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As long as I am not clogging the toilet, I plan on using as much t.p. as I want or need, my whole life long. This is not something I will be trying to ration or save money on, now or in the future.
I suggest that family try to save on cigarettes, alcohol, electricity, water, and vacations, rather than on my own money being spent on my own t.p.
It is a personal choice.
It was bad during the start of the pandemic too , when getting toilet paper was tough & expensive.
My husband just started leaving partial rolls in the bathroom for her .
We removed the extra rolls from under the sink & locked them up in our pantry.
Just do the best you can. As frustrating as it seems.
🍀🤗🐞
My husband folds then hides the folded tissues, paper towels, and napkins. He's starting in on an old bible that is losing its pages.
I find them folded mostly and sometimes wet and balled up in a variety of sizes. Some are smaller than a pea and others go up to golf ball sizes. I dread to think how he's moistening them.
He can spend a lot of time folding and refolding laundry (great, I say) but I have to check his hands first because he also tears at his cuticles and skin on his fingers. As a result he leaves bloody marks at times on freshly cleaned laundry. Thank goodness for peroxide.
What's worse is that this behavior seems to be happening at the same time that he's become too frugal with using toilet paper on his butt. Ah, me.
Today I’m going to try something new for both of us. I’m preparing a large shoe box, his designated fun box, plus a couple of plastic bags of things to change off.
My plan is to fill his fun box with small colorful fabrics. Maybe some of those different colored microfiber dusting cloths, or old wash cloths. Maybe a couple of small different colored children's socks, (Goodwill, Salvation Army purchases).
I have to keep in mind that they too may disappear.
Another day (another week, another box?). Maybe I’ll put in nuts and bolts, velcro, different colored nylon tie wraps.
Maybe I’ll mess up his tool box come to think of it, or a draw, or even my sewing box for him to put in order.
Wish me luck.
My mother uses loads of TP...and forgets to flush. A whole other problem arises.
Bathroom issues often become obsessive. This one seems fairly mild, though any of these behaviors can get under your skin over time.
Cheaper TP, and maybe gathering all the unused pieces and putting into a basket so they can create handfuls of TP when needed seem like good ideas.
Remove the roll of toilet paper after she's done her business.
Give mom a laundry basket full of wash cloths and ask her to please fold them for YOU; that you need her HELP.
Apply for Medicaid on behalf of your mother and see about getting her placed in a Skilled Nursing Facility since you say 'you can't afford to place her'. Long term care IS available via Medicaid for seniors who qualify. Dementia often reaches a point where in-home care gets too difficult to manage, especially if you are getting burned out, as you said in your profile.
I suggest you read this 33 page booklet (which is a free download) which has THE best information ever about managing dementia and what to expect with an elder who's been diagnosed with it.
Understanding the Dementia Experience, by Jennifer Ghent-Fuller
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/210580
Best of luck!
Take the t.p. tissues from her pockets and place in the basket, on a regular basis.
Your profile says you can't afford to place her. It's not about what you can afford because this is not your bill to pay unless you are filthy rich. It's about what she can afford. And if she can't afford it, she can go on medicaid and they will use her social security check and whatever other money she has left for her care. So if you are burnt out and ready for a change, find a place that accepts medicaid and get that ball rolling.
Good luck
Try to put the best spin possible on it for your own mental health and know that it will pass.
She might be willing to fold wash cloths or napkins or hand towels or match socks to get some of the desire to fold out of her system. See if that cuts down trips to the bathroom. My aunt liked to snap green beans, shell peas, clean dried beans. Lots of things to try. She did a less and less acceptable job as time went by but the object was to keep her busy with an activity she enjoyed.
Signing cards is another one I just remembered. Some days she signed her maiden name.
When it comes to dementia I have been told often times only thing you can do is live with the behavior or place them. You will rarely get them to change their behavior.