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Sandwich42: My mom has been on so much medicine, but nothing seems to help. She cries alot and they tried prozac for it, but it didn't phase it. She took seroquel too and said she had nightmares and eventually quit taking it. We (caregivers and myself) would even sneak it in something for her to sleep and she would get up and cry that she had the worst nightmare and that she didn't sleep well. It worked like a gem at first. She slept well, seemed happier (if that's possible) but after a month or so she had a hard time with it. Hope it works for your mom, because it did help some with my mom at first. Now my mom only takes a 5mg of a pain med and aleve for her back pain and lorezapam for anxiety. It's not much, but even without it she becomes a worse mess. In April after moving in AL, I got to the pharmacy too late and she had to do without her anxiety med for two days and she was literally a big mess. Wringing her hands, pacing the floors, saying "I can't do this", her eyes as wide as quarters. After giving her one then in 20 min she was a different person. Weird how a small white pill can make a difference. Even though she is like she is, she is so different without the medicine. She is more child like and so nervous without it. My mom doesn't hold her breath, but she constantly tells me NO. She isn't going to do this or that. Drives me crazy. No is her first answer to everything. The doctor told me not to let her tell me no. Okay? Really? She is a 68 year old woman that is my mother. The one who was always in control (...and do I mean control) and now you want me to be in control of a control freak? After three years, I am learning, but I still let her tell me no because it is too hard to fuss with her. The hospice doctor last summer told me the opposite, he told me not to make her do anything. If I offer her something to eat and she won't eat it, then so be it. That really helped me so much. After experimenting with different medicines, she got off of hospice and they put her on pallative care. She still says no and that is ok with me.
Wel, here goes. I will make my phone call and try not to ruin my day.
jewel - you can start going once every 2 weeks, or once a week for a shorter time. I don't even go once a month as she is out of town. You need to do right by yourself too.
loo - 1/2 hr at a time is enough - sometimes too much.
(((((hugs))))) to all of us dealing with this.
She definitely is handling my boundaries better though.
The things that Mom needs that might help you deal with your situation:
1. Other people, strangers, etc. Anyone who gives them attention. Just like a child.
2. Distractions outside of their 4 walls. A ride to a park for a 20 minutes.
3. Eat out and let her pay for it. When you get home: no dishes to do!
4. Call instead of visit. Wear headphones and check your email or do other things while she rants on. Mom can't be bothered to see if what she is saying is really being heard or not. She believes no one can listen and so she makes that happen!
5. Let her know you love her (even while gritting your teeth) and then let it all go.
6. Reward your time with her by doing something nice for yourself.
My neighbor said that my mother is continuing to drive, despite it being illegal for her to do so. I told her this numerous times, and she seemed to understand and seemed willing to respect the law. But her dementia is getting worse, and she feels like the one being persecuted and victimized. So she's doing what she damn well feels like doing, and everyone else can go to hell.
Sorry for the long update---the new plan is for my husband and I to go down on Saturday and he will drive her car away. Believe me, she will have an absolute sh-t fit, and will probably not want to speak to me anytime soon. Which will be a blessing. I'll coordinate additional home care for her, and that will be that until the next crisis.
Emjo: yes, I feel sorry for my mom too for the decisions she has made these past few years, but now I realize it was the illness making the decisions. It is what it is and there isn't any changing it.
I am working on everything else to get myself some freedom from the guilt and her sarcasm. I guess I do hope things will get better as far as her appreciating things I do, even just a visit. She wants me to fix it and I have told her I cannot fix it. After three years I have finally realized I honestly can't fix it. I did try everything possible to try to make it better. Now, I am working toward letting what she says to me roll off my shoulders and think oh well you don't bother me anymore.
Looloo: I cannot imagine having to go take away her car. My mom did quit driving on her own two years ago. She became afraid of everything, driving, the shower, going out, etc. She has lately stated that maybe she could try to drive. Well, it is too late now because her licence expired. I just tell her the doctor stated she couldn't drive. I blame a lot on the doctors and she blames a lot on the medicine she takes...Haha! I also agree with you about loving my mother. Do I tell her I love her? Sometimes I do to make her feel better, but I honestly can't say that I do love her like she would want me to. I see her as a mean, hateful, ungrateful woman that is miserable in her own skin and makes everyone around her miserable as well. I think another thing that is hard for her and me is that she is only 68. She has had to give up a lot and go through so much at such a young age. I know her frustrations also come from not really understanding it all.
I know that I say some of the same things, but please understand this is all new to me and I am really searching for ways for comfort and ways to move forward. When I started here a few months ago, I did the courage through others to put her in AL and not feel bad about it. I am so glad I did because now I know she is safe. When winter comes I will not worry--did the electric go off, is she warm, can I get to her because of the snow, all that will be one less thing on my mind. Winter is my least favorite season, but I will tell you, when it comes I know I will have peace because I can stay home and tell her I can't get out.
Baby steps, one step at a time for me. Thanks for the nudges to take the next step.
I don't know if this will help you or not. I hope so.
This takes courage, guts, and a spine of cast iron to survive all this, but you can do it.
Here are some of the things I had to come to terms with when it was all new to me:
== I had to give myself permission to do what is necessary, whatever that may be, and even if it's unexpected and undesired. Even if I don't have parental permission in advance.
Mom used to be a mega control freak. However, there came a day where it could not be that way anymore. I took the reigns. I didn't ask for the reigns. I stopped waiting for her to pass them over. I just grabbed them and didn't let go. This is the way it has to be to keep her safe. No sense wasting energy on feelings about it now. I wasted 15 years of feelings patiently cajoling her, trying to get her to see reason about her own situation and future. I can't count the sleepless nights of worry, the quarts of Maalox I took for stomach anxiety over her stupid stubborn refusals of help. No kind of medical emergency would scare her into cooperating. I should have just taken control then instead of trying to partner with her, collaborate, and get her to be part of the decision making. She wasn't capable then anymore than she is today. But all the going advice said to make your senior part of the conversation, get them to pick choices, etc. Little did I know that advice doesn't apply to some situations and precious little is written about this kind of situation.
==I had to give myself permission to be flexible. Some days will stink, some days will be so-so, once in a while there might be a somewhat normal day. It's all ok. Stay loose. Hang ten. Breathe your way through it. You can push the proverbial reset button at any point in the day and as many times as you need to in a day. There were days when I had my finger on the reset button all day long.
== I had to let go of the fantasies. First, I had to realize that some of my wants & goals for her and our relationship were fantasies in the first place!
I love the idea of a pleasant afternoon visit, or a nice friendly meal together, or going on outings, but these are never going to happen with the real mother I have. Her physical and mental person are never going to be that fantasy mother in my head. She's not capable of it. Once I let go of the wishes & fantasies, I can see and accept her for what she is, no more, no less. I quit beating myself up for HER inadequacies. I quit blaming her for constantly pooping on the parade. She can't *not* poop on the parade, so we don't do anything like that anymore. Note I didn't say love her for what she is. Acceptance is NOT saying that it's OK for her to be that way either. It's just a basic sentiment that she is a permanent full time Parade Pooper, so don't bring her to something and expect her to be any other way.
==I am able to do the little bit I can with her, and I mean it's tiny, out of a sense of mercy. I can't even say it's love. It's just mercy. This woman has had a tortured life, full of learning disabilities, untreated mental illness, traumas, the wrong meds, too strong meds, no therapy, no guidance, and no interpreter since my dad died in 1986. He translated the world for her and kept her out of a lot of trouble. She was highly dependent on him and has been a basket case since then. However, I am not his replacement.
== I had to accept my own limits as OK. They aren't faults or failings on my part. I get to be human in this. I'm not a machine who can go and do everything for everybody every day. I don't owe her or anybody explanations about my choices and behaviors, so I don't bother coming up with them. If she is cranky about something I did or didn't do, oh well. We aren't going to have pleasant visits ever, so it doesn't matter anyway.
My question is: When she says these manipulating things and points fingers at me by using others as an example, I am stuck with how to handle it. Do I say anything or just leave like I have been? This is where I am having trouble now, what to do in these situations. Thanks again for the inspiring words.
Well, fast forward 30 years --- her mother was now in her mid-80's. My friend obviously never left her husband to live in her mother's home. Her mother managed to live there alone quite nicely. She never drove a car, so my friend would take her mother out for outtings, get a Senior van to take her to the local Senior Center, do her shopping, etc. etc. However, as an only child, my friend felt obligated to call and visit her mother MANY times weekly over the ensuing 30 years, all the while her mother guilt-tripping her for 30 years. When she was 85, Mom decided she wasn't going to go to the Senior Center anymore and that my friend would be her sole caregiver (she refused aides) and provider of all her needs and her entertainment. As an only child, she was totally guilt-tripped about this and resigned herself to her situation. One day, at age 85 her mother fell and was hospitalized and it was determined that it was not safe for her to live alone anymore. My friend made the wise decision to put her in a NH (which was a pretty nice one) and not bring her home to live with her. Well, as you can image sh*t hit the fan and for the next 9 years (until her mother's death), her mother was angry with her daughter. For the next 9 years, my friend dutifully visited her mother EVERY OTHER DAY while she was a resident in the NH. Every other day!!! She also did her Mom's laundry.
Not a day went by that her mother didn't make her life miserable. Telling her what a horrible daughter she was putting her there, more head games, yelling "Noooo" at the top of her lungs. More often than not, my friend would come home in tears after the verbal lashing (abuse). My friend was a saint. Her mother was safe from falls, ate well, clean --- but the terrible guilt my friend bore was so upsetting to her. My heart broke for her. I could only console and be there for her as a friend. I told her her Mom did love her in her own way and that ultimately, the dementia was taking over (she never was diagnosed with Alzheimers) and it was not my friend's fault. Sandwich42 is correct. Heed her words.
So my dearest Jeweltone -- as an only child, you MUST take care of yourself FIRST. You cannot change your Mom's perception and attitude. You must realize it is what it is. You can only limit the effects her behavior has on you. As such, my advice would be to decide how many days/calls/visits you can handle and stick to that schedule. You said it yourself, whatever you do, no matter how many calls/visits etc., the outcome will be the same. You can't fix your Mom. It's a sad situation, but again, in the NH she is safe, gets regular meals and is clean. She is cranky because she cannot change the situation she is in --- her only release is to take it out on the one person she knows will faithfully visit/call her --- you.
Ultimately, my friend's Mom passed away after 9 years in a NH -- her crankiness, guilt-tripping got worse before it got better (meaning, towards the end she was no longer able to communicate with my friend). After her death, my friend felt so guilty --- but ultimately relieved. She knew she did the best she could for her Mom. It's been 5 months now and while she's still sad and grieving, every day that goes by, the grief is lifting.
You know your limits. You know your Mom's situation/crankiness is "NOT your fault and your are NOT a failure because you cannot fix it or make her happy." You have the right attitude and I know you will find peace.
When my friend's Mom would verbally abuse her at the NH, she would just say to her, "Mom, I'm not going to sit here and take it while your saying mean things to me. I've come here to have a nice, pleasant visit with you. If you can't stop saying these things to me, I'll have to leave now." And then she did. She would walk out and not come back until her next scheduled visit. Sometimes it worked. Sometimes it didn't. Whatever happened after she left, she knew the nurses/aides would handle it. My friend had a great relationship with the nurses and her mother's aides. Every time my friend would visit her Mom, she never knew walking into her room whether it would be a good day or a bad day with her mother's attitude. Some visits would be pleasant, most weren't. But my friend hung in there.
If you have good friends who support you and to whom you can talk, by all means, utilize this. If not, seek out support groups and, perhaps, your own mental health therapy if it's too hard to cope. Come to this website, vent, we are here for you. I wish you well and send {{{HUGS}}}.
This is a tough thing. There is no training or preparation to hear this kind of stuff coming out of your mother, or any other person really, but it cuts to the quick when it's mom, even if mom has been a royal pain always.
My mom has communicated this way for so long she can't communicate any other way. She isn't even aware that she is being mean, hateful, angry, etc. She has no awareness and therefore no control. This is the way she is and it works for her. It's always served her purposes to put people off and keep them off kilter with this kind of personality & approach.
What can you do? Several things.
== Arm yourself ahead of time. Literally do mental images of putting on armor. For me, I picture myself in a protective bubble she can't pop or get through. It's impenetrable. Inside my bubble it's nice, clean, happy, and I am in control of everything. I don't come out of that bubble until I want to. Mental imagery is really powerful, so find what means something to you and do it - a lot! Find the images that make you feel powerful, strong, and capable. Put on your armor before you walk through the door of where she is. Kind of like the Sheild Wall they make on the Vikings show on History Channel. She is not coming over that Sheild Wall. Tawanda!
==Remind yourself the visit is temporary. It is not like it was as a kid where you had no choice and had to stay and listen to everything until she was done. No way! The visit can be over when you decide it is. This is like the club you carry in addition to your shield.
== Write it, say it, chant it if you need to: This person has zero effect on me. I am not a sponge who soaks up her poison. I am me, separate, happy, and good. Do this a thousand times a day if you need to.
== Visualize her as the weak one, because that's what she really is. You are the strong one. You are only patiently putting up with her mess because you don't need to strike back. You are valuable, powerful, capable, and amazing entirely on your own. You are like the giant oak tree that has a little kid being a brat at its roots. It doesn't affect you one bit. Nothing she can say or do has any meaning or bearing on how you feel and are. The bratty little kid is not going to bring down a big old giant oak.
==In the moment, just ignore what she says. Interrupt her and talk about something completely different. I know, this is rude, right? NO IT IS NOT. Just cut it off mid-sentence and ask her a question about something totally unrelated. Make it random. Make it silly. Anything is allowed if it derails her train and keeps her off the tracks. She is not expecting this, as this is not how mother/daughter dynamics work, so it will be effective at least for a while.
==Afterwards, reward yourself. Take a nap, go for a walk, something that only you can do for you. You earned it. Sometimes my reward is not going back over there for another few weeks. Sometimes it's a massage. Sometimes it's time reading a book or knitting or sewing. I get to pick and I look forward to it. Sometimes it's a big fat margarita! :-D
This is what I do to get through those absolutely stupefyingly traumatic visits with my mom. I hope it works for you! You might come up with your own, so please post them!!
==I can see that you're upset. I'll come back another time to finish our meeting/discussion when you aren't so upset.
==Let's not make this discussion personal. If there is something concrete and work related that you expect that I can write down, I'm happy to do my best, but I don't have to sit here and be ambushed with personal criticism.
I tried calling her a bit ago (havent talked to her since Sunday)--today is Wedensday. She did not answer. Praise the Lord. I was glad and guess what? I will NOT call her back tonight. before, I would have called back until I got her. Not anymore. Before, I knew she could have fell, or something be wrong. Now, I know there are people there to check on her and they will let me know if something is wrong. Well, it is not or they would have called me. Yippee. If she sees where I called, she may call me back. But hardly doubtful.
My other goal is to STOP thinking about it everyday when I am not with her.
This chic is on a mission.
Jeweltone, I hope only the best for you as you go into the battle. You might have to find your inner Machiavelli.
I had the best luck getting my foot in the door with my mom when she'd call me late at night, scared of the phantoms at her window. She was sundowning and having hallucinations of men looking in the window, walking around on her property with red glowing eyes, smoking at the window, driving around the house in trucks. None of that was really happening. My uncle would come over from next door, and there was nobody there, no tire tracks, no cigarette butts, nothing.
I jumped on it, and asked her if she'd like to be somewhere safe, where the men couldn't get to her. She said yes. I started taking notes on all the things she was unhappy about, and used those examples of why to make a change. If trying to get traction by attracting her to a new place wasn't going to work (the carrot), then I switched to the stick and had much better luck. I got lucky by stumbling on that approach!
Sandwich, your moment, when you saw what kind of approach might work, was a creative moment. And it worked! I had my own creative moment yesterday in the car, rehearsing and strategizing about how to handle my upcoming "take away the car" day on Saturday. I'm thinking it could work more smoothly than my original plan, but there's no guarantee of course. Anyway, that sudden flash where I knew I came up with a better idea, with better odds of being successful, made me happy, and I actually did stop feeling 'sneaky' and so annoyed at the lengths I have to go to in order to keep her and other safe. I felt kind of 'creative' instead :).
Sorry if this is rambly! It's early yet.
Speaking of the hair thing...I made an appointment for the lady at the AL salon to do her hair tomorrow. When I called to tell her, she got quiet and then said, "oh lord, will you come?" I told her I would if they would call me when she is ready to do her hair. If I can go tomorrow (Friday), I will NOT have to go over the weekend. YES!!! I can stay home one weekend. Cheers to me...
An awful lot of today's seniors in care wouldn't plan ahead, didn't plan ahead, and are 100% certain to outlive their funds. Somehow, "somebody else" is supposed to pick up the tab. What choice is there? This is actually a huge problem for communities because there aren't as many people in the population groups now paying taxes to support the medical assistance need. The burden has fallen to us younger ones, and there's fewer coming behind us who are yet to become tax payers. Every first world country is dealing with this problem.
Once you get through enough of the 12 stages of grief about the money, you can work on getting the paperwork together for medical assistance/Medicaid. This must be done well in advance of the day of need. In the US, application processing can take weeks or months. I'm lucky that mom's nursing home has a Medicare coordinator on staff to help me out with all this. And they can go "medicaid pending" for some period of time between end of funds and approval of medicaid.
Yes, it would be nice to have something to show for all the effort at the end, but my attitude is that mo money = mo problems. I remember going through estate probate when dad died in 86. It was a paperwork hurricane, so many fees to this clerk and that clerk, so much time spent doing the estate probate forms. He had a will and everything was in order ahead of time, but it will still a giant pain in the haunches.
I'm kind of relieved to know that once we spend all the money this year on her care that I won't ever have to worry about settling an estate or going to probate or any of that jazz. My reward will be freedom and the ability to stop doing her taxes, her bills, jousting the paperwork monster involved with being old in the US. I might not be able to put that in the bank or pay for a cruise with it, but getting my time and attention back will be priceless.
I don't know if this helps anybody or not.
Getting packed, finishing up work, gassing up the car, for the trip to take away my mother's car. Husband is going down with me, and he'll drive her car back home (to our house, 3 hours away).
After talking to my mother's neighbor earlier this week, she told me that she had driven my mother to the DMV, and it was a 3 hour process. She told ME, that they told HER, that they couldn't revoke my mother's license then and there because my mother had scheduled a hearing, which was scheduled for today. I spent the week wondering if she'd actually attend the hearing.
Today, I spoke to the neighbor again, and she told me that she was able to cancel the hearing while they were at the DMV!! AND, that my mother's license IS NOW revoked permanently. I think, as she was telling me all the drama, she simply didn't stay on track and give me the resolution of the story. But I will try to see if the DMV will confirm this with me on the phone. I think that this neighbor is probably telling me these details now, 3 days later, because she's calmer. She tends to get very wound up, and I spend a lot of energy trying to calm her down, and not get distracted. Important details tend to get left out of conversations.
So, if this is true, then this IS good news.
The only 'bad news': my mother is either becoming more confused, OR she's really beginning to lie to me. Big, boldfaced lies. I spoke to her very briefly this morning, just to let her know I'd be 'stopping by' tomorrow, and asked her how her week was (wondering what she'd tell me, of course). She said that her car was giving her trouble (Really???), so she took it in for service (Did you now??), and it seems ok now (Well, that's GOOD!).
Here I go again -- trying not to be pulled into the story, trying not to spend too much time sleuthing for proof that she actually did take it in for service (she didn't -- no checks written, no credit cards used), and trying to tell myself that it makes no difference whether she's lying deliberately or believing her stories, or whatever. It makes no difference.