I placed my LO in assisted living 10 days ago. I was getting sick and run down caregiving and felt "I can't do it anymore." He is having a very hard adjustment period and I am feeling guilty causing this. I really felt this was right but now I keep wondering if it was and should I buck up and take him back home?
The folks to listen to are the ones who start their sentences with "I've done this, I know just how hard it is. May I share something that worked for me?"
Not the ones who say "I know a MUCH better way to do that".
Kudos and big SHOUT OUTS to you!
Many times the term "assisted living" (AL) is used freely here, without clarifying that a true "assisted living" home is not the same as "assisted living with memory care." The former is a place where residents can have their own keys to their building front door and they can come and go as they please. The building is monitored by cameras and visitors are required to sign-in at the front desk. Meals, laundry, and housekeeping are responsibilities of the residents.
The latter is a secured building where residents cannot even go out to the fenced-in yard without having to ask the staff to open the door. They certainly cannot go out to the yard at night, period. Leaving the premises alone - day or night - is definitely impossible. I would call that "locked up." It is not "locked up" like a prison, because it is not a prison, but a locked up place.
Now, whether or not one SHOULD be in an AL with memory care is a different story. It depends on the needs of the individual - and even that is questionable. I toured several AL with memory care centers where many residents seemed to be in the advanced stage of dementia and were in wheelchairs. They seem to be doped up to know where they are. How could they run away in a wheelchair? Do they really need to be in an AL with memory care? The facility keeps them there because family members can pay the facility to keep them there. These residents clearly should be in a nursing home. As long as the money is coming in, the AL with memory care does not care. When the funds run out, out the residents go.
My purpose to respond to Lassie was to calm her down and help her not to react out of fear, especially fear of the unknowns. We can plan only so far ahead, but letting fear of the unknowns dictate our future decisions and then make drastic decisions is never a good idea.
Many times the term "assisted living" (AL) is used freely here, without clarifying that a true "assisted living" home is not the same as "assisted living with memory care." The former is a place where residents can have their own keys to their building front door and they can come and go as they please. The building is monitored by cameras and visitors are required to sign-in at the front desk. Meals, laundry, and housekeeping are responsibilities of the residents.
The latter is a secured building where residents cannot even go out to the fenced-in yard without having to ask the staff to open the door. They certainly cannot go out to the yard at night, period. Leaving the premises alone - day or night - is definitely impossible. I would call that "locked up." It is not "locked up" like a prison, because it is not a prison, but a locked up place.
Now, whether or not one SHOULD be in an AL with memory care is a different story. It depends on the needs of the individual - and even that is questionable. I toured several AL with memory care centers where many residents seemed to be in the advanced stage of dementia and were in wheelchairs. They seemed to be doped up to know where they were. How could they run away in a wheelchair? Did they really need to be in an AL with memory care? It is quite possible that the facility keeps them there because family members can pay the facility to keep them there. These residents clearly should be in a nursing home. As long as the money is coming in, the AL with memory care does not care. When the funds run out, out the residents go.
My purpose to respond to Lassie was to calm her down and help her not to react out of fear, especially fear of the unknowns. We can plan only so far ahead, but letting fear of the unknowns dictate our future decisions and then make drastic decisions is never a good idea.
Don't feel bad. You did what you could as long as you could and no one could ask more than that of themselves. Unfortunately, guilt is par for the course. But it's a sign that you cared and that alone should relieve you of some of it just knowing that IT IS A SIGN THAT YOU CARED!!!! So pat yourself on the back and give some loving to yourself now. You deserve it!