Mom is back in the hospital. I talked to her for awhile. She is still in the ER with the same symptoms. I told her that I have to go to work tonight because we are really busy. She said that’s ok. I left a message for her primary doctor to call me back.
Sending you a great big hug and a prayer for strength
I think the only way to get through to her and to everyone is to stick to your guns and refuse to help her in any way. If she wants 'independence', this is what it looks and feels like, mother.
In hospital mother was diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder and prescribed some meds. I believe they suspected the start of dementia as well. She was also interviewed as to her future choices (I declined to be that that interview). I visited her, brought her batteries for her hearing aid aids and so on but never stayed long. I couldn't. She was at the time living in an AL, had developed some paranoia and delusions, accused some staff (hospital and AL) of poisoning her, also of stealing the $2000 which I found from her bank records she had deposited back into her account and more. In the hospital they did get her to agree to visits from a community psych nurse and psychiatrist. Of course in all of this she was deemed competent. I returned home and got crazy phone calls three times a day in the evenings which eventually I let go to voice mail. They were accusatory and very upsetting to me. I worked with the staff in the AL who were excellent, towards getting her evaluated by their house physician as being incompetent, They documented her "episodes". At the same time I was working with her case worker and the community psychiatrist. and after a few months made a trip to her city. Mother had totally snowed the psych nurse but not the others. Mother had stopped taking her meds and the psych asked to to try to get her to take them. I checked with the pharmacy she used as I was pretty sure mother would give me a story about the meds and then spoke to mother several times. She was nasty as expected, refused to take the meds and also spoke about suicide. I reported back to the psych. who said she wanted to place mother into a geripsych hospital willingly or not. I agreed and fortunately for all of us mother went voluntarily. There she got the assessments and meds that she needed and placement in an AL for seniors with mental health issues at about age 103. Not that that all went smoothly during her time in the hospital, but at least she was looked after by professionals which took a load off my mind.
Take heart - it often takes a crisis or two for professional care to kick in properly. You are doing the right things. Looking after yourself is of primary importance. Being up front is important and you are doing that. Pat yourself on the back. You are doing very well in very difficult circumstances.
I have been revisiting the decision I made in my 20s not to cut contact with my FOO (family of origin) and wondering if I made the right choice. Once when I was about 40 and mother had been particularly difficult/unpleasant to me I cut off contact for a year. It gave me a break for a year but really she didn't change.
I know the pull to stay in the fray and do what you reasonably can so as not to leave your mother without any family resources. My sis never helped only criticized. The decision to stay and do the necessary is not an easy one but easier for many of us than cutting contact altogether; however, it comes with a cost. I guess there is a cost no matter which decision you make. Slowly over the years I detached more and more emotionally, and visited less and less. It was what I had to do for self preservation and allowed me to stay in there as POA financial and medical to see that mother and her affairs were looked after. I am healing some now as it is almost over (estate nearly finished and I have gone no contact with sis) and looking forward to a new life, even at my age. I will pray for you.
You are one tough cookie. Many would have fallen apart by now. You are in my thoughts and prayers. Things will turn around and you can resume a ‘normal’ life. Really happy that you have a supportive husband and son. That helps. You have all of us too.
Stay strong and take care 💗.
Anyway, I'm glad you shared this story with Elaine *and with all of us* because it's very inspirational on so many levels. Thank you.
elaine - I would say then that your mother has BPD. Mother only talked of suicide 2x. The first time when she has extreme sciatic pain in her mid 90s and the second time as I mentioned before - around 101 when her paranoia and delusions were well developed. The med they eventually gave her was Risperdal, an antipsychotic and it helped her a lot at the time. A little later she got an antidepressant - can't remember which one off hand. It also helped her until she was about 6 months before passing and then neither helped anymore I guess her brain was just too broken from the vascular dementia.
Treatment for BPD is not considered to be very successful but it involves antidepressants and therapy. The psych in the hospital after the aborted flight east said therapy was pointless at her age as she was too set in her ways. Some how the antidepressant got lost in the mix. In the geripsych hospital they gave her risperdal for the paranoia and delusions which came from the vascular dementia and it calmed her down very well. Then the antidepressant helped her to be more content, Before going to the geripsych hospital she had had some pretty strange delusions - people were poisoning her food to give her dementia, there was poison gas coming out of the vents in the ceiling, she had been abducted and taken to the Salvation Army and had her sex glands removed (this one to our embarrassment she told people at church) and more. Risperdal got rid of those.
Looking back, for mother the first sign of dementia was paranoia. She tended to be a bit paranoid anyway but it got worse, Because she was "weird" anyway it was harder to see the onset, but I think it started in her around age 96. The next one was mistakes with her finances. She was always very careful about her finances. But she lasted another 10 years and was only diagnosed with dementia around 101.
Has your mother ever had a neuropsych eval? It would be good for her to have one. Incidentally, even in the geripsych hospital they would not deem mother incompetent, though they gave me authority over her meds as she was refusing to take them. I gave them permission to hide the meds in her food but she spotted it every time. and wouldn't eat that item. Finally after 9 months the delusions got so bad she agreed to the meds.
Mother had a history of high blood pressure which was mostly controlled in between times but got out of hand from time to time when she was upset/angry, which was fairly often. She never actually had a stroke but must have had tiny ones which damaged the blood vessels in her brain.
I am so glad you have some supportive people around you.
Please don’t ever apologize. Your genuine input is so refreshing to me. I actually love how you don’t water things down. I relate to that. Having been through struggles too I don’t feel so alone or strange knowing that others had similar feelings to mine about family members. Your postings helped put things in perspective for me. So, I thank you from the bottom of my heart.
Thank you, need and you are welcome. I didn't feel the need to apologize but to add some context. As I said, I debated with myself about including that story, I guess out of respect for the woman that my mother was. Although she had BPD, she still accomplished some good things in her life. However, as much as the BPD and the good things were part of her life, so were the bizarre things. I tend to be pretty open when sharing. I really prefer reality and the truth as far as I can recognize it, knowing others may benefit from hearing my truth and reality. That being said, there are some stories I would not share.
elaine - I don't want to hijack your thread. If your mother has BPD you have been emotionally abused since childhood and may have PTSD from those experiences. For me it has helped knowing what others go through. Please keep us updated about your mother and yourself and how you are coping. I think you are doing very well.