Just thought I'd share the story of my morning(s) here... Please take this in the spirit in which it is intended - or, in the words of Jimmy Buffett, "If we couldn't laugh, we would all go insane."
...
Got up at 0615, poured my coffee, sat down at the computer and started checking my email. Hubs gets up ditto. Suddenly, a voice floats out from the bedroom down the hall...
Mom: "Hello? What time is it? Oh God, I'm so coooooold!" (It happens to be 65° outside, and the heater is on in her room.)
So I get up, go in her room, and find that she's thrown off her covers. I cover her back up, crank up the heater a notch or two, and...
Me: "Mom, it's only 0630. I'll be back when it's time to get up."
Mom: "I woke up earlier and I was hot. Now I'm cold."
Me: "Well, I put your covers back on and turned up your heater. I'll be back when I wake up a little. I just got out of bed a few minutes ago."
Mom: "Okay."
Five minutes later...
Mom: "Oh God, I'm so miserable! I need a pain pill. No, I need TWO pain pills."
And then...
Mom: "Hello? Are you there? I can't remember what you said you were going to do. Were you going back to bed, or are you up playing with the kitty? I can't remember. Hello?"
Hubs: "Geez, if you went back to bed, you wouldn't be there long, wouldja?"
Mom: "Hello? Is anybody there? Did you go back to bed? Are you asleep? Hello? Oh God, I'm so miserable! I need my pain pill. Oh, and I'm wet all over. I need my coffee! Are you up? Hello?"
Me (hauling myself out of my chair): "And this is why I drink."
Hubs: "Ah'm thinkin' about takin' it up m'self."
The following is a small sample of a GOOD day:
6 00 am Daughter #2 and SIL wake, shower, get dressed for the day.
6 30 am Daughter #2 takes thyroid med to Mother, chats for 10 minutes, goes to work.
6 30 am SIL unpacks dishwasher while coffee beans grinding, makes his one coffee for the day, chills out on back deck listening to morning song of bird life.
6 40 am Mother toddles into the kitchen, cannot find the cat’s cooked chicken breast where she left it last night, then goes to laundry, sorts clothes, starts washing machine.
6 45 am SIL investigates, finds Mother has put wet incontinence pad (in a plastic bag fortunately) into the fridge – again. Must have done that during the night. SIL disposes of pad, wipes out fridge, finds cats food, feeds hungry cat.
7 00am Mother, now dressed, shuffles into kitchen, feet hurting, shoes on wrong feet. Sit down, SIL corrects problem. Wants to feed cat, it is hungry. SIL says already fed cat, no you have not, she is hungry, I can tell. SIL finds more cooked chicken breast, Mother takes to spoilt cat, cat will not eat. Mother in panic, must go to vet NOW, cat won’t eat, very, very sick. Vet not open, will ring later.
7 15am Mother cleans cat’s tray, not satisfied with consistency of cat’s poo, emergency, must go to the vet. Vet not open, will ring very soon.
7 30am Mother arrives at breakfast for her ritual cereal nuts and dried fruit. Does not want that ‘muck’, trying to poison her, SIL should know she never eats that sort of stuff.
7 45 am Mother won’t take meds, chemist has given her the wrong ones. Someone is trying to poison her. SIL promises to take her for a drive if she eats her breakfast and takes her meds. Eventually complies, then disappears.
8 00 am SIL empties washing machine, Mother has put today’s overnight wet pad in the washing machine and thrown her panties in the rubbish bin - again. SIL dons gloves, cleans up mess, does a sanitising rinse, then sets the machine to wash again.
8 30am Mother comes out re-dressed for her drive. Difficult walking, removed her shoes to get dressed, on wrong feet again, SIL fixes problem - again.
8 45 am Mother cannot understand her diary entry, 2 medical appointments no one told her about. Rings Daughter #1, wants an explanation of diary entry, says SIL refusing to take her to medical appointments. Like I can see her diary from more than 200 miles away! Discover she is looking at a diary more than 5 years old. (Mother never throws anything away).
9 am Mother does not believe Daughter #1 so phones Daughter #3 who is already at work answering busy switch board at police station. Daughter #3 soon discovers same issue with diary, cannot convince Mother, disconnects the call.
9 10 am Mother wants a cup of tea before she goes for her drive so that she can sort out her diary and cancel her two medical appointments. She can jolly well look after herself, she does not need anyone to look after her, she will make her own tea thank you. Offers to make one for SIL. Okay, now, how do I make a cup of tea?
All I can say is I have the most patient brother-in-law in the whole wide world.
Another day I was informed my little mother had organized other residents to help throw the very large round dining table out the floor to ceiling wall to wall window to the courtyard, so they could escape!! Mind you, on each side of this huge window to the lovely courtyard were unlocked doors to the fenced in courtyard, so the residents could come and go there at anytime. But they were going to escape. I called my sister, who was out of state and informed her she might hear of a mutiny at a Alzheimer care home in FL on the evening news. She said, "Let me guess, Mom was the organizer?"
Or when we moved her into the home, we were told it was fine to hang pictures on the walls of her room so she would feel more at home. Do that we did. We had her room looking so nice. Including a needle work picture she had made, hanging over her bed and pictures of family hanging on other walls. Only to find she had riped down every one of them. I forgot to mention, my little mother was only 4'9", so I knew she had to stand on the bed to get the needlepoint down.
At another stage, walking with her walker, she would walk down the hall calling out to employees and others, "Look out girls, coming through". Or would say, "Passing water and gasoline". The employees asked me where all this came from. I told them, being a nurse back in her day, nurses passed water to their patients. But they wondered were the passing gasoline came in. After much thought, I said, "She most likely was passing gas as she went along on her duties and gasoline came to mind".
Laughs that helped soften the oh so tough times. Mom passed 12 years ago at age 94 and the training I had then is now helping me as my husband's caregiver. We must never forget, if their brain was working right, all the things they do, or say would not happen and they would not want it to happen. One of the things that is hard, is to remember they are adults that act as a child, many times but they can not help it. We can not expect them to remember or to learn. We have to know that we give them the very best care that we can and do it out of love. Blessings to each and every one of you.
In Australia we no longer treat our medical professionals as gods. Respect yes, reverence, NO! Given that we often have to wait up to an hour for our very popular GP, and despite our booked appointment, I would have given a 'now you know how it feels, doc' if he complained. In your circumstances, the receptionist would have been given a very disrespectful suggestion that she get back in her box.
It helps to be aged, it helps to be well-known, it helps to have a reciprocated wit and sense of humour, but one can still make it be known someone has pushed one too many buttons when we are having a bad day.