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I had the most wonderful CNA that would come in and 3 times a week would help me give him a shower. And order supplies. And provide me with some conversation while we sat at the table having a cup of tea while my husband had breakfast. That was the only conversations I would sometimes have all day since my husband was non verbal.
When he became bed bound the sponge baths were wonderful. I somehow could not do it as well.
I got the supplies and equipment that I needed first a Sit to Stand then a Hoyer Lift. A wonderful Hospital bed not tom mention the medications that were delivered to my door..
The Nurse was kind, caring and always easy to talk to. Social Worker and Chaplain were on my "team" as well.
Guilt...I have none.
I watched the man I loved go from a Vibrant, kind, loving husband and father to a shell of a man over the course of 10 years.
To be able to keep him home, comfortable, with a few great caregivers I had and Hospice helping that was a Godsend.
am I sad..yes (but I do not wallow..he would not have wanted that at all!!!)
do I wish that he did not die, yes
do I wish that he never got Alzheimer's, yes.
but do I wish that he were still here with me the way he was..no.
By calling Hospice you are doing the best
No one can change the fact that we will die
You can change how or where. (ok sometimes you can't..)
The goal of Hospice is to keep a person at home, surrounded by family and loved ones, relieved of pain. No feeding tubes, no intubation..to allow the body to finish the job of living and part of that is dying.
It is a difficult journey but one we all have to take.
Use your Hospice team to guide you along this journey, like any you will need help along the way.
It was a most blessed site to see him relaxing and he told me that had he known the pain would go away, he would have chosen Hospice sooner.
I discussed everything with my Dad all the time - it was his body and I felt he should get to make the decisions. I had to explain things several times but I always made sure he finally understood. When the time came and he saw my Mother again for the first time in 7 years, it was worth everything - his whole face just glowed.
Hospice is there to provide support and help--they do NOT hasten the dying process, simply make it a process of peace.
You have NO NEED to feel guilty over providing a loving, peaceful, pleasant passage into the next life.
We were ready to call in Hospice for Mother last November. She rallied and we didn't call. I know that when it's time, we'll call them and they will be as lovely as they were with daddy.
This is an important point to be made here: I lost one of my grand mothers with no warning-she simply got up one morning and laid back down and passed. We were on excellent terms and I have no regrets over ANYTHING with her. We don't often have that "warning" of impending death. I do not get along well with my mother, and so I try really hard to make sure that I don't go away angry when I've spent time with her (easier said than done) partly because I DON'T want to have any guilt.
In time, after this is all over, and you have grieved, you will be grateful you provided mom a gentle passage.
I'll be honest - lots of times when I read posts about feeling guilty, I just don't understand why the person feels they have anything to feel guilty about.
I've said it a number of times here but I want to repeat it for you, sweet Katiekate. Because from everything I've read in the posts you've made - you've been a wonderful, caring, thoughtful, smart daughter to your mother. You are the same as a contributing member of our community here.
So what is it you're feeling guilty over? As others have said here before me - it looks like you feel that calling hospice is an admission of no hope - giving up, and acceptance of your mothers death. Honestly, when it really comes down to it - why is that the wrong thing?
As you, yourself say - death is inevitable. Death comes to us all. Constantly battling with it can't turn back the hands of time. But it sure as h*ll is hard to look death in the eye - especially when it's coming for someone whom we love.
But I think it's important to recognize the difference between feeling bad and feeling guilty. You have done nothing to create what's happening to your mother - time, age and "life" is doing that. And even that, is just running its path - its eternal circle.
So now your mother is at the end of that path and you have been bravely walking it along side her. As you clearly see you've got a couple of choices.
Using my "path" analogy you can steer your mother off the path into what's most likely to be a rough and difficult trail. Or you can walk in front of her - kicking away the rocks and clearing away the underbrush. But one way or the other - your mother is going to reach her destination and complete her journey.
Hospice isn't for everyone- and by everyone I mean everyone else. We see posts about people being unhappy with the hospice care. I think what they're really unhappy with is the death of their loved one - and they need to blame someone. When in all likelihood the result would have been the same - with or without hospice.
But the difference being the painful process of death being handled in a way that provides the loved one whatever they need to be without pain and without anxiety. And it will support YOU by ensuring people well versed in what's happening with your mother - that they take a great deal of the weight off your shoulders enabling you to deal less with the process and more with the person. And isn't that what's important- what you would want for yourself when your time comes?
So no, Katiekate- you shouldn't feel guilty. Feeling badly? Yes, that's only natural. It would probably be unhealthy if you didn't feel badly about what's happening with your mother. But please try to remember you are not doing anything wrong- nothing you need to feel guilty about. If anything, you should feel grateful that you have one more opportunity to do something for your mother by helping her to gently transition to whatever it is out there that comes after - at the end of the trail.
I was relived when my Mom passed and sad, too. I had no guilt, as she had put a lot of this upon her self by being so stubborn, denying her age and that of my Dad.
Later when my Dad passed, I wasn't ready, and I had some guilt thinking I should have noticed a pattern of his coughing when eating. He had passed quickly from aspiration pneumonia. But I also knew he wanted to be with his love of his life, my Mom. I learned from this forum to tell Dad that it was ok for him to leave and go to Mom, etc. Thus the next morning he passed.
Sometimes guilt is actually frustration if one's parent refused to do what would be best for them. For me, I couldn't convince Mom that she and Dad would enjoy moving to Independent Living, as their house was becoming too much work. But my Mom still viewed me as being 30 something instead of 60 something, big difference on what I could still physically do for them.
Now that I look back, those phone calls Dad made to me to see, for example, if I could climb up the ladder to get to the attic. Yikes, that ship sailed years ago. Really wished Dad would have told me it was Mom that wanted HIM to climb that ladder, and he knew he couldn't. Same with other things, like driving my parents places. Dad would say he would start driving again, now after the fact I realized once again it probably was Mom who wanted to get to the grocery store for a sale on can corn 5 for $1.00. That is where some of the guilt I feel.
As for using Hospice, I had zero guilt using them, as the group I had for both of my parents were outstanding. Having both parents have a pain free passing was so very important.
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