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I toured assisted living facilities and skilled nursing facilities. I specifically asked the question, ‘When is the best time for a person to enter the facility?’
Every place gave me the same answer, “Don’t wait until it is absolutely necessary! It is better to place a person sooner so that they can adjust better to their new surroundings.”
Wishing you and your family all the best.
I suspect you will be having more and more "mission creep." It's already happening when she isn't there, YOU get the call, and then YOU have to go over there.
As long as you are the apparent solution, H and SIL will be happy to keep her at home.
With dementia she has little to say on the matter.
She is doing things that are not safe. (leaving with friends, not answering the phone and forgetting there is someone that she should expect)
What if the person that was going to drop by was you to take her to a doctors appointment?
Her other options would be the caregiver becomes full time. And over night as well. Ya never know when she may wander out.
To drive the point home better back off and let your husband do ALL that you have been doing for mom. Let him field the calls from delivery people, let him go over and get meds ready, get the mail and everything else that you do. (write out all the "etc" items that you ended your list of chores with)
Would you want your own children (if you have them) to make you go ASAP from your home just like that?
Probably not. A person can be 'cognitively impaired' and not require facility placement to live safely. They can remain in their own homes with the right kind of help. If live-in homemakers/companions could work then people should try it.
If it doesn't work then placement in a facility appropriate for their care needs.
Give the caller your SIL or DH number. Let them handle. Give them a heads up one time that you are trying to reduce your stress and will be forwarding the callers. Take your number off all her business give them the sibs numbers.
Also they might try cameras. Sibs can see who comes and goes. Ask sibs to hire someone to take your place in the evenings. They can forward the mail.
MIL not being ready to go is not your responsibility. I assume you are not the decision maker on that so don’t enable it to go on.
It takes a long time to get emotionally healthy after abusing yourself when you know you have to stop. I truly don’t think I’ll ever recover.
Don’t ignore your own health as sibs seem willing to do. Think of them like MIL friends. They don’t know, can’t see the condition you are in. You have most likely trained them that you will take care of things. Take some responsibility on that. You don’t have to fix it. You just have to say, I’m out and mean it.
MIL may not be ready. They don’t want to push her. You understand. They need to do what they need to do. She is not in this alone. You are ready now. They can do what they want to do and should. It’s you that must stop, regardless of their concerns for MIL. You are two different people with different needs. You matter too.
The evening helper could be a permanent fixture for when she goes into care. There will always be something that needs doing until she passes. That doesn’t mean it is you that must do it. Perhaps she could move to her daughters area and it would be more convenient for daughter. They will work it out but not until they see it is up to them and not on you.
Let us know how you are doing. I know you were most likely trying to see it through but truly it can be years yet. If they find the right replacement for you they may be able to keep MIL home a few more years. Win Win.
Turn in your notice and step away. Good luck.
It is no longer what your MIL wants it is about needs and not just hers.
Stand up, set your boundaries.
Good Luck!
Some families will gang up and tell the PWD that it is time to move. As far as your DH, start by showing him our answers here.
Wishing you the best!
MIL will never say she’s ready to go to a facility .
Not necessarily. A live-in companion may be a good fit for the MIL.
The OP makes no mention of her MIL's home being filthy and unsafe, or that she's not keeping up on her personal hygiene. So either the MIL is still able to look after her own personal needs or her morning help is doing it.
They should float the idea of live-in homemaker/companion to the MIL and include her in the interviewing process. This could be a good fit for her.
This could be a workable instead of her having to move out of her home. Cheapter too.
Also, if she has care coming in the mornings, meals delivered, and still lives alone in her own home, you are not her primary caregiver. Checking on someone in the evenings and picking up their mail really doesn't count as one.
I have 25 years in homecare so I'm letting you know this as a friend. The time's coming where care facilities AL, MC, NH, rehab... will likely become part of your MIL's life and your family's.
Don't refer to yourself as her 'primary caregiver' to any of the people associated with these places like nurses, administrators, or social workers because they will try to hold you to that and make you literally responsible for her if something happens.
Look into live-in companionship. If you and your family think this would be a good idea, I recommend hiring privately from a site like care.com this way you can negotiate the wages and do your own backround and reference checks.
Also, always hire more than one person. Either they split the week, or you have one who works the weekdays and another on weekends. Or have no one on weekends and family can take turns staying with her.
This way no one can make your MIL's home their residence. Never let a caregiver make someone's home their actual residence and mailing address.
Burnt, can you please explain to all of us, why that’s so important?
If we are judging your experience according to our own experiences, that isn’t fair to you, because we may have totally different situations.
You’re the only person who can really answer this. Sometimes, it really is so hard to determine what is the best way to go. So, we feel like we need guidance from others.
I hope you find help from our individual opinions and figure out what is best for your particular situation.
Best wishes to you.