days I enjoy my time with her out of the house, the TV turned off, or my husband and I go somewhere together.
I took the suggestions of my therapist and after realizing my mother was being manipulative, passive-aggressive and confabulating too, (depending which phase of her CHF/dementia she was in) I reinvented myself.
I do what is best for her whether she likes it or not. I am legally responsible for her. I stopped feeling guilty for anything she threw at me! The childhood I had, she doesn’t remember so why do I have to. She lived in a false reality. A utopia. I don’t know where that home was she lived in but it wasn’t the same one I grew up in. She remembers my three older sibs’ childhoods where she cooked great dinners and made hot chocolate when they came home from school yadda yadda yadda. There is a long gap between them and me so she went to work when I was 9 and I came home to a cold empty house. A latchkey kid. I didn’t mind because I didn’t know any different. It’s like my sibs grew up with Ozzie and Harriet lol. NOT! My father was a narcissist and their childhoods weren’t happy. We all walked on eggshells.
Anyway, I realized if she couldn’t remember the reality why did I have to. So I’ve taken her care on as a job —not a personal responsibility. I’m seeing to her care. I’ve renovated my second floor into a nice apartment and installed a stair lift, I leave her to her TV, she has her cat, her space is cleaned by a caregiver, I administer her meds three times a day, wash her clothes, and make her a well-balanced dinner everyday (she eats her sweet rolls, ice cream, cereal or half a sandwich the rest of the day).
I don’t socialize with her any more than I have to since she’s made it clear she needs nothing from me as her caregiver. My sewing room is across the hall next to her bathroom but she doesn’t care to stop in when I’m in there.
Her CHF is end stage so the dementia is also progressing. She tells people on the phone she’s very happy in her “ivory tower”. But who really knows?
So my life goes on. My husband and I have done all we can to keep an eye on her and keep her safe and healthy. I renovated her home and have just leased it which will pay for her home care.
I retired three years ago at the onset of her CHF diagnosis (and with burnout myself from my job) when I had to move in with her so she could take the medication required for her to be in hospice care and stayed with her for three months. But the medication gave her a boost and she has a had a couple good years until a year ago when her health started to decline again.
This went long and I apologize but ... my point is I stepped out of the box her care put me in, if that makes any sense. I took her too literally thinking her (false) reality was mine. And it wasn’t and it isn’t now and doesn’t have to be. I have an old lady that lives under my care but I also have a life with my husband. She still throws some problems at me but most I can resolve by “taking care of business and doing my job” not worrying if she will like it or not because she can’t be reasonable anymore anyway.