Does accepting the negative emotional abuse from caring for my parents, ever get easier to take???? I'm so thankful for this site to offer the support & relief that we sooooo need , usually on a daily basis, I find it hard to just let some of the comments and attitudes from dad roll right on off of me...as my older sister says that she has learned to do.You guys are a great help/relief site. Thank you for your help.
The truth is my relationship with my mother and the rest of my family has never been a great one. I was verbally abused by both my parents when I was a child and my mother even hit me very hard across my face once in front of all my girl friends when I was a teenager because I was wearing a dress she didn't like on me. My brother and sister refuse to acknowledge that I was abused, but even my father admitted it toward the end of his life. My mother never did.
To answer one of your questions, I had a productive life, until I took a leave from my job to move in with my mother. I have several advanced degrees and was a respected professional career. But, since moving in with my mother, I have been so beaten down by her behavior and constant, vile verbal abuse that I feel almost paralyzed to change the situation. To answer another of your questions, when I said my brother and sister were useless, I meant they do nothing to help or support my mother. They don't even visit more often than once every couple of months and they live very close. The reason I am the only one who recognizes my mother's dementia is that I live with her and I see her everyday. It's easy for my mother to put on performance for my brother and sister when she actually sees them so rarely and for an hour or two when they do see her.
Also, my mother refuses to go to her doctor to be tested for dementia, so it's only me who has diagnosed her. She has every symptom of dementia according to the websites I have checked. My brother and sister chose to live in denial because it makes their lives easier. They can justify not helping me or her if they convince themselves my mother isn't seriously ill.
In the last few days, I have spoken to some of my friends who have convinced me that I must move and get away from my entire family. I am currently looking for a townhouse to purchase in a town far away from my family. If I leave, my bother and sister will be forced to deal with my mother. By remaining a caregiver for my mother, I am enabling my brother and sister to take no responsibility for my mother and in the process I'm destroying my life and my health.
A Nursing Facility is 24/7
Perhaps if you want to live with her..then u will have to accept it.
As there is nothing to do to change it..instead of all her money going to you..that is to take care of her in a Nursing Facility for her proper help.
Thank you for sharing your experience with us. It is a blessing to have a first hand account of what is happening inside a person's mind. Your willingness to educate all of us does help to enlighten. One thing you said especially hit home with me and that is, "They hear every word and see every sight but they are unable to connect the dots in order to form human response and communication in the manner you believe is normal." When mama says something off the wall (to us) we don't correct her unless it's important because it always causes her distress; we see it on her face. I also hate the word "dementia." I hope in time the word is replaced with something more sensitive; it seems to me to be archaic terminology.
My mother is now in a nursing home, and has good and bad days, she has to be on serequel (anti-phsycotic med.) every 8 hours. She seems to be adjusting little by little, and when I see all the care she needs, she can no longer dress herself, she has "accidents", she does not know to brush her teeth etc, I know she is where she needs to be. It is costing her $300.00 a day, and when she runs out of money, we will apply for title 19. But she will be self paying for a while.
Good luck to all you caregivers. I just want you to realize when you can no longer do it, it is time to consider 24 hour care or nursing home.
I DO know he understands what is being said about him by his wife... it always makes me angry, to see his feelings hurt.. true that in a few minutes he won't remember, but in the here and now, he is feeling diminshed as tho he is not setting right there and hearing what is being said....
Thank you from the bottom of my heart for giving me much needed insight... this is going to help me be a better caregiver and to never take credit for what S is able to do on his own.... hugs across the miles to you.... please keep us updated on how you are doing ....
motor responses needed to walk so I shuffle and I have a perpetual smile that is extremely un-attractive and causes anyone who doesn't know me to think of me as an idiot. So since this is a caregiver question and answer forum let me explain for any caregivers who do not understand my affliction for your own knowledge-imagine waking up each day and not remembering yesterday and each day you are frightened when you look in the mirror and see yourself smiling for no reason and before getting to the bathroom you forget where you are going. My daughter sets me in front of this computer and as long as I do not look away I can hold my thought and see perhaps with more insight than most humans can imagine. My drs said that it is the characteristics of some Savants who paint or play musical instruments or can do mathematical calculations at the speed of a computer.
But for the disease that gave me these insights I will Nova soon and be lost inside of my own mind. If you are caring for someone who has dementia you think they are unaware of what is going on around them but you cannot understand that they do. They hear every word and see every sight but they are unable to connect the dots in order to form human response and communication in the manner you believe is normal. Imagine if you will our frustration at your not understanding us. The word Dementia is in itself a slap in our faces. Imagine being called demented.
You go to your physician and you listen to the litany of complaints your caregiver gives your doctor who has already labeled you an idiot. Does openheart2 understand the different stages of Subcortical Dementia? I doubt very much many caregivers recognize the number of forms Dementia presents. My daughter is telling me to tell you she takes me shopping and it makes her cry to hear people call me an idiot because I walk with a shuffle and cannot stop smiling. I do not remember this now but I may later I can only do this or answer openheart2s statement as I perceived a hint of wonder between the lines. Wondering how someone labeled as demented can think and converse in the abstract. Now you know. My daughter found this site and she sits behind me as I type to keep me on topic. I type sister and she corrects me-I type dented and she corrects me. She said I might be able to help caregivers understand that no one is demented except maybe a criminal or a caregiver who would abuse a person because of their affliction(s). Most elderly are very old and their hearing is bad and their eyesight poor and their hands hurt and their boby aches and they are fixated on their deaths and no one understands them. They are taken places they do not want to go or put in a corner and sit for endless boring hours because you are too lazy or too busy to take them for a ride or to the beach or to a movie because you think they are too much trouble. I can read and I can write and I can think so why,you wonder am I demented? And why should my daughter take credit? I give my daughter credit for alot of things but not for my ability to try to enlighten caregivers on the world of dementia. Physicians can only guess and make suppositions. They lie to you and say momma does not know what is going on so don't take it so hard. That is not so. They only say that to ease your suffering. You are the patient, not the mother or father you are caring for-YOU! I do not know how I know this. I just do. Where do thoughts come from? Do you understand dementia?
Perhaps she needs Nursing Facility whre they know HOW TO take care of her Professionally.My BEST ADVICE. As they don't take things personally&there is 24/7 watches.
I HOPE you see that instead of all of this..she won't easily do this to the Nursing Staff..&she will have to cope with relating with them..which will help.
My mother (with dimentia) went in the hospital for a total hip replacement in April and has been rehabilitating at a nursing home. She is more confused than ever, is mean and is giving everyone in the nursing home hard time.
I visit every day because I'm local, and when I try and tell her to listen to the therapist, she says she's going to kill me!
I have signed her up for long term care, she needs 24 hour care now,and I cannot provide that anymore. My sister said I guess it's up to you because you are the one taking care of her, (I think it was supposed to make me feel quilty) as she wanted me to get 24 hour in home care. But I know that my mother is beyond that. I'm going to do what I have to with no guilt, because I know that I took care of her as long as I possibly could at home. I told my sister if she wants to move her to MA and take care of her that would be fine with me. You guessed it she does not want to do that.
Good luck to all you caregivers, do what you have to do, knowing you did all you possibly could for your parent, and when it is time for them to have nursing home care---it's time---don't beat yourself up over it.
Then one day about 6 months ago, he threw up blood, was hospitalized for a couple of days, and it scared him. He finally came to that realization that he is not this person that is immune to sickness or death, he became more humble and a loving dad. He says thank you, please, and appreciates me and my family now. He calls our home his home. I have to tell you that this has made all those years of tears and anger worth it. Even if it does not happen for you, please remember that it is honorable what you and I are doing, and it is the sickness and sometimes pride that make them treat us that way. Try not to respond with anger and try to say, I don't appreciate you talking to me that way, and walk away for a short while. This might backfire, because then he called me sensitive and making a big deal out of nothing, but at least you are trying to communicate yoiur feelings. You can't make them change, but what this is really doing is making us stronger people. And I have been told (don't know yet) that when my dad dies, I will feel good that I did everything I could to make his last days as comfortable as possible. And he will feel loved, whether he wants it or not! Even if they did not realize or appreciate it.
Thank you for your thought provoking words. It helps me just to know that others are going through difficulties with their elderly, mentally challenged parents and I'm not alone. When you wrote that your mother makes excuses for your brother's not helping her, I related totally. My mother defends my brother and sister no matter how much they ignore her, no matter that neither of them does anything to help her. I'll try to remember the song you mentioned the next time my mother is screaming abusive remarks at me. It just might help a little.
I can relate! My sister and I have been the ones to help and care for my mom since our father died over 20 years ago. She's in assisted living now and we each visit her twice weekly; take her clothes home to wash (as she doesn't like them washed with the other people's clothes;) keep her supplied with personal needs and new clothes; arrange for hair cuts, manicures, pedicures; take her out to eat and to our homes; coordinate all her medical care; etc.
Our brothers visit occasionally and do small things for her when they go. My mom makes excuses for them all the time and it just kills us. According to her, they are so busy she really appreciates when they come visit. It's as if my sister and I sit on our duffs all day and have loads of free time. The simple truth is we have made her one of our priorities and they haven't. I know my brothers love her dearly and it hurts them to see her in someone else's care. It hurts me, too, but as an adult you have to put your own feelings aside and do the difficult thing - VISIT her; she needs ALL of us now not just some.
I've been told the same thing about "letting things roll off my back" or "just ignore her." These are bold statements from uninformed people who don't understand the aging process and what people with dementia need. Would they appreciate being ignored? I think not.
Finally, when things get rough I try to remember the lyrics to that old song, "You always hurt the one you love. The one you shouldn't hurt at all." Consider youself loved and deflect the stinging remarks by diverting your parents attention onto another topic. I also remind myself that getting old and depending on others for everything is something the greatest generation never wanted to burden their children with; much of their backlash comes out of frustration.
It is beginning to destroy my self-esteem. My mother does not abuse anyone but me, so I get no support from my brother and sister. I am the only one who lives with her and takes care of her, yet she seems to hate me and adore my useless brother and sister. I am the only one who can see my mother's dementia, too.
It is beginning to destroy my self-esteem. My mother does not abuse anyone but me, so I get no support from my brother and sister. I am the only one who lives with her and takes care of her and she seems to hate and adore my useless brother and sister.