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Also, give a little more info in your question. Were you the DPOA? For whom? How did you find out they didn't want you any more?
5 years ago, she wasn't like this. She became depressed when her sister passed away, and then when my dad passed 2 years ago, she started really going downhill, and it hasn't stopped. It's like a slow train going down a long, long slope.
She stopped cleaning the house. "I don't care. Nobody's here but me." was a cover up we all missed. She stopped washing dishes and cleaning up spills and doing laundry and taking out the trash. "Don't mess with that. It's mine!" She could no longer put clean things in the right place, so there were piles everywhere of mixed clean & dirty clothes.
She stopped being able to pay bills or communicate with the doctor and pharmacy. She started eating rotten food, leaving things out overnight to "thaw". Buying lots of the same thing over & over. Like 6 dozen eggs, multiple pints of collard greens, many rotisserie chickens.
House repairs weren't being made. She called me mad as heck one day because the gas station "ripped her off". She could not remember how to pump and pay for gas. She swore they charged her $50 for nothing and there was no gas in her car, yet the needle was on F. That was a scary day. I know she made a scene in the gas station.
She called me frequently at all hours with hallucinations that I was in her house (I was in another state), or that I was talking to her on TV. She asked me where I put her pants, when I hadn't been in that house for a couple years.
She was seeing men with red eyes in the windows of the house at night. She was seeing a squirrel on the mantle running around. She got her days & nights mixed up. She believed people were driving up into the yard around the house and tearing up the yard, but it was not torn up.
She basically got to where she couldn't follow instructions anymore and compensated by being loud, mean, and bratty to chase people off. She lost her social filter and would threaten to run around naked or pee on the floor.
She began to have temper tantrums like a little child if she didn't instantly get her way. Complete with kicking & screaming, swearing, spitting, and hitting.
Fear turned into paralyzing paranoia and anger. Everyone was out to kill her and steal her money. Especially me.
Even so, she was calling our names until just very recently. She knew what grade my kids were in. She would ask me if "I had found work yet". I've never been unemployed. She can be as lucid as you & me and then an hour later, she hears cats in the wall and sees some kind of cat/dog hybrid animal and holes in the ceiling & floor. An hour after that she's calling her caretakers the N word and duking it out with them. It's all over the place.
When my dad could not play a game of Solitaire on the computer and he'd even managed to e-mail me and used to program in Fortran, I really should have known. How he HATED the word "confused" when he got things mixed up, but he could often relate to "memory problems" OK and other times you just had to go along with him.
Forgetting where you left your grape juice is one thing. Calling a loved one who lives 30 or miles away and is at work to come find it for you right away, or calling the police or accusing someone of stealing it would be another thing altogether. Forgetting to turn off the oven happens, but failure to react to smoke or the burning smell is something else. (I use a safety tea kettle myself!!) Forgetting your house key is one thing, but forgetting what keys are even for is much more serious. Writing a shopping list and forgetting to bring it with you - happens all the time, but just buying one of everything instead of coming back for the list or texting a spouse for it could be more of an issue...or not. We frequently have a few extras of various items thanks to one of us screwing that up! Keyword though is "a few..."
I believe inappropriate behavior (which was uncharacteristic of the person in the past) can be an early sign of dementia.
Try to minimize the confrontations over the memory issues. Say, "Oh look! Here is that half-full glass of grape juice we were looking for!" and not "Well, here is where you put your grape juice." Avoid rubbing her cognitive problems in. At some point you may need to say, "I worry that your memory may be getting weaker. Let's have a doctor examine you and see what could help." I don't mean to go into denial yourself about her cognitive problems, but just to be gentle with her. She may be very aware at some level that things are not right.
Personality change can be associated with dementia. It can also be a result of anxiety and fear. Thinking that you might be losing your mind might tend to make one a bit crabby, don't you think? Try very hard not to take this new behavior personally or as if it really is directed at you. Consider that there is sometime going on in Mom's brain/body that is keeping her from being herself.
Be gentle with her.
Don't take it personally.
Bring her new behaviors up with her medical providers, and perhaps bring her to a specialist.
Will these steps improve her memory? Probably not, but it could improve how you feel about it and deal with it.
Best wishes to you, Chris3265. Please keep posting and let us know how this is going for you.
I hope they're able to identify the cause(s), then remedies.
Do you have any siblings or close relatives for support?
It just breaks my heart reading all of your stories, as I am dealing with some of the same issues with my Mother of 69 years old. She is a type 2 diabetic with numerous medical conditions and was approved November of 2013 to have a gastric sleeve done. Ever since that surgery, she has been in and out of the hospital 10 times! DKA, recurring pnemonia, stroke and seizures in the brain. She has been through the ringer! After her stroke in January 2014, my husband and I moved her in with us. It killed her soul! In her mind, she has lost all independence and all control of her life. She is now in a skilled nursing facility from her last hospital stay and has totally changed mind wise. Has anyone ever had a parent that had brain seizures? I am still trying to understand what is going on with her, as are the doctors. This last hospital visit was for recurring pnemonia and sepsis. She became extremely confused and not herself, to which they did a brain wave study and found that she was seizing then. She was in a coma for two weeks due to the 3 seizure meds they had her on. She has continued crying spells with major memory loss (short term) and gets extremely aggitated! Any words of comfort? Thanks so much.
I'm not saying anything like this is happening with your situation, but sometimes a person just runs out of patience in general, etc. Maybe the loss of independence or memory is causing anger or fear? Those reasons aren't signs of dementia, I believe.
I hope you're able to find the cause and a remedy!
There is a possibility that Namenda is causing the headaches. I have now started giving my husband a new Namenda, which is taken only once a day and is time released. I haven't really had enough days to diagnose if this new medication will help, for I suspect the Namenda given twice a day could have caused the severe headaches. marymember
This is so hard...and so sad.