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It is so frustrating that he does not take care of basic hygiene. If I didn't tell him to take a shower, he never would take one on his own. He refuses to take his meds because he insists that he took them an hour ago. (He NEVER takes his pills on his own). He sleeps most of the day (side affects from his meds) and gets up at all different hours of the early am. I need my sleep! He wakes us up every night. It is a different hour every day, never the same sleep schedule for him.
He does not want to listen to me or my husband because we are kids in his eyes and he is the adult. It is very frustrating! Sometimes we play along with his stories, but that can backfire. He wants to go to work at the hospital and insists that we take him there. So, I end up telling him the truth and then he sits and stews over it for an hour or so. I just wish he would respect our judgement and, no offense, do what we say. It is for his own good and safety.
Sorry, I don't have any tricks that work. I am still learning how to take care of this stubborn guy.
So, I try to distract her with comments about her pretty hair ,how the neighbors asked how she felt, would she like to go for a drive, would she like something to eat--milkshake. If distraction does not work then I have to resort to sitting down with her, rubbing her arm and back, saying we are buddies --in-this together- and we will get through it as a team. She will eventually cry herself to sleep if that does not work. That is truly the hardest and saddest moment for me when I cannot change her perception of herself in those moments.
I find what I call depression the most challenging.. Because it's a domino effect.. Her unwillingness to do any activity results in depression, anxiety, shadowing, Sundowner's, sleeplessness which in her case results in panic attacks. Everything I read says to avoid argument so I just stop pushing activities.. So everyday is the "woo is see" syndrome..
So as I stated it's all a challenge..And I never know if I'm making the right decisions.. I'm not a doctor and I don't want to be one! LOL
What have you all tried that has helped, and what have you tried that's made things worse?
Right now, I would say it's the repetitive nature of our conversations. I know it doesn't seem like much; she's not soiling herself, she's not babbling into the wind... she's not roaming the street at night...but... I'm not used to it yet, I guess. Maybe that's why it comes in stages; so the caregivers can get "used" to it as it progresses...
Today mom and I were... wait for it..... you guessed it... Shopping!
And she mentioned 3x in one hour that she liked a particular item (pillow! candleholder! rug!) all because they are her favorite color and she kept saying I like that color, it's my favorite color. I love the color...
It may not seem like much, but compile that with asking the same questions and forgetting the same explanations about the same stuff on the same day...