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I would visit her, but I wouldn't force the PT issue.
Ask about better pain relief.
Has anyone talked about Hospice? Hospice would be all over her pain.
I think I would step away from the caregiving role when/if she comes home.
Be the loving DIL who gives backrubs and treats. Let the others do the caregiving, or let them arrange in-home caregivers.
I think I might arrange to go on a vacation for when she is released from the hospital.
As for forgiveness, consider marital therapy.
With lotion an calming essential oils every time I go in there. I always lotioned her feet and calves and shins along with her back after her showers. So that isn’t a new thing for me to be doing. I agree about the vacation. I’ve never been to Hawaii, that sounds good to me right now! Thank you for your encouragement. I truly appreciate it.
I am so very sorry that she is going through this. I would never want surgery at her age. I am surprised that her doctor even considered surgery.
My mom had issues that if she were younger she would have done surgery but her doctor said no surgery ever for a woman in her 90’s.
I know someone whose daughter had her father have resuscitation in the hospital. He didn’t want his life prolonged in any way. It was horrible. He only lived one hour afterwards and was in great pain.
I agree that most people are ready to go when they are that age with health issues.
Why would your husband and his family expect you to be her caregiver in this situation? They caused the situation. You are absolutely justified for feeling as you do.
PT is effective in certain circumstances but is extremely hard work and isn’t appropriate in every situation.
I hope your mother in law can find relief soon. I wish her children would have respected her wishes.
feom the doctor about how each scenario would look, and I think that gave them pause and information they needed to understand. You are right, it wasn’t malicious, and I knew that before, I was the one who needed to be courageous and step up and have an uncomfortable conversation about it. As her caregiver, it was my place to take that stand.
now expected to fulfill their wishes to get her well.
I think each of them needs to go sit with her for a day and see exactly what choice they have made for their mother. I cannot in good conscience force her to exercise and be in so much pain just so her children can feel like they did the right thing. My husband wouldn’t even let me participate in the conversation yet another sister-in-law was there. I feel so disappointed and abandoned by him. They have abandoned their mother when she needed someone to let her go and be finished with this existence! Her husband died 12 years ago and she wanted to go and be where he is! I am having trouble sleeping and am so angry at this family.
I agree with your comment. It is time for your hubs, sister in law etc, to be the ones sitting with her in the hospital. They need to face the consequences of their decision.
I remember my 90-year-old aunt was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, and her kids where so horrified at the thought their always-healthy mother was dying, they insisted she try chemotherapy. She agree, and did it for two weeks before stopping because it made her so sick. Now, seven years after her death, my cousins beat themselves up for having put her through that pain and agony in her last days.
I think you should go to the hospital and visit, because your MIL needs someone there who understands and is there for her. Honestly, I doubt she'll last long in spite of the surgery, because she's in such bad condition.
In time her children will understand they squandered valuable time with her by putting her in this situation. It'll be after the fact, but some of them may eventually realize the mistake they made. It's too late now to point out to your husband and his family that just because a doctor lays out options for treatment doesn't mean they're what you should do, but that's the reality. Some doctors just won't tell people if a treatment is really a good idea or not when they give them treatment options.
I know, I should have had them notarized, I should have fought for her wishes. I did a soft fight before surgery, hoping they would com to the same conclusion I did. They did not. I immediately regretted not doing that. Come to find out, she had previously signed a medical POA with a different son, which she did not remember and he did not say anything about until it came to the time to decide about surgery. But as the daughter-in-law, I wouldn’t have wanted to give my husband the choice over my own mother’s end of life care, and I felt I needed to have them feel peace about that decision. It was my own fault I didn’t speak up sooner and lo them what she needed. I am disappointed in myself and angry at myself for not doing that . I think that disappointment and anger is what pushed me to finally speak today, and talk about what I have felt this week and what I know she would have wanted to do. I am grateful that her dementia is such that she doesn’t even remember why she is in the hospital or that she’s been there for a week. I’m grateful that I love her and she’s knows it, and that she loves me, and I know it, and I know she would forgive me and want me to forgive myself and her children. They do love her. I think it was their misunderstanding the gravity of her situation and the painful results of the surgery she had. They are each spending time in the hospital this week as she is given comfort care instead of pushing for recovery. The dDr. Thinks it will be a matter of days, and maybe a few weeks before she passes. But at least we are on the same path now.
So, you don't forgive and you do not forget, its been since 2016 and it is still rough. I rarely state my opinion but ehen I do, it brings up bad emotions.
I wish you well.
Discharge to Hospice seems appropriate. You are right. They should have left this poor woman to pass in peace.
Is your MIL on Hospice care going forward?
One thing I will say to you that I don't think others have yet, is that you have to forgive yourself too. You're very upset inside, however calm you are outside. I read your angst and self blame between the lines. Forgive yourself. Then you may be able to forgive others. Life doesn't come with a play book. You made the best decision you could in the moment. God may using this whole situation for a growth in yourself and others that we cannot yet see. Please forgive yourself.
And visit your loved one but share the caregiving. I pray you can bring her home for her final days because dying in the hospital with only one person allowed at a time is awful for your MIL, you, your hubby, your children who have cared for her also, and all her family.
May God give you peace.
of that. We talked about options. And I’m looking into availability of nurses 24/7 at her own home, as well as a facility. I would love to have her come here, again, and I’m not sure that I am truly actually up for the emotional toll it might take on me. I cannot do it all
by myself, and, because of family circumstances, no other family member is in a position to have her in their home.