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I felt overwhelmed with my mother's care. It wasn't hate as much as I just wanted to run away from home, the responsibility was so daunting. And I absolutely did hate my sister for not helping. I definitely had my moments of being less than patient, but mostly with my own family and not with my mom.
I lost my mom almost a year ago and can honestly say I am so glad I did care for her. I wasn't perfect but I tried my best and I know my mother was grateful and forgave my imperfections. I miss her more than words can say, but am glad I did what I did. The weirdest thing is I even miss the hard days. Not everyone feels that way though. It was incredibly difficult to care for her. I knew that at the time but looking back, I wonder how I did it at all.
My sister (same one I hated, but still love!) once told me feelings are just feelings - not good or bad or worthy or not. You just have to honor the honest feeling and go from there.
Hang in there. Get some help or a break if you can and give yourself some grace.
I care for my husband to and yes, sadly hate it. Lets be honest. It's like it was also me what you said. Nothing wrong with my husbands mind either, however he still acts more like a baby instead of a man and I get so frustrated. I get mad at him because I feel he doesn't care about my happiness. It has always been about him. I have a attitude with him to . I get upset for many reasons, that he doesn't seem to care about talking to me is one, about our life now, and remember, their is nothing mentally wrong with him. It's normal for us to get frustrated . We have to take care of our loved one And take care of everything else in the house to. LIke I read here, get some help at home if you can afford a day or two a week. Take care Sylvia
God bless you.
When you are the only caregiver and live in the same house as the person you're taking care of, it is in a sense a kind of slavery. You are chained to the situation and your life is not your own anymore. Even the smallest every day things like going to the grocery store have to be planned in advance with arrangements made so you can go for an hour. Then add the total ingratitude of the person you're caring for, which is also very common. The often abusive and negative behavior that the person being cared for develops over time, and the two-cents offered from everyone you know about how you can be doing a better job. Then add the guilt we put on ourselves for feeling resentment. Someone on this forum said that when a caregiver is feeling resentment it is because they're giving too much of themselves. That is the God's honest truth right there.
You are giving too much and it's time for outside help to take over some of the caregiving burden. And it is a burden even if people say otherwise. Let paid caregivers take some of this burden from you.
I wish I could give you a sure fire thing to do to make all of your anger and pain go away.
I will ask you to follow the techniques listed below:
1. Don't kill yourself with guilt.
2. Create personal time for yourself even if its just 5 minutes. Set goals and build on your time. Care giver burnout is real and the effects on you spirit and physical body are real. You need the time for yourself.
3. Find a friend or a family to share your thoughts. This person needs to be your cheerleader. This friend needs to be a good lister and reminds you of your love, your strength and your reasons to continue to give. This person can not allow you to focus too long on the negative. You can create your own pity party, you need someone who will create an uplifting party.
The one thing I would ask you to do, is when you see someone struggling with care be a helpful voice, even if its just lending an ear and a shoulder to cry on.
The Aging of America is here, we are all living longer with more. In addition, COVID-19 has proven people would rather be home vs facilities. When the time comes for voting or pushing issues to the forefront bring this issue up. "How do we care for our loved ones at home? What can private pay, Medicare or Medicaid do to support Caregivers?"
I don't have the answers. I suspect no one has all the answers on this issue but its a real issue and its effecting every day people.
Stay Strong take a few minutes for yourself
and
Stay Inspired,
Shonda
I realize you don’t think you can get respite help, but please try! If you own your home, there’s money in equity. (You could start getting it back now.) If you rent and have little money, Medicaid can help. The senior care agency in your area may be able to help. AARP may help. Could you sell some unwanted things or get a part-time job that pays as much or more than you’d pay someone to relieve you? If your husband’s social security is much more than yours, you can receive more money now. (Contact the Social Security agency near you.) Ask a Pastor at your church for names of volunteers who may be willing to help. Ask a nice neighbor or friend.
Discussing and reasoning don’t work with someone with Alzheimer’s/dementia. Only prayer really works, and the answers may come from unexpected places. Be open to new ideas! They may be answers from God!
I’m crying now with you and praying for you.
Please get help while you’re still able to ask for it!
Jenny Uhl
She is taking care of her husband's needs. For God's sake, no one is perfect. All the compassion, prayer, and love there is will not help caregiver burnout if you've got it.
You know what does? Actual help so the caregiver can still have some kind of life outside of the day in-day out miserable drudgery that is caregiving.
There's a saying. God helps those who help themselves.
We all start off with love and noblest of intentions. When you've been at it year after year with no help that burden will destroy someone, and no mistake. It doesn't matter how much love there is or was.
It's not wrong to bring in outside help or even to put someone in a care facility. It doesn't mean that you've stopped loving them or love them less. It means that you've given all you had to give and there's no more.
I don't hate it but I understand your feelings . I feel trapped, tired and frustrated almost every day.
Can't do anything without having an ear out , can't get lost in a book or movie , can't take a nap when I want or even sleep through the night. Any free time is spent meal planning , cooking , organizing medication , or changing beds , washing , mopping etc.
My grandmother has no time awareness and I don't know if you have experienced this but having someone demand a full meal at 3 am when you'd rather be asleep , well...it isn't cute .
It's a rough road as you know but what can we do ? I will pray for you as I do for all of us and hope that God will grant you superhuman patience and strength because too often , that's what's needed .
Don't beat yourself up , self awareness of the issue is the first step . So maybe you can count to five before you respond or imagine what your life would be like if the roles were reversed . What would you want for yourself? How would you want him to treat you ? Start there .
Best of luck to you and to us all.
L
You are not a slave.
I understand that grandma has no awareness of time. Infants don't either.
You can't go running in for the baby every time it squawks a little. Sometimes you have to let them cry for a while for their own good. Otherwise they will never be able to be alone for a second.
Same with our seniors. Even the ones with dementia. Not running in every second or not giving them a meal at 3 in the morning will not do one any harm.
Everyday I wish I had my old life back!!
Therapy helps a lot!!
Take good care of yourself as best you can. I joined a support group. Enlist the help of a friend so you can get away even if it is for just an hour. Try to find humor where you can.
Thinking of you and sending calming thoughts.
The irony here is that I have been trained and worked in direct care. I loved it. But the difference is, in a care facility, if the patient doesn't want to do anything, he or she doesn't have to. When my mother refused physical therapy in the hospital, no one made her do it. She ordered nurses around, complained, etc. They had the ability to just move on to the next patient. They also got to leave when their shift was over. I have taken care of people so compromised by dementia/alzheimer's they had to be spoon-fed. And then there are people experiencing severe memory issues or hallucinations. I feel compassion for those folks. But the difference is: none of those people never personally attacked me, or said cruel things. Most of those patients appreciateted the care that was provided and showed at least a modicum of respect for the care staff.
I don't expect perfection. I expect effort. I expect the courtesy that one would give a stranger on the street. I get none of this. And I am her daughter.
You are not alone. That needs repeating. I'm looking in the mirror while saying this, but you need help. See if there's a group you can join just to talk with and maybe find a therapist, try AARP or your local health dept. <3
This horrendous disease, Lewy Body, causes such heartache. It’s like Satan has brought this into our lives.
I get so upset when mom calls 800 numbers and keeps changing her medical insurance that interferes with her care. Then it takes me a week of numerous, difficult calls to fix the mess. Not only has she done this to herself and repeatedly does this, but also has done to me, changed my city coverage through my husbands union! This is all done due to tv commercials that mom finds appealing at that moment. Yesterday, it happened again, not only with insurances, but the ASPCA, where mom decided she wanted to donate her diapers. ❤️ Very loving and kind, but I paid a lot for those various pads, liners, diapers, etc. out of my own, disabled, pocket money.
I get angry and yell and I feel so broken afterward. It’s just so overwhelming and it breaks you. All of the worry, taking knobs of oven, removing the toaster , all because I truly don’t want to burn to death in my sleep. I pray for forgiveness because it not moms fault. It’s the disease, that horrible disease.
last night, when I got my mom into standing position, I gave her a huge hug. I tell her all the time I love her. Sadly, most of the time she thinks I’m someone else. Though, no one else’s faces confuse her, just mine.
though I love my mom to the moon, I recently had to make the most horrible decision in my life, assisted living. I can’t do it any longer. If I’m yelling at my own mom, what have I become. I’ve become a monster. I love her way too much, she doesn’t deserve this. This yelling, happens when I’m afraid for her and it comes out and I’m ashamed of how I respond at times. I ask our Heavenly Father for forgiveness, as well as my moms. I always apologize and truly mean how very sorry I was for getting so upset with her and try to tell her how very concerned I am about her and she has no clue to why I was so upset to begin with.
I truly have learned to trust God more. I do the best I can and when I can’t keep up, I slow down. Take an hour listening to my soft Christian music in bed, which slows my heart rate to a safe zone. It truly calms my heart and mind.
you can only do so much. I can only do so much. Even our sick loved ones can only do so much, although sometimes we may forget this. All we can do is try to do our best and trust God more. When we get to that point that we say that we truly hate caregiving, I think it’s time for us to get some kind of help. I too, always said that I’d never ever put anyone I loved in a home of any sort, but sometimes, it’s necessary. I want what’s best for mom, is she truly happy hear? Or would she be happier with other ladies, friends to talk to, Music and activities, now that COVID is allowing various activities and visitors, nice meals to fit her diabetes. My mom is agreeing to this change. I think mom will enjoy it. I’ll be visiting quite frequent, probably daily, always making sure she’s ok.
just because we have to make such decisions for someone we love so much, it doesn't make us bad people. How can we possibly care for others when we don’t care for ourselves? When mom goes into assisted living, we will have more quality time together, less stress and more love. We can enjoy every moment we do spend together, without all the exhaustion and resentment.
I’ll always love my mom, I don’t hate caretaking, it’s just that it’s consuming me... inside and out, to a point that I’m not myself anymore. My mom wouldn’t want this for me, she loves me way too much, as I love her.
keeping you in my thoughts and prayers, please forgive my long winded message. I have so much on my mind lately, as all of us do here, it truly feels wonderful to vent a bit. Something I’ve been doing a lot lately at aging care. I’m so greatful To have found this place.
stay safe & well.