Hello all,
I posted a question about having to move my mother against her wishes (but with her Doctor’s wishes). And I truly appreciate all of the help, support and guidance I received.
She has now moved into the residence and my oh my it has been difficult. The moment she was told that she is now living at the Assisted living residence that she chose she started to walk to the car to leave. “i’m Going home!”. The employees and my brother stopped her from leaving. My brother and I managed to get her involved in a few activities that she seemed to enjoy. The moment an activity is over she is looking for her purse and the door out.
We had set up her suite using a lot of her furniture and it looks quite nice. We have tried to calm her by saying to just try it out for a little while. Like a great full service resort. Give it a chance. If it doesn’t work then we will see what we can all do. This seems to calm her a little bit but of course every noise is horrible, the bed is uncomfortable (even though the bed and sheets are hers from her home)etc.
I am currently typing this up in a recliner in her suite where she is trying to fall asleep. I am hoping that. By staying with her tonight, she will see a familiar face in the morning and feel less dead set against this move. I feel bad because we tricked her into coming here. And I feel bad because she truly is hating everything about living here. If I had never moved her we would be home right now. Albeit with me stressed and worried with all the what if’s... want if tonight is the night she wanders, what if she gets sick, etc.
She is in mid stage Alzheimer’s and is such a sweet woman but feels trapped and tricked.
Did I make a huge error? Will she adjust to Assisted living? Or am I stuck sleeping in her recliner every night.
Oh this whole thing is so horrible.
help
thank you all in advance for your help, advise and personal stories.
You cannot sleep in a recliner for days on end. It will not encourage Mum to settle in, nor will it give you the rest you need.
thank you for your reply. She has only just gotten to the residence today. Or I guess now that it is about 1am here, she got to the residence yesterday.
Just need to to know that my mother is safe and will eventually feel more at home at the residence. hopefully not wishful thinking.
We also "tricked" our mother who has Alz to get her in or she wouldn't have gone at all because FOREVER she demanded she would get help "if " she needed it.
Because she has some back issues, the doctor ordered PT, which we had set -up at AL..so the day of her first therapy, after the therapy, I took her to her room, ( two siblings from out of state were there to welcome here with me) Ok .. that didn't go well! She had what we call in the south, a hissy fit, for about an hour and half. We were mortified that we didn't have plan B. We did not have her room looking like home but a beautiful hotel because we wanted her to think she was there for a short period of time for PT. She wasn't buying it.
The staff and ex Director at this AL are AMAZING and after a while, sent us on our way.. of course we are all in tears and feeling like the most horrible children. They gave her something to calm her down and after a few hours, they sent us pictures of her in the dining room smiling with the staff and other residents.
We were told, we needed to give her time to acclimate and our presence would trigger her ability ( her ride) to go home. She did the same thing, threatened to call police, a cab, etc.. We continued to stay away. Had to take her phone out of the room because she has tried to call me and neighbors ( since I am local) and she even borrows other resident's phones or IF they leave an office door open, she would call me....often times leaving very hateful and pitiful messages. I know it sounds cruel, but I wouldn't answer... because they didn't want her to have a meltdown. .. and of course, I was the one having meltdowns! The psych nurse at AL told me it was like leaving a kindergarten child because family is the trigger... but my mother is now participating in activities she hasn't done in years and actually from the pictures they send me, has met new friends, participated with group exercise, bingo, etc. vs sitting at home alone in a dark room doing who knows what. That brings me joy and reminds me that doing the right thing is most often the hardest thing!
We have hired a sitting service for the sundowning times so she won't walk out door for a few hours in afternoons and evening until she totally adjust.
I went for the first time yesterday in the morning to see her ( mornings are better because of sundowning starting in early afternoon) and I was a nervous wreck..but she had calmed down and we had a nice visit. I told her I had a work appointment and she insisted she wanted to go home ...of course, but I told her I would get with doctor and see her on Monday... just kept deflecting and kissed and hugged her.
I thought I would cry my eyes out, but she has gained some weight because of eating GOOD food 3 times a day, taking a shower everyday and all of the personal attention she is getting there.
ALL Of this to say... this is NOT a fun journey ... I would give your mom some space to adjust because every time she sees you, she knows you have the ability to take her back home. I am reminding myself of this.. Mother has been there almost 6 weeks and it is still raw... but I see progress and we have to remind ourselves.. we have to keep our parents safe even though they can't understand and you have to do whatever you can to make sure they are taken care of.... hang in there !
And your mother - I hope this doesn't make your heart sink - is doing well.
What you're seeing in her is what you'd expect when a very elderly person with impaired thinking skills is all shook up. You have done the right thing in bringing familiar items for her, but all the same - the place, the routine, the noises, even the smell, everything is new to her, it's a huge change, and it's going to take time for her to settle down.
To make it even more fun, she can't process all the reasons *why* she's feeling so unsettled. She can't, as you and I would, wake and know where she is and what she's doing there; so she does what you do when you're anxious and uncertain - you take exception to what's around you and you head home.
Staying overnight... try it and see, it might help, but this is not something you want to make a habit of; and make sure that anything you do dovetails with the facility's own routine. That routine is what will help her adjust more than anything.
Lavish love and reassurance on her, and then hold steady. All shall be well, all shall be well, and all manner of things shall be well.
Before you go, ask the director how long it usually takes for someone to settle down and agree to stay away during that time and ask to check in with the director - or whoever your point person will be - by phone or email once a week or so. Trust that the staff will call you if something out of the ordinary happens and they need your assistance.
Use the time off to get away, take a mental health holiday, enjoy some peace and quiet, and learn to refocus your life. Worrying and coming up with what-if scenarios isn't going to do you or your mother any good.
thank you all for your answers they are all so helpful.
She is where she should be now for her safety.
She will adjust
You will adjust
It will take time for both of you.
She will say she hates you
She may say she hates it where she is
She will say she wants to "go home"
Home is in her mind when and where she felt whole, secure and well.
Reassure her that she is safe, that you love her and that she is home.
All the best as you navigate this difficult journey, my friend. My heart hurts for you, I know how tough this all IS.
The time we all have together is far too short — and fleeting.
It is exhausting, and it is SO freaking hard to think I was wrong in moving her. I am sitll guilt ridden. She died last year, and my family knows I would have died too if I kept mom in her home and trying to hold our personal world up.
So, it takes a village to raise a family. Do you have a family who will support you? I thought I did, but it is so exhausting. My friend tells me, Mom was fine, you should concentrate on your child who needs you.. And you missed that window.....Off to college in a few months. YUP I missed out.
We didn't go through this growing up. My parents moved away across country, so they were not there on a day to day basis, but it was hard for them not being able to just drive 5 minutes and check up on ma and pa kettle.
A cousin said he dreaded moving his mom out, but once he did, he realized she didn't even know she moved...
I was told to leave mom there and not visit for a week, let her get acclimated to her new place. So I called daily to check on her....
Give her milkshakes her favorite foods, music, movies, be happy happy, and if it doesn't work, keep it to a minium and tell her you will see her tomorrow.
Take a week off and let the facility take over for a bit.
All she could do was smile, or whince, or cry. She knew me most days and would laugh when she saw me, and smile, no talking...
Love you MOM
He hates his facility, even though he picked it out and moved himself there. I had to step out of the picture completely because he had come to depend on me to do everything for him (even things he could very well do himself). Once I left the picture entirely, he started doing for himself, getting into routines, and even became more positive. After about 5 weeks, I made an appearance to bring him things from my home that he finally had room for after a facility change....and goodbye to that guy that was doing for himself, and feeling positive about his newfound independence. Right back to guilt trips, do this do that, "I hate this place", etc. It's been 3 weeks since then, and it's only just starting to quiet back down and he's getting back to doing things and socializing with the other residents.
Trust me when I say, during these times, as much as it may hurt or guilt you, you NEED to step out of the picture. She will not settle in with you there all the time like a safety net. She needs to adjust to the new "normal". No, she doesn't like it but things are no longer about wants and likes now...it's about needs. Hers AND yours. You are no good to her if you burn out, or cannot care for yourself and then get sick. Take care of you. She will be ok, just give her some time and space. You are in the thick of the difficult beginning, it will start to get better.