My very independent, healthy 92 yr old mother has some Dementia. She is no longer nice or sweet and I am her only care taker. She won't take or do anything that might be helpful for her. I am her only caretaker and she refuses any outside help. She can still drive very well and needs no assistance in walking or doing tasks.
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Sometimes the worst person to care for a senior is their children! Not because their children don't love them and want the best for them but because it will destroy their children! Some diseases, mental health issues, personalities and the combination there of are far larger than any person with the emotional ties of childhood can possibly manage. Have you considered investigating a geriatric case manager who can manage your mothers life while you continue being her daughter? If resources are truly a challenge many social services agencies offer various levels of case management. Consider talking with Adult Protective Services for insight into what facets of your mother's life you have any ability (right) to attempt to change. Having POA for your mom may be the worst thing you can do for your own mental and physical well being! This DOES NOT make you a bad daughter in any way. A child is not obligated to sacrifice her own health and well being to care for an aging parent. A child is only obligated to do what they can within appropriate reason for their parent. Just like it is sometimes best for a birth mother to allow her baby to be adopted, it is at times best for an adult child to allow another to care for their parents. God bless you for your loving heart.
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Drop on over to the Grossed Out thread because that is where we all are hanging out on a daily basis. If you want, copy and paste your stuff into the box over there and hear more ideas and encouragment.
they are a wonderful group of people and some of us have actually met!! and more of us are planning to meet in the future!
lovbob
I would love to have read the document that lady attorney wrote for your mom. She sounds like a real jewel.! Lucky you.
I had to laugh at your stating, "bring on the Meals-on-Wheels!" and lets go to the Mall. Hey, I'm for that too. LOL. All of my mom's lady friends have all passed away, so she doesn't have any anymore and she absolutely will NOT go out to a store to buy clothes, or go get her hair done or anything that is positive. She wants to stay shut in her house and looks like a 'bag woman' that digs in dumpsters and collects cans. Even when she drives herself to the grocery store, she looks awful! It's embarrassing. She does not want me to go with her and never lets me know when she is going. She refused to let me have a garage sale for her several years back to get rid of the boxed up items in her garage. I'm trying to be positive about this and find some joy somewhere in here. I don't know what I would do if I had not found this site and all the wonderful sharing and encouragement I have received. At least I've discovered that I am not alone and everyone here has their share to deal with too. You all are just GREAT!!!
that's what Dementia looks like. I am so sorry.
Ow on your knee and yes the stress is not what you need.
glad your bro has the POA. could the both of you take a day and handle the 'recycling'?
Him working while you sit with your leg up and point?
She is going to fight just like you said but there will be a turnaround point and you can only do what you can do.
I would hate to call the state because that is a slippery slope to get involved in and if your bro and you can show up and just do it, without warning, she will yell and freak but when it's accomplished she will probably love it because so much crap will be gone. they really act out and look like they're going to achieve liftoff but that is the disease talking.
Have you tried telling her that she has Dementia? I know that's a WHOA!!! but I did do that with my mom. I told her that I could bs her or I could tell her the truth and this was in the period of time that I describe as a turnaround. she was beginning to understand that what she was doing was not 'normal' and that I was going to help her and not run. She was able to relax a little because I told her that I would help keep her 'safe and sound'. their fear is for being unsafe more than the loss of independence I think. they're scared because they know something is not right and what will happen to them if someone figures it out? They want to stay in their home, that's the end all be all, so if you can get her to accept help in order to stay in her home......
Tell her you've already figured it out and that you want to help her stay in her home and have a good time and be 'safe and sound'...
at the end of the day, what have you got to lose? It will be as uncomfortable as all get out but it may work. Everybody's Dementia is different.
I know that there are answers to the thermostat issue....
Try: alzheimersstore . com might have to Google to get the correct web address... online store and they will send a catalogue out to you. i got some stuff from them for mom and it's good stuff!
I think that there's a thermostat that you can program by phone but I'm not sure. love Google.
When person has Dementia they have to be very brave and when someone is caring for a person with Dementia they have to be very brave also.
Stay here with us on the site and we will be brave together.
lovbob
and Crowe has a good point with getting the Power of Attorney and Medical issues ironed out.
My mom thought she was never going to die and that made it so hard but I did find an older lady who was an attorney and the 3 of us sat in her office and she was great with mom in explaining the whole process. The POA that she wrote up was a beautiful document and it was a contract I willingly signed even though it bound me hand and foot to my mom. It made my mom feel good too and that was the beginning of the turnaround with the difficulties of caring for her. the rest of the difficulties were just the disease itself and that is hard enough without all the rest of the drama.
Man, when I get old I am totally looking forward to the meals on wheels and taking the old people's bus. what a luxury! Let's go to the Mall!
With all the budget cuts I bet there will be no meals on wheels. I'll set up the grocery delivery and as long as there's peanut butter.....
I'm not a senior yet but I will totally tell them I am at the movies and Denny's to save a buck. I don't dye my hair and am just about totally grey after caring for mom.
Mom also wouldn't let anyone come by to visit because she didn't want them to see the house and put 2 and 2 together.
I've always been a great fan of your friends being comfortable enough to 'drop by'. that way if you're getting too out of hand if they are decent friends they will help you get straightened out.
these days if someone drops by over here they go home with knick knacks and some books!! Anything to move some of mom's stuff out of here!
lovbob
Before, I did that though, I would get medical and durable POA over her if you don't already have it.
If she needs no assistance in walking or doing tasks, then what are you having to do that makes you feel so trapped?
What are you feeling guilty about?
except for the driving and putting others in danger, she is able to stay in her home and I would imagine that would work. It's the driving that's the rub. Hard on you tho.
She is suspicious because she knows she's getting away with something she shouldn't I bet.
There should be a driver service with the Seniors but I know my mom wouldn't do any of that either. She was 'above' all of that and besides... she had me to run to pieces.
She's gone and I miss her terribly but what damage her dementia did to me is incredible. I am still not right and am suffering from PTSD after almost 6 years of caregiving and all of the insanity that comes with straightening out the life of a hard core hoarder.
Mom had papers and bills stacked up like that too and that was her deal. Every day it was papers papers papers and woe to me if I touched them. I had to because I had to live with her because I wasn't going to rent an apartment to take care of her when there was room in the house. would have been way easier if I had lived here in town but I didn't.
you just might have the best of the game here with her fine so far on her own except for the driving and you just across town. Might work out ok
for awhile!
Can't argue with what makes someone happy and if she is happy screwing around with her papers and not hurting anyone else then whaddya do?
I totally understand how hard it is for you to not know if she is ok on a consistant basis.
My mom called me every name in the book if i said hey, I'm coming home to visit and I didn't understand Dementia and had no idea that she was sick until I showed up with no announcement and saw how she was living. She always came out to see me saying, oh I'll fly out and she would get off the plane with no baggage!!
I just thought she wanted me to take her shopping so I would and we would get some new outfits and undies, etc. had no idea that she couldn't shop for herself anymore. she always used the same travel agent so she got her tickets ok and she used the Shuttle van to get to the airport. She amazed me when i finally figured it all out. I was clueless.
thank God there are more resources now for caregivers and Dementia and AD is in the news so more people know what's what.
I thought I was going to die doing this, no kidding. Still kicking tho....
glad you're here, this place is a life saver and I look forward to the tactic you use to get her off the road.
Cops and DMV should help. I almost had to call them for mom. She got a suspended license after the second accident and her idiot friends got her scheduled to take a test behind my back and I was able to eventually explain to her by 'practicing' for the test that she was not going to be able to pass it and better to cancel than to be embarrassed in front on the panel at DMV. She finally gave up and then all I had to endure after that was her friends calling me every name in the book! lol.
Those old ladies would come over here and I would make tea and serve and wait on them and they still skewered me. My mom was proud of her house when i got it finished and I would still invite those old biddies over so mom could strut around and be the GrandeDame. that part of it I wouldn't change for the world. It made her so happy.
lovbob
man oh man oh man.
the fact that she won't listen to any kind of intelligent reasoning tells you she's demented right there. sux.
my mom didn't believe there was anything wrong with her either. thought she was going to live forever and didn't care if she used me all up doing it. Demented.
can you contact the mechanic and let him in on it? If he's not an idiot he may be able to help..... I am continually surprised, though i shouldn't be, at the idiots out there who enable the demented. what to do what to do.....
How about calling the cops and telling them that she's demented and shouldn't be driving but won't give it up? they could pull her over with the broken taillight that you have caused...... and get the ball rolling with a suspension of license until a written test.... hard to find allies because people don't understand the severity of it all... until it's too late.
whaddya think?
lovbob
You are a good daughter to step up for your mom.
These folks are right! No more driving and it's not up for discussion with your mom. Disable the car if you have to but keep her from getting behind the wheel. She will kill someone and it's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when.
Her Doctor is not up to speed with Dementia just like my mom's Dr wasn't. Mom ended up with 2 accidents and the second one she almost killed herself and thank God no one else was hurt. That was when I intervened by quitting the job of my life and moving across the country to care for her. BTW, I would not do that again... I would figure out another way rather than lose my job and life. that being said....
I can totally relate to the trapped feeling and you are here amongst friends so vent vent vent to keep yourself sane.
the demented are experts at masking their condition and when it's your mom she has a hard core psych advantage over you that you have to shake off. I did it and believe me, you have ALL of my empathy because I know exactly how hard it is.
If you don't want to hear her gripe about the car, simply disable it when she's not looking. Go out and get groceries for the week and whatever you're going to need and get the car out of the picture even if you park it around the corner and tell her it's at the garage getting fixed. This is the most serious part of dementia and if you google dementia related car accidents you will be appalled.
not fair to put others in danger.
another caregiver here mentioned the clock test and that is a great way to get a grip on what the situation is. It's a down and dirty fast cognitive test and will tell you how far along she is with the disease. And this is a disease and it is progressive, as in it gets worse. Although Dementia is widespread it is not a part of healthy aging.
I'm not here to scare the sox off of you and we all want you to keep coming back to get the support you need, but the next little while is really going to be tough.
You have to intervene, change her life around to protect the public and yourself and you have to go through things you would rather not.
I am an only child and this was crazy making but I am living proof that you can do this, live through it and pop out on the other side maybe a little bruised, but still able to live and enjoy your life.
The secret, believe it or not, is this website and the caregivers that are here and in various stages of the process. You will find out that you are not alone and you will find that some of us are here all the time so when you reach out and yell, someone will hear you and respond.
this site, and the folks on the Grossed Out thread saved my life and that is why I am still here even after my mom has died to support the new and seasoned caregivers who are adjusting to this life.
ok.... no more mom driving! that's the first and hardest task! don't let anyone tell you different! my mom's 'friends' tried to keep her driving even after that incredible accident and of course I was the bad guy. Too bad, I sucked it up and did not relent. Somewhere I know that there is someone alive today because I didn't listen to my mother or her friends. AND, mom had some good years left with some fun and adventures that she wouldn't have had if she had continued to drive.
Good luck and you can do this! We'll be here to cheer you on!
lovbob
She can't remember what day, week, month or year it is.