My mother is 90 and has recently had a stroke, which left her with very poor speech skills and vascular dementia. In rehab, she became suspicious and paranoid, pointing out aides and saying 'don't trust him', thought people were talking about her, thinks she's being given the wrong medication or no medication. We know these things to be untrue. In general, I know that you're supposed to play along with folks with dementia, but I can't agree with her about this stuff, or should I?
27 Answers
Helpful Newest
First Oldest
First
ADVERTISEMENT
So far, one time I have said "since I've never been in a prison, I don't know what you mean". She ignored me that time. Oh the joys of caregiving.:-)
If you are going to argue everything they say incorrectly you will drive yourself and them crazy! It is frustrating, I admit it but you would be surprised how many things they let go of, if you just do not respond to just being up a different conversation out of the blue. It works.
In this case it was important to stop her thinking this way, because it would cost thousands of dollars. Sometimes we do have to put our foot down and do things to protect loved ones who are not thinking clearly. Good examples are taking away the car keys and large expenditures. I usually find that the way to handle things gently occur to me as needed, and that I don't need to follow a prescribed course that turns me into a false personality. We can be kind and truthful all at the same time if we just consider the best way to handle each situation as it arises. Sometimes ignoring is good. Sometimes distraction is good. Sometimes truth is good. It all depends on the person and the circumstance.
Then you have a choice about how to respond to her feelings. Most of us have learned to say stuff like "well, relax, it's ok" and "no they're not" and other such reassurances. But that really boils down to telling someone not to feel what they are feeling. The intention might be loving but the effect isn't. And notice, those are all essentially arguments about what's true again: are they out to get her or aren't? We're back there again.
So instead you take the only truth that matters: She's anxious, period. Nobody wants to suffer so if it were easy to decide not to be anxious, she would. What do you do with that truth? Just be with it. "Sounds like something's worrying you. I can see how tough it is for you." That's not agreeing with some un-truth, it's acknowledging the truth of her feelings. Don't worry, it won't make her feelings worse or fuel the fire.
What WOULD fuel the fire would be (1) if you stayed on that topic for a long time, (2) if yourself went along with those feelings by becoming anxious yourself, (3) if you went rushing around trying to solve the problem as she sees it. Those all give the message, "yes, there's a problem." So you stay calm, and you move on to something else. YOUR moving on is what makes redirecting work for HER.
This is all a crash course in empathic relating, isn't it! Turns out, it's applicable to ALL our relationships, with EVERYBODY!! Whoa! I'm still working on it......
I completely understand. I am a caretaker for my fiances grandfather (who has Alzheimer's) and get accused of "stealing" or "hiding things in his desk". "every time we come over here she hides it". Most commonly it's his pistol that he wants (which is no longer available to him), but it's anything. For a while it was his nose spray...really like I have the desire to hide nose spray? Or his phone which will be on his charger next to his bed. Or his remote control...of course I put it in the desk as well. Obviously, or at least I hope it is, all of this is untrue. I became very weary and upset. Knowing the truth, but also knowing that his brain is not completely functional. The simple stuff like nose spray, cell phone, toothpaste etc I just help him find it. With the stuff that he is not allowed (keys, pistol, pocket knife) to have we have formed a story that he left his pistol in his truck and his son borrowed his truck. It might sound wrong but this has helped us tremendously. ---P.S. we tried the whole "distraction". Nope doesn't work on this situation. Only distraction that has worked is a watergun fight. & my apologies...I'm not always up for one of those.
He also believes his mother is still alive, she passed away nearly 20 years ago. Besides, if he's 77...it's very unlikely his mother is alive. But you can't reason that. & I also refuse to tell him his son died. It took me 4 hrs to calm him down & get him on another subject--he wanted his pistol so he could kill himself. So he might say "I don't think my mother has ever been here", I respond "I think you're right". and move along with another subject.
You have to use your best judgement and figure out what works best. I live with him & I want to try to make it as positive as possible. Hopefully this helps.
So no, you can't agree with your mom but you can listen. I used to imagine what it must be like for my dad. I knew he wasn't in any danger but that was his reality, his truth, and how scary that must be for him to know that people are out to get him. Be comforting to your mom, reassure her as I would reassure my dad, and then gently redirect her attention.