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I know how you feel 'cause I felt that way too when my 94 yo mom (stage 6-7 Alz) was living with us. Some days I thought I'd really loose it when she'd scream at the top of her lungs. I started doing that too. I felt like I was going insane. Wonder what the neighbors thought?
It doesn't help that I've felt more anxious in the last 2 years with other family member stuff. I made a very poor decision to bring my mom home with us when her rent went too high. Her living here only lasted 3 months but it felt like 3 years. It really is too much for one person (even with hubby's good help and a night time c/G4 nights a week) to handle. It is a "going out of your mind" situation. We couldn't sleep-let alone together in the same bed. It started affecting our marriage (he couldn't stand to see me so stressed). He was the one who suggested she live with us in the first place!
We found another memory care facility that she can afford and we moved her there last Friday. It feels like a vacation, it's been quiet and no breaking our backs or going insane with her confusion.
The only way out (other than drugs for her and/or you) is to put her in a facility. We need to give ourselves permission to live our lives the way we have chosen. God knows, I'd NEVER want to do this to my son. Just put me away and check up on me occasionally.
I feel for you. Good luck.
I read something last night about frontal dementia. One of the characteristics of frontal lobe damage is the loss of empathy and knowing how to treat other people. I have a feeling I've been getting too big of doses of frontal lobe damage for one person to deal with. But then I look around at all the people who are waiting in line to help. Sigh. It is discouraging that the world is so cold.
Seriously, I'm just trying to make a joke about this to offer some light banter and raise your spirits. And just as seriously, I think mood swings and quick responses when provoked and aggravated are part of caregiving. We're often pushed to the limit yet still expect to work like pack animals. Of course we're going to burn out.
If it's any consolation, I'd become annoyed when someone has provoked me, especially like the manipulative control freak who loves to complain about my father's front yard and ask why I don't clean it up, to HER specs.
And you have a high level of conscientiousness about your mother's welfare, so you're thinking of her and her needs probably most of your waking time. And from what you described, I think your mother knows this and knows how to "pull your chain."
Can you hibernate in your room and just chill out? Just getting away from your mother for a while will help. But I have a feeling she'll create some reason for you to come out and attend to her.
It isn't pleasant to live with someone who you absolutely dread and who watches the most dreadful TV. :-P
Reading your post I can't help but remember how awful things were about 3 years or so - I'm still surprised mom and I survived
Last spring when the nurse from her LTC provider came to do the annual assessment she said something kinda interesting in that little outbursts are healthy better than keeping it bottled up -
If that's the case, then that might explain why mom at 94 hardly has any wrinkles
Of course I'm turning into more of a crone with each passing day
If at possible, send mom to adult day care, or get a caregiver a few hours a week and get yourself to lunch or a movie, the gym or anything
Today was like that for me, pushing myself beyond to meet his needs above my own.
Feeling a little green, a little like road rage too, and even hoping that homeless stranger did not speak to me, but he did.
Home feels like a prison, getting out feels dangerous, it's Saturday nite! And I am home.
So being kind can be good medicine for anger? Who would have thought? The brain is a mysterious thing.
(Begin rant:) It is a soul-deadening task taking care of bpd/narc elders who believe they are entitled to your help. My dad tells me all the time he “praises god for giving him a girl so he could be taken care of in his old age.” It’s my “duty to honor him like jesus obeying god to give his life for us all.” I completely hulked upon hearing that. (Thanks for turning god into a narcissist and making jesus a poster boy for child abuse, old man.) As soon as he’s eligible for asst lvg or NH, I will have no qualms about placing him. (End rant)
Small acts of kindness do wonders for one’s brain - releasing hormones to improve the mood, lowering blood pressure, generally making the world a better place.
I *know* I am being more than charitable to my father, and to purge myself from his vile attitudes, I go out of my way to help strangers, even if it’s as simple as holding the door open for them. Tiny kindnesses like this keeps me (almost) sane and (mostly) humane.
Jessie, what's the status of Mr. Amour?
But now Send is feeling green as well. Uh oh! Is there some type of caregiver malady that makes us feel green when we're exhausted?
OTOH, Jessie and Only have hit on something I've read about periodically over the years - the release of endorphins which improve moods, although from what I've read endorphins primarily reduce pain. (I'm probably not sharing anything that folks here don't already know, but it's a nice reminder, including to me.)
Petting animals can produce positive feelings, especially of relaxation. I understand that works for the animals as well. My niece used to take her children to a child/animal interaction event when the children sat on the floor, petted dogs and read to them. Apparently this is a very mutually beneficial activity.
And we bring pleasure to animals when we pet them, then we feel better and more relaxed as well. Therapy animals are real treasures. They've even helped veterans deal with PTSD.
Okay, anyone who's feeling green and thinking that her/his skin is turning green, find a dog or cat to hug!
My mother's condition is hard to guess at. She has been actively dying every day for at least eight years. It may be mental illness or factitious in order to get people (me) to do things for her. I realize she is in her last mile of life, but she is only progressing an inch a day, so she may live much longer. I don't know what is real with her, since our days are filled with imaginary illnesses and problems. This sounds cold to say, but it is what I've been seeing. She'll be 91 next month.
only001, I know exactly what you're meaning. It is so hard to keep putting effort into a bottomless pit that insists we owe it to them for some reason. I really dislike it when someone hits me upside the head with the bible. That is religious abuse for sure. We get locked into this thinking we're taught as children -- if we don't do what god says, then he is going to be unhappy and we'll go to hell. It won't be just for a day, but for an unrelenting eternity with no relief. And god not only sees everything we do, but knows everything we think. Goodness! That could scare a kid half to death, don't you think? I know I still play this scenario in my head when I think bad stuff. I wish I could purge it from my thoughts. Looking at it now I know it is abusive teaching.
JessieBelle, I so feel for you. I used to find other frail elders easier to cope with than my own mother, but anyone under 75 - God, I was a bear. Hungry sleepy bear with a sore paw.
I'm better, now. Getting there, anyway...
Shall we start a badge thread? "Hazcare", for example, and we'd have to come up with a symbol for the yellow sign, too - a falls alert pendant, or a walking frame maybe.
A few years ago I was at my moms IL doing my mandatory soul-sacrificing, ie caregiving, when my mother started telling me about her neighbor who had given my mom some sort of book about Jesus, the word of God and all that. My mom didn’t want the book anymore and was trying to get me to take it home with me. Mom seemed to think I would become better at sacrificing my soul if I read in this book that - A. It was my duty to do so, and B. God would look more favorably upon me if I did - read the book.
In general, I’m not a big fan of Organized Religion - and it’s accomplishing propaganda. Add in my mother trying to force me to do yet another thing that I didn’t want to do - and there was no way in hell I was gonna take that book. That book instantly became a symbol for me trying to hang onto the small sliver of my own life and the sanctuary that was my own house. I. Was. Not. Taking. That. Book. Home. With. Me.
My defiance, my not immediately, and subservantly doing as I was told - to pick up that book and put it in my bag infuriated my mother.
My mother launched into a hateful and cruel verbal spewing of epic proportions- her head practically swiveled 360 degrees while hosing pea-green slim. All in the name of me taking this book and being a better Christian.
In the end, I took the frickin’ book - only to toss it in the first garbage can I came across while exiting the building.
But still - just picking up that book and leaving with it - letting my mother win the battle - that she could and would continue to force me into bending to her will - now and forever - we’ll, it was just another chunk of my soul being thrown into the bottomless pit.
You found a way to circumvent the whole issue.
She didn't bent you to her will; you found a way not to allow that to happen, by removing one of the tools she could use. You disarmed her.
Is your soul really in a bottomless pit? Or did you circumvent that by removing the book?
I won't deny that I have difficulty and work on not letting myself become a victim, so I try to think of ways that I've maintained my independence and am able to see both sides of a challenging situation. I don't always succeed, but I try.
Congratulate yourself on defusing a situation w/o revealing to your mother what you really did with that book!
I can imagine your ordeal, only if by a fraction, as my mom, though, not with dementia, suffers from horrific, debilitating, painful and serious ailments on a daily basis, though, is perfectly healthy, save recurring UTI's, IBS and acid reflux. (Most of which her doctors think are caused by anxiety.) So, I have to wonder if she too will be a very long living sick person. She's now in her 70's.
I'm not trying to pry, but, are you at least confident that one day, you will be compensated for your years of total devotion? I would think that would concern me. She may no longer be able to consider that, but, hopefully, there will be some justice to this.
Funny you should mention the older gentleman. We stayed friends. He got married this summer to a lovely woman near his own age. It was a nice wedding and reception. I still get kidded about him being my boyfriend. Now I just gasp and say he's a married man.
RainMom, you can take credit for that. The comments you made on taking the book not only spurred me to respond, but I did so on a reactionary basis, not even realizing that I was giving advice to myself.
I've been thinking about our respective comments and reactions, and realize that I'm advising you to do what I have had difficulty doing. Things often happen too fast and before I realize it I've lost common sense.
That especially happens when one of the neighbors asks me why I haven't done something that she thinks would improve the look of my father's yard.
RainMom, you're a better caregiver than I am! (With apologies to Kipling and Gunga Din for changing the meaning of that famous quote.)
cwillie, what you wrote didn't sound cruel at all. I have these two people living in my brain -- one hoping something will happen so I'll be free and the other not wanting that. It can be a struggle of the two parts of me.
Sunny, I'm not paid for doing this. My mother is leaving me the house, but that is more of an albatross than a blessing. What I would really like is to just leave without worrying about anything. What I do hope is that I don't die the week before she does.
If you find yourself not able to do care-giving any longer, your mom will be okay.
Loads of folks tell me (on this board and elsewhere) that their parents will die if placed in a nursing home/AL/Memory Care. Sometimes that happens, because they are at the end of their lives--just like the Hospice discussions we keep having.
Most elders, even mentally ill elders, adjust to new living circumstances, with the help of staff, family, and meds.
There was a point in my life, right after my marriage dissolved, when I thought about offering to move in with my mom, pay rent and try to get my life back together. I didn't and in retrospect, am ever so glad that I took the path that I did.
We make choices in life; just be sure, JB, that you are choosing to stay with your mom for the next 10 or 20 years. And not being forced into that path by Fear, Obligation and Guilt.
I thought the editors didn't work on the weekend
Don't like my words changed either, was that even necessary?
Feeling green and kinda hulky, cannot help myself.....
But, I am going to stop. Everything cannot become an important issue or else I will continue to want to blow! Dropping this now.