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PD - "It is absolutely wrong to forfeit your own family to serve (you call it what you want but let me tell you that will be what it ends up being) your mother's whims." Totally true. I see that my mother has the care she needs but will not/cannot cater to her whims. She would have me running here and there and changing her mind when I am in mid stride. I would have no life.
MaryK - there is no limit to the age one will benefit from exercise. Just doing more than you are doing now is an achievable goal for everyone,
Johnjoe - that may be ideal for some people, but those of us who have and have had mentally ill, self centered parents from the get go can end up in an untenable situation.
jessie - ". I wonder if we're indeed enabling a life that is not so good." I think that is true. Though your mother does not like the idea of a facility, she would have more activities, more social life, more and professional people caring for her, no cares about upkeep/maintenance and so on. Please know I am not criticizing the care you give her and I know it is very hard on you. I am looking at these things for myself. If I find it too hard to deal with upkeep, it is time to move to where the upkeep is someone else's responsibility, not harass my children to take over my responsibilities.
I struggled terribly with the guilt for years, the one in my conscience and the one she made me feel every time we spoke on the phone (2 times a day). My life was miserable, my brain so tired that it affected my job, my spirit so sad. So o took the dreaded step, the one everyone told me I shouldn't. I rented my house, sold my car, sold everything, and moved overseas with her. Ih, forgot to mention I tried hiring people to stay here but never worked. They all left, sometimes their fault, but many times my mom's ways pushed them out the door.
So now, I can say I cook for her so she's at least eating. Before I used to call and it could be 9am and she hadn't eaten at all or she'd say she had literally nothing to eat (also tried delivering food..she got upset and cancelled it. I think she felt it was the "easy way for me" to just buy the service. Plus she's picky with food.
Summarizing, did I succeed? Was it the right decision? Yes, because every situation is different. I know now my mom truly couldn't be by herself, and also know taking her with me never worked. But, take into account, I'm single, I'm not sacrificing anybody else but me. And yes, it's a huge sacrifice. The financial uncertainty is more than scary (no job yet here, terrible evonomy), personally I'm living for her and it's a 24/7 job, yet, for me and my conscience it was the only way to take. I struggled a lot, risked my own health. Now I'm far from happy, I'm very tired, very afraid of the future but I know it was the right thing. Is she happy? No, she's taken care of but not happy. Never will be, when you're old and depressed that is an almost unattainable goal, plus she feels guilty because I sacrificed all for her, she repeats she wants to die. In a nutshell, these situations are rarely a win win. The options are all imperfect and someone has to sacrifice, a lot. It's important to realize that whichever option taken, it will not be fully "it". Happiness almost has to either be postponed or recreated. If able. If nothing else, at least the physical needs are being helped, and the one worst enemy of all mitigated:loneliness. She's no longer lonely.
Every situation is a different universe, but look at mine, foresee what could happen in your situation, and hopefully make the less harming decision. God bless!
That you love and cherish your partner and care for them is part of the marriage ceremony - to the best of my knowledge I didn't have to sign anything to be born to my parents....although, since I am adopted they actually did have to sign something to have me!)
It is absolutely wrong to forfeit your own family to serve (you call it what you want but let me tell you that will be what it ends up being) your mother's whims. Yes she is being incredibly selfish, AND yes she is being manipulative.
How to honour her properly, Make sure you find her the best care facility you can and take her there. Then give her the option.... she either accepts help form the church together with paid in house care or she goes into a care home or she comes to stay with you - her call - in fact knowing what I know now I wouldn't give her the choice I would say care home and then monitor that she is safe and well looked after - that's how to honour your obligation (PS THERE IS NO OBLIGATION) to your mother
Older people can fear change, but change can actually be a good thing.
If I could roll back the clock, those 7 years of driving I should have nipped it in the bud and set boundaries if I would have known it was going to damage my own health. Who knew. All I was doing was enabling my parents to continue to live in their house and here they were in their 90's. Mom refused outside help. If my parents would have moved to a senior complex, in a nice really large apartment, the complex offered transportation... plus there were several doctors on-site with their own office.
My Dad has similar eye problems as your Mom, he can't see out of one eye due to macular degeneration and his other eye they are trying to slow down the progression. Since my Mom had passed, Dad now has a morning caregiver who loves to get out and drive, so she is more than happy to drive Dad to appointments, whew.... then they go to Burger King as Dad really enjoys having lunch there :)
I think it is so important that if one needs to use something to make walking easier, that it be fun to use. I remember last year going to a doctor appointment with my parents, the office was a very long hallway away... Mom had her cane, Dad had his rolling walker and Dad got to the door of the doctor's office like a flash while Mom struggled to walk down the hall with me holding her arm... there was Dad sitting in his walker all smiles waiting for us :)
But my Mom refused to even try Dad's walker. In fact, Mom didn't even want my Dad to use it outside when he needed to walk down the driveway to the mailbox. She didn't want the neighbors to think he was getting old [94].... I was thinking the neighbors probably would be thinking "well, it's about time he got one of those" as he had fallen on the driveway quite a few times.
Regarding your brother, he might be surprised when it comes time for Mom to go to a higher level of care [if you can convince her to move], that Mom would need to sell the house and use the equity to help pay for that care.
With my mother, they were all right under my nose. Rigid thinking. Unable to switch focus. Fixated on the "right way" to do this or that, but could not execute and went ape-sh*t if someone else stepped in. Lost interest in what few things ever interested her. Paranoid. Control freak. Anti-social. Deliberately made her world astonishingly small.
I kept thinking that it couldn't be dementia. She always knew the day, the president, current events. Still a math whiz.
She was always a low-grade control freak. I figured she was just becoming "more herself" with age.
Fast forward. Autopsy revealed 2 different forms of dementia. I almost fell out of my chair. Why autopsy? Refused to see a doctor for any of her escalating issues. (Control freak, remember?)
Whatever is going on with your mom, it sounds like she will wear it like a badge of honor. While you increasingly feel like you are one step from the nuthouse.
These years will wear you down. If mom has food, clothing and shelter -- and refuses to entertain other options for herself and your father -- take a step back. And commit to being present for your husband, adult children and grandchidren.
I can also relate to the "too much information" syndrome. A lot of that negativity came my way the past 5 years. My parents became fond of "dropping bombs" (hello -- I'm your daughter, not your shrink).....neighbors/relatives would unburden themselves.....the things I discovered when I cleaned out their house. Upsetting and demoralizing. To say the least.
Again, make every effort to rise above. Easy to say, difficult to do. When our relationship with elderly parents becomes transactional, it creates a deep sadness. The best antidote is to stay fully engaged with those who also give -- and don't just take. (((big hugs)))