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The benefit: For the caregiver, knowing you will be up, when, for how long-having some control over that will be less frustrating and allow for better rest when you do get it. For the 'patient', benefit is having no wet depends for hardly anytime at all.
Of course, this won't solve all the issues with you getting your REM sleep.
Sorry you are, and so many are having to go through this.
That's in a nutshell it, right?
Is it going to work? Well maybe but may have the same probability as me getting back into a size 4 rather than a size 14. As one who has lives abroad for periods of time, the adjustment of being back in the states is in & of itself a hurdle. Your body clock will be off for weeks. You mind will constantly be filtering change of language & culture (& perhaps some regret). Even if you've been living where US English is spoken everwhere. If you travel back & forth regular & have a homebase in each & fluently multilingual & multicultural, it's not quite the issue but will require adjustment nevertheless.
Then add onto this, taking on caregiving for a elder who is 6 years older & more frail than when you last were around her & that you know needs 3 shifts of caregivers presently. That you know has worn out your sister even with mom being in AL with 3 shifts of care. That somehow you being her 24/7 caregiver in your home is going to provide & make up for quality time you've missed with mom those last 6 years. Really is this at all realistic?
Please, please, please speak clearly with your husband on all this. If you all are moving back because he's retiring from a job abroad.....he is not going to be at all happy about coming back to the US to essentially become a unpaid caregiver & emptying a porta potty & having a needy elder 24/7 in the home. If you all lived in a country where all the expats have help, maids, drivers.....& he was used to having staff at work......well he is not going to be happy now having to do scut work no matter how much he likes his MIL. Please think about this.....Being sleep deprived coukd be the least of your problems.
My husband needed assistance any time he got up in the night. I was sleep deprived the entire ten years I cared for him. That was my choice. That was my soulmate. Could I have done that for my mother? Sorry, I don't think so. The nature of the relationship is just different.
To begin with, the sleep deprivation was so severe I knew it would not be safe to continue that way. He doctors came up with solutions to help him sleep through the night most nights. That made it possible. He still got up to go to the bathroom at least once, but that was manageable. I also had daytime help coming in the morning and more than once I stay in bed for a while after she came.
Good luck to you!
Those are the choices I see.
Why are you planning to bring her home at this time?
What is the reason you are attempting to bring your Mom into your home? Does your Mom dislike where she is living? In the 3 years she had been in Assisted Living, she probably has made friends with people of her own generation... would she be around anyone her own age if she lived at home?
If Mom falls on a regular basis, would you be able to correctly pick her up, so not to unintentionally harm her? Have you picked her up in the past? If not, an elder become dead weight, it's like trying to pick up a 100 lb to 200 lb barbell.
Is Assisted Living becoming too expensive? The place where my Dad lives, they have it set up where one can share an apartment with other, thus cut down on the expenses. Or have you looked into a Medicaid Waiver depending on if your State offers such for Assisted Living?
Moving her in with you will be a lot of work and you may find that it is harder than you can imagine. I understand if it is what you need to do. A bedside commode would help, but if your mother is prone to fall, she may fall as easily going to the commode as going to the bathroom.
We have had many people in the group take care of their loved ones at home who were more frail. I hope that some of the people who know the technicalities of what you will be facing will join this discussion. They will have some good advice, I'm sure.