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I think we're all entitled to our own lives. More importantly, we're all entitled to make our own judgment as to who and what is worthy of our personal sacrifice. Nobody should get a free pass just because they're blood relations. Nobody should feel obligated to make huge sacrifices for someone just because they're family either.
Now to hear someone come into a caregiver group and criticize, saying to ask someone else to do what we do, is hard to hear. It's not like people are lined up to help. The truth is if they care, they don't show it at all. I would absolutely love it if someone did take over for a while.
I do believe that caregivers can become mentally ill from all the stress. It goes with the territory. Many of us who were sane when we come in lose our grip on reality when dealing with someone with dementia. It bothers me when someone accuses us of complaining and being mentally ill. If we can't complain here, where can we complain. And personally I am as crazy as a bessie bug now because I've been caregiving too long without anyone else that cares.
Complaint over.
As for just coping for you, it's hard and it's hard to not be angry at other family members for not stepping up. Most of us feel that at some point. Being a caregiver is usually an act of taking the higher road, your aunt has taken the higher road by taking care of her dad, caregiving isn't pretty, it's tough and it can be downright ugly, there's no perfect way of doing it and it leaves people almost battle beaten. Not one caregiving situation is the same, there are many variables whether it's medical conditions, family conditions, financial conditions.
Caregivers need breaks. If you've got the space, I'd set up a room where you live that's the break room, not kidding. You and your aunt can have quiet breaks away from everything going on in the home. My break room is outside doing yard work, and I set up my bedroom to the furthest corner and quietest corner of the house. I'll set my dad up with lunch or dinner and while he's eating, I got to that space, work on line, watch a show, etc.... In that room I'm not surrounded by medical supplies, and all the other things required for caregiving, it's a normal room. Anyone caregiving for awhile understands what that means. It'll help you a lot and your aunt if you do your stuff on a schedule as much as possible, so your aunt knows when you'll be there and not, and let her know ahead of time, that when you are there, you have to do this or that and cannot help with grandpa at certain times. If she needs your help, she should let you know ahead of time if possible. I hope something out of all this helps you. Stay strong.
Then you go on to say you have little sympathy for those who complain about doing everything?... wow, did you think these people may have no g-damn person to talk to and absolutely no where to turn and they are literally stuck in limbo or stuck between help or walk away and abandon another human being..so they are simply releasing some pent-up truths of their own situations????
Then you say a person chooses to be in the position of care, that they dont have to be? God... Sure everyone should just throw the elder in the car and drive them to the nearest nursing home, right.... No really, have you ever read all the different scenarios that actually take place that leaves only one person in the care of another??? Have you?? I'm actually quite p*ssed about what youve said. Take me for instance, I am in literal limbo and "stuck" with having to care for my 76 yr old dementia sufferer, mom .... why? because she was wrongfully evicted from an assisted living facility (they stole nearing 10k of her belongings from her personal storage closet in her apartment, then they had the nerve to evict her after I filed 2 police reports of the thefts. She had no where to go, her lovely son first rented out, then sold her home (it was in his name...) All 3 (of 4) adult financially well-off children denied her a place to stay during that emergency (umm no we cant take you in, sorry mom) .. so I took her home. She has 4 adult children including myself, one makes over 300k per year, another well over 100k. I have placed her has on waiting lists to get into another assisted living facility, but shes extreme low income so shes Medicare Waiver recipient (meaning facilities dont exactly invite her in) ... she does not qualify for any "in-home care" state or gov assistance (because there is none) and unless I go to work which does nothing but to pay a day care provider for her because she needs 24 hour monitoring (meaning everything is coming out of my pocket of which i can no longer afford jack-sh** ,much less turn around and pay for another to come in and do the job im already not being paid for myself !! ... So unless volunteers do it, and that is a joke, its unreliable and they are strangers each time to come into my home, that is not only unsafe, but a major worry (since i have children).....So she sits in my home needing 24 hour care and monitoring and my finances cannot afford to pay another day to care for her, yet Im not being able to work the amount of hours needed to afford it all because she needs the care. Now, I could (as her other 3 kids desire and have said so verbally) dump her in a nursing home, but she is no where near that state of care needed and it would depress her severely to be surrounded by such declining individuals let alone out "nursing homes are not exactly blue ribbon categorized facilities ...So she sits here, has my care, and I cannot work as much as i need to to afford her life and mine.. its the largest d*mn mess Ive ever seen.... so dont you dare come onto here and say what you've said.
My mom was diagnosed with dementia 12 years ago, it can go on and on and on. There may be something else going on as ferris says, but there may not be.
See an elder law attorney that specializes in Medi-Cal planning. He is permitted to own a house and a car. Does he have quite the portfolio of assets? He does need to spend down all but house and car to become eligible.
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