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"Love" has absolutely nothing to do with the situation you're facing with a demented mother. Either get an overnight care giver for her or consider placing her in Long Term Care. Dementia reaches a point where it becomes totally unmanageable for 90% of human beings trying to do the care giving inside the home. Between incontinence, wandering, trying to cook, staying up all night and sleeping all day, it takes an entire team working 24/7 to manage these sufferers. This is why Memory Care communities are popping up everywhere like flowers! What your mother is doing at night is a common behavior with dementia, and not likely due to any medications she takes. Their internal body clocks get turned around is what frequently happens. Lots of napping during the day = staying up all night.
Please consider one of these options before YOUR health starts failing as a result of all this care giving. Also let your brother know what's happening and see what contribution HE would like to make towards her care.
Good luck!
I often see these erroneous claims about sleep on this forum. There is simply no basis in fact to support these claims.
Here's the science.
I've often read on this forum that a complete sleep cycle is 8-9 hours. It's not. It's 90-110 minutes.
"Sleep cycles usually repeat every 90 to 110 minutes."
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK279322/
It's natural for people to sleep through the night in blocks, not in one solid 8-9 hour "UNINTERRUPTED" block. As long as each block is at least 90 to 110 minutes, you are getting quality sleep. The historic human sleep pattern is two 4 hour blocks at night with an hour or so nap in the afternoon. The two 4 hour blocks at night are separately by an hour or two of wakeful activity. That's why I pointed out that it takes some people about a couple of hours to get back to sleep after being waken at night. We evolved to be that way. While napping in the West, outside of Spain, is frowned upon. Other cultures schedule that into the day. In China for example, factories schedule in a nap after lunch for all their workers. As long as you get a total of about 8 hours of sleep for every 24 hour cycle, you are getting quality sleep.
Here's a NIH metastudy that talks about sleep.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4972941/
It's a bit dry so here are some popular press articles.
"left to our natural inclinations in a 24-hour day, humans would have a period of wakefulness, an afternoon siesta, another period of wakefulness, a period of sleep, a period of wakefulness in the middle of the night, and another period of sleep. It may be biologically normal to be up in the middle of the night."
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/sleepless-in-america/201609/in-the-middle-the-night-it-may-be-natural
"Humans slept in two four-hour blocks, which were separated by a period of wakefulness in the middle of the night lasting an hour or more. During this time some might stay in bed, pray, think about their dreams, or talk with their spouses. Others might get up and do tasks or even visit neighbors before going back to sleep."
https://www.livescience.com/12891-natural-sleep.html
Sleeping in one solid 8 hour block at night wasn't a thing until the industrial revolution. Then it was introduced to force workers onto a schedule to maximize factory efficiency, not for their health.
Sleep deprivation also weakens your immune system. Hello, antibiotics, which bring a host of side effects to the party in your gut including diarrhea. Diarrhea lowers your potassium, which plays a role in *every* *single* beat of your heart.
Sorry but you can't cope if you're dead. And whose going to look after your mother and greyhound then?
Your mother’s brain is broken. No amount of comforting, reassurance or even annoyance with her will “fix” her. You can try medications if the doctor will give them to you, but doctors don’t like to prescribe sleeping medications for elderly patients any longer. If they sleep walk, it’s dangerous. You can try nightlights, soft music, a TV left on...but there is no guarantee that anything will work. Some posters ha e said they lock their loved ones in their rooms at night. But that won’t stop them from banging on their own doors and screaming because they are afraid.
What I'm trying to say is that this is a common issue with dementia patients and their caregivers. Unfortunately it will only get worse. As Glad says, you cannot do this alone as much as you want to. Have you spoken with your brother and told him what’s going on? Ask him if he can come stay once a week or so, or if Mom can go to his house. There is no shame in asking for help and since he is so free with his advice, let him have the experience of caring for his mother to see just what you’re doing. Or, you can tell him you’ll have to hire an overnight sitter and if he’s counting on any inheritance, it will quickly disappear. You are doing the work of three shifts of caregivers round the clock. Consider checking out Memory Care for her. You aren’t abandoning her.
I was up all hours of the night too and it nearly killed me! Sleep deprivation is so hard on us. I don’t know if you have children but remember when they weren’t sleeping through the night yet and how tired we were? Geeeez, that first good restful night of sleep was heaven on earth!
My daughter’s pediatrician had a fit when I told her that I wasn’t sleeping because I was still breastfeeding her every time she cried at 18 months old. She thought I was crazy and told me to stop!
She told me that I needed to sleep and that I wasn’t helping my child, that she no longer needed to be breast fed at that age and my sleep was more important. I stopped breastfeeding immediately after that visit to the pediatrician. The pediatrician was right.
I had mom in my home for nearly 15 years and looking back I honestly don’t know how I survived. I suppose I was on autopilot. Well, that isn’t healthy either emotionally or physically.
Thank God I reached out for help here on this forum and in a therapist’s office. People gave me sound advice and told me I was pushing myself to the limit. I finally hit my breaking point due to a number of circumstances. Just having too much togetherness is hard.
Please listen to everyone who tells you this is far too much. I am telling you too. I had to learn the hard way. Learn from my mistake and don’t follow in my footsteps thinking you can do it all. I knew that I couldn’t after awhile. I should have followed my gut instead of being guilted by my mom and brothers!
Well, the tables are turned now. Now my brother is dealing with it because I told them if I was doing such a poor job because mom didn’t get everything that she wanted that she could go live with him! Sadly my relationship with my family has deteriorated. Don’t put that strain on your relationship.
It’s funny that her doctors always complemented me on taking such good care of her. She expected me to sacrifice my entire life for her. My marriage took a hit. I had no privacy in my home. I did not get to see my own daughters. It became awful.
Granted my mom did not have any form of dementia but she has Parkinson’s disease and it’s challenging also. It’s too much for one person. Too much! Entirely too much!
Did you hear me? It is too much!!!
I am not trying to be sarcastic but I want to make sure that you hear me loud and clear.
I do empathize with you. I was in your shoes. That is why I know how you feel.
Please listen to lealonnie and others on this site that helped me to see how difficult it is to care for someone in these situations. Hire an evening sitter or find a facility. Get you much needed sleep!
Best wishes to you and your mom.
My Mom is gone now too, just three months. My sister lived with her and did the multiple wake up calls in the night for years but worst the last ten months. I did not do them as I have my own family. But now I feel so badly not helping Mom more, especially at the end when I told her she really to put a diaper on at night when it was 1am and she was carrying on with my sister. My own daughter was along and starting to lose it too as she has never spent the night there and was downright tired herself not really understanding what Grandma was doing. Mom was gone in just days after that as she wanted no part of a diaper and by then, even my sister and I could not move her to help her as she just was very unhappy being dependent. So sad to think about it. How I wish I would have just grabbed her and hugged her and said I am sorry but then I was more like sad, angry, and disappointed. I think I also did not realize what Mom had which really was some form of dementia developing. I was expecting her to reason like she used to but then she was not operating as her old self although I wanted her to.
God bless and Merry Christmas.