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Now, contact social worker at hosptial. Tell her Mom really needs evaluation and if there is a serious dementia you will NOT be caring for her in the home and she will need placement. So that she is on notice. She, if they will keep her the 5 days, needs rehab. It isn't a matter of telling her or her telling you anything. It is doctors orders and they will swoop in with ambulance stretcher and take her there. It is time to know that Mom cannot in these circumstances be the boss. She is DEPENDENT on you and it needs to be clear that while she is dependent on you you will need to have a say. Or she will need to move into care.
The social worker needs now to help explain POA for health care and possibly financial, and most of all to get the health care in place so condition will be discussed with you.
Get all the help you can while she is in the hospital and start with the social worker. Tell her what you told us. GOOD LUCK!
Thank you for addressing my omission!
If she is found to be cognitively intact, you’ll have an objective reason for waiting out her treatments in the rehab facility to determine how well she recovers.
If she is diagnosed as having symptoms which may be dementia, you will know that her confusion and temperamental conduct will need to be addressed as her dementia progresses.
The evaluation done on our LO cost $300, and the brief statement of her situation was very helpful while planning for her best possible future.
The main issue is her husband (not you) being overwhelmed by the thought of her continued care. Her husband is responsible for her care, if he has full cognitive abilities. Does he? It makes no sense to have 2 (or more) people orbiting around your mom. Does she have the financial means to have some in-home care? If not he can contact social services to see if they quality for any in-home services to provide some relief. As for your admitted co-dependent relationship, I'm not sure what to say to someone who probably will struggle to enact any of these suggestions because of that dysfunction. Your profile says you're married...your husband has priority over your mother. He needs you to be whole and healthy (and you need that for yourself). What are you willing to do to help find permanent care for your mom that doesn't come from you?
I guess there are others with similar stories to mine, but for so many years I thought I was the only one with a mom like mine. The codependent part from above is more of her dependency on me and me allowing it to continue instead of a true codependent relationship. Growing up as an only child with a dad that spent a lot of his free time in pool halls, it allowed my mom to start being dependant on me for companionship. It wasn't until I was in my 30's and in therapy that I realized it was a form of emotional abuse. I loved my dad and he was always supportive of me, but wasn't invested in their marriage. I was too involved in trying to help them stay together and trying to make my mom happy than I ever should have been.
Then I made a huge mistake in trying to "take care" of them again. When I got married we built a duplex and lived in one side with them in the other. By this time my dad had a lot of health issues and once again I was trying to take care of things and make my mom happy. My husband agreed with it, even though he put down the down payment and then we split the payments. His only real comment was that we would be there for a few years then put our side up for rent as an investment. Well, time has a way of moving really fast and many things happened along the way, and here we are still there 35 years later. He was a truck driver and was gone for a week or so often. This unfortunately allowed me to continue spending too much time with my mom.
She has always been very easily agitated, depressed and for some reason I continued to believe I was the only is that could make things better. My therapist called her symptoms, (as I explained them because of course my mom would never consent to anything wrong with her), Borderline Personality.
My dad's health continued to declined until it became necessary (to keep any peace) for him to go to an assisted living facility. He died a few years later and after dating several men met Joe. For what ever reason, (probably being too much in debt and needing a home being at least 50%) he married her...him being 15 years younger. I know you will find that they continued to live beside me unbelievable, but true.
That was in 2013. Since then... the short version is...My husband is now on disability, Joe went on disability shortly after they married, and my mom's health started to deteriorate. Joe has taken care of most everything...fixing food, helping her to get around the house,etc, but has never contributed financially. Last year he admitted to a gambling problem and took a part time job to try to get out of debt. The 20 hour job has turned into 30 to 35 and My mom spent most to all of her time in the bed when he was gone. She is very afraid of falling and thought she would be safer there. Since I am a kindergarten teacher and gone during the day, she had no other outlet. She never developed long lasting friendships due to her "issues" and the longer she stayed in bed the less mobile she became.
Last spring she had double pneumonia, recovered mostly, but started showing some signs of dementia. Nothing dramatic, mostly calling me and Joe multiple times staying the same things, asking the same question over and not remembering it...etc.
Now this new issue has developed. She went kicking and screaming (literally) to the hospital. Yesterday she seemed better and the case manager is discussing discharge.
I know this has been waaay long. The honesty in your response once again gave me a jolt I needed. I know that I have put my mom first my entire life...even before my own happiness and well being. I have resentment over things I allowed her to ruin or choices I made trying to make her happy. I know this is totally on me. I should have changed long ago. Now at 62 and her 83 it is even more difficult. My head tells me one thing then my heart...