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It could also be that she's angry at her state in life now and just wants to vent. But it is an energy drainer.
You might want to ask her about things that she did well. "Hey, mom, how did you do this or that?" It doesn't matter whether you care about the answer particularly, but it can get her off on a topic that she does feel good about. I often ask my mom about her childhood (hundreds of stories) and that occupies her without negativity for quite while.
And, of course, I always have to suggest medication. My mom was an impossible nuisance untill she got on the right meds. Have you had her evaluated? Trust me on this one: it is worth it. The right meds can turn things around overnight.
She escalates every twinge she may feel to be a serious health issue.
She is in a very good facility, and on an antidepressant. I visit once or twice each week and take her to appointments. She makes no effort to get out of her apartment on her own to visit with the other residents or to entertain herself. After several years of this, I have come to the conclusion that I cannot change her, I can only change the way I react to her. As a result, I keep my visits and phone calls short. If she starts complaining, I make up a reason why I need to hang up. Listening to a long litany of complaints is exhausting and stressful.
All her frustration and anger is directed at me, and it sucks the life out of me, so I pull back. At my age (soon to be 73) I feel I have a right to enjoy my own old age, and pray that when my time comes, I can be gracious like my aunts, not bitter and angry like my mother. Meanwhile, I do what she needs, but leave when she starts to put me down, or my children. She has driven them away, and then complains that she never hears from them. So sad, and when she dies, I think I will cry for the relationship we never had, not for her death.
Granted no one wants to hear negativity, but if you were a elderly widow who has no way to get out of the house you would be negative to.
Your mother doesn't need see someone like a psychiatrist, I love people who immediatedly suggest that without looking at the situation or putting themselves into the person's shoes.
I think most of us would be depressed/negative is if the only time we get to leave the house is to go to the doctor. Try adding lunch or maybe even a movie after the Dr. appt.
My mother will be 87 in October. All of her siblings are dead. Most of her friends are dead too. My father died in 1992. She lives with me. She is in good medical health for her age, she still drives to church, to the bank, to the grocery store, to get her hair done. She has almost all of her marbles (although her memory is pretty bad). She has no hobbies or friends to do things with. She is hard of hearing, sometimes wears her hearing aids & sometimes she doesn't. She doesn't owe a penny to anyone, has excellent health insurance, has a good pension from my father & social security every month, and wants for nothing. She has severe spinal stenosis, for which she had a procedure done in December that eradicated almost 100% of the pain. She had very early stage 1 colon cancer in 2009 that she had a colon resection for & did not need radiation or chemo, so she got away lucky with that one. I buy most of the groceries in the house, as well as things for improvements & fixing stuff. I'm good like that, LOL.
Why does she complain & why is she so negative?
Because what else does she have in her life except other elderly people's health problems, other elderly people dying, her back pain gradually coming back, the fear of cancer coming back, etc. She's lucky I live with her, or else she'd have no one to talk to on a daily basis. I have 2 brothers, but they don't really come to see her & call her every now & then. I get it. I don't enjoy it, but I get it. When you're closer to death than you are to birth, I think mortality is always on your mind. Every ache & pain makes you think it's the end.
When I hear people say they want to live to be 100 years old, I laugh. Do those people realize that by that time, all of your friends will be dead, if you're the youngest all of your siblings will be dead, your spouse will probably be dead, you most likely won't be able to live by yourself or drive a car or make your own meals or take a shower/bath by yourself, you'll be deaf, etc? People think when they say they'd like to live to be 100 years old that they'll be in the same shape they were in when they were 50 years old, and that's not the case. The human body is like a car---when you're born, you're like a brand new, shiny car being driven off the lot. As you get older, just like a car, things start to break & need fixing & replacing, the paint starts to peel & rust begins to appear, the tires lost their tread, there are little dents & dings & scratches, and if you manage to keep the car for 30 years, other cars have come along with much better technology so the other cars that would have been 30 years old become obsolete & you don't see them on the road anymore. You're the only 30 year old car left on the road. Who wants to drive a 30 year old car that has rust, dents, bald tires, no radio or air conditioning, broken radio, torn up seats? The owner of the 30 year old car would be complaining about all of those things, just like an elderly person complains about everything in their life.
As I said, my mother complains & is negative-----and I don't like it & it is annoying & frustrating, but I get where she's coming from. I try to keep that in mind, but sometimes I do have to distance myself from her or I'll end up the same way.
i will just add that my hubby is totally negative with remarks like'It's the govt spying on us" The Internet provider has changed all my password the govt is tracking me" we have to prepare for what's coming" "Cash in your 401K and buy gold" other than that he is reading medical journals to research real and imagined diseases. now he has been loaned an anchant book from the 1700s written by a Dr of that time describing approaches to treatment like the use of leeches and treating patients with hyrophobia by blood letting till they died or suffocating them between two matresses. the author is forward thinking enough to disagree with many of these practices and way ahead of his time in some of his treatments.
As I've read these posts about dementia and the various ways it presents in different people, I keep wondering if it narrows one's focus so much that people resort to basic survival concepts - i.e., protecting oneself from the government, focusing on the negative, developing unreasonable fears... just a thought.
Another was worse - I never once saw her smile; she always had a scowl on her face. Her boss was different than ours - he was personable (hot, too!), she didn't have a difficult workload, but just was a sourpuss.
After her brother had a heart attack, I asked a few days later how he was doing. She snapped at me with a retort something to the effect of "how do you THINK he's doing??!!". I said I was sorry to have disturbed her and never bothered to speak to her again unless it was just a good morning.
Now I'm wondering how many of the elders being discussed here were like this 20, 30 and 40 years ago? I know some of their dissatisfaction is age related as well as their current conditions, but I can't help wondering if these are personality traits that manifest more intensely as life gets worse.
But in the case of the OP we don't hear about any attempt to do this. If she is just showing up to take her mother to the doctor and nothing else, well that would put anyone in a bad mood.
Too Young for This, I think you hit the nail on the head. It must be very difficult to see everyone who is your peer die or be sick.
Lifeexperience, that sounds nice. But that costs $$$$$. You're looking at easily $4k a month for that, and more in some parts of the country. You make it sound like it's so easy. $4K * 12 = $48K a year.
of negative things with my health. Not to justify, but picture their side.
I have spent 5 days alone with no visits or phone calls and I have great
children. However, they have lives of their own nod families also. I luckily
can still do most of my own care taking. But find myself telling my family
about the things I can't do and sometimes I only have negative things to
talk about. I do try not to ask if I can possibly do something on my own.
I have ask my family to remind me when I get on the downside so I can
change subject. Sometimes it works when they bring it to my attention. I have no one to talk to either positive or negative and it's hard being alone.
You can start the conversation by saying what is good.
Hang in and get some help. Look into a geriatric doctor and the right meds. You may be surprised.