I am seriously considering telling my mother-in-law that I will not be seeing her as much if I have to listen to the constant litany about how the people where she's living are stealing from her. Everything she says they are stealing, I can find hidden somewhere in her room. I'm hoping that she will actually 'remember' what I'm saying, since there is a possibility that she won't get to see me anymore. Or at least, not nearly as often. Her memory is terrible, but the thought is, that message will get though the fog enough to STOP the craziness of repeating the same thing 50x's a day. I'm hesitant in telling her that, cause she is a nice person and I do love her. But...I'm tired of banging my head against the wall. Any thoughts?
What's a person to do... we are trying our best to make things good for her and have her live safely...
The sale is a bust!! Two people have looked at it. One wanted more land; 3/4 of and acre is not enough!! She said that the house is over decorated; like I am selling her my pictures, artwork and couch!!!! One wants to come back. The house down the street sold yesterday at a 250thousand loss!! We just might scrap the whole idea. We don't have to sell and won't give it away. Feeling very depressed tonight. One of my very best friends is moving in 2 weeks to CA. That is on the opposite side of the country for us. I don't know what I am going to do without her. I am going to be like a rudderless boat. My depression is growing daily and I feel like I have had the worst few months of my life. God help me, but I just want to go to sleep and when I wake up, pretend that it is a dream. Got to laugh ; mom wants to know what is wrong. After the Thanksgiving fiasco( pooped, pooped and pooped some more), I just feel like getting on a plane for TX to go see my daughter! Can't wait till Christmas when she comes home. That will be the best medicine for me. Sorry to go on, but not a good night. Hope yours is better.
Linda
What a long road ahead. You will have to talk to the doctor, and maybe multiple doctors. Someone has to step in and take charge here. It is very difficult and uncomfortable, but the bottom line is their safety. My Mother had these symptoms for several years before we were able to do anything about it, because she fought us every step of the way, and is still fighting even though she is in assisted living now. It took a long time to get her there, but it is the best thing for her. It will take a concerted effort by you, or someone in your family to start planning for what is ahead, meaning power of attorney or guardianship. When our loved ones get to the point where they can no longer make decisions about their well being, someone has to. And yes, you may be the bad guy, as I am, but I know I am doing the best thing. How is he handling his finances? Are his bills overdue? Are telemarketers targeting him?
My Mother put on the big act too, but when we got her doctor to recommend a "senior evaluation" for two weeks away, they determined that she absolutely could not live alone. You Father may need an evlauation, and that way it's not you, but the doctor.
Document his behavior daily and try to stay calm above all else. Step in and take care of bills, etc. if you see the need. He may not like it and think you are stealing, but you have to do what is best in his best interest. Look for a geriatric doctor in your area. I hope I have helped you.
I have been thinking of you lately. Hope all goes well. You have been through so much. Prayers and best wishes coming your way!
Linda
Just got a call from another attorney...who had been on vacation. (I had called him weeks ago...) He not only listened, but gave me hope. Will look forward to my appt. with him on Thursday. And I will put my fears to rest for the next two nights. Eleventh hour miracle??? No matter. In God we trust.
Meanwhile, wonder what Mom is imagining I've done lately... (Almost funny.) Not!
I really relate to the need for depressurizing after an encounter. We have been trying to do so for 50+ years, now. The only problem is, it has worked against us, not in our favor. Our family taught us some really horrendous habits as vices, and we knew no better than to follow suit. But thanks be to God, along the way, we learned some things, and God kept us from total destruction.
Some of my vices of the past I dare not even mention. I graduated to less damaging means of coping, thankfully. Good and Plentys became a recent favorite, but even they bring little comfort, now. I do still enjoy my coffee, but have switched from sugar to honey in the cup. However, this has little influence over the damage created by the emotional effects relating to an emotionally unstable individual. I still need to depressurize from the effects of a horrible situation that only seems to be growing worse. I think it's reaching it's Zenith, and I think it will be to my detriment this time, unable to change it's course.
I haven't seen it until recently, but Mom has magnified her mistrust of me to an accelerated level. She is convinced that I have committed all kinds of evil against her, and she has a lot of other people convinced as well. She has fanned her paranoia and imaginations to the point of believing that anything we've done for her was against her best interests. To her, it has gone beyond the realm of slight, into the areas of calculation; even provocation. Much to my utter dismay, I marvel how her perceptions can be so convoluted and twisted. Though in her mind, they're real.
We have done everything we can think of to appease mom, woo her, or appeal with reason. She understands none of this. We have found the saying is true: one cannot reason with an unreasonable person. Good and Plentys no longer salve my distress, so I have abandoned them, (but not forsaken) and question all my other coping strategies, as well. To tell you the truth, I struggle greatly in my prayer life, wondering how oppression has become so pervasive.
I think my Mom and I are at a place where there is nothing left save the Lord's intervention. We are literally praying for a modern day miracle, because it is the eleventh hour, and it is beyond our human ability to change anything. I sometimes feel as though I'm trapped behind the Jericho wall, with the trumpets ready to sound.
I feel crushed by the weight of her vindictive accusations and actions. As children, my sister and I were told that we were "the problem." Even in Kindergarten, teachers noticed something amiss, but mother cleverly hauled ME off to a Psychologist to correct "the problem." My sister tried coping by sniffing gasoline, elicit activity, etc., and needing serious counseling during her college years. Her way of escape was to join the army, rather than go back for more abuse. Me? I just went from one abusive situation to another, and kept returning for more... Sis has since learned the art of appeasing mother, and has been vindicated. Her goal? The takeover of coveted material possessions and family heirlooms; the only thing left of the family's bargaining power. She has turned against me, as well, to maintain her position as being the "non-traitorous" offspring, and her covetous son has joined her in waiting to gather in the spoils of victory.
A prudent person foresees evil, and hides himself; but the simple pass on, and are punished. Silly me. I have been diligently working to help my parents for the past two years. Once in great amount of debt, and even health danger, through help, they could now live out their final days relatively free of worry, and even in comfort. But that will not be the case. A family acquaintance told us a while back, "Your mother is going to ruin everything." We see that happening right before our eyes. Unfortunately, she wants to punish me. I have never met a more vindictive person in my life.
I pray often for the Lord to change my attitude, and try to practice forgiveness. Now I'm wondering if I misinterpreted my acts of kindness for stupidity. My enemy was hungry, and I tried to feed her. She was thirsty, and I gave her something to quench her thirst. I tried to overcome evil by doing good. These only serve to enrage her more, because she hates the heaping of coals of fire upon her head. It seems the more I do to help, the more she hates me.
I've been accused of "taking" things from mother all my life, including her "honour" and dignity. Now she's using Scripture and her church and Pastor against me, telling lies about things I've "said," or done, and convincing others that her accusations are truth. My husband said she taught me to feel guilty, even when I'm not. I told him she also taught me fear.
I've been trying to appease her to the detriment of my own well-being. Mom gladly accepts my offers, demanding more. She is now using the court system to exact greater riches for herself, at my expense. And who would believe Chicken Little saying anything to the contrary? Mom convinced Dad long ago that we were "horrible, rotten children," and even when we called him at work during her "corrective punishment sessions," he'd hang up the phone, literally abandoning us. Mom has Physicians, Psychiatrists, Reverends, and Lawyers convinced she has been wronged by me; that they need to rescue her from my clutches. Never mind that she has held my husband and son and me hostage for the past two years, as spent our energies, talents, and personal finances trying to help our needy loved one. Never mind we sacrificed jobs and income, and precious family togetherness, only to be accused of "neglecting" her, and not meeting her needs.
I have sought help from the community, calling every resource imaginable, following every lead and trail, only to be slapped down by an unjust system to "protect" Mom from "someone like me." Instead of helping, Mom dismissed them, as me, and turned back against me for saying she needed help.
I'm waiting for the ultimate accusation: by cleaning their home of accumulated garbage (after years of compulsive shopping, and impulsive purchases), will be "charged," with "stealing" her precious substance. We tossed broken, useless items in an effort to make her home saleable, to salvage what we could financially, for her future needs. Our good deeds will not go unpunished, and others will reap where they have not sown. Misunderstandings have led to her accusations. We do not want to give any more occasion to maliciously flapping gums. At this point, it is difficult to extricate ourselves from this situation. How does one graciously bow out??? I am her legal Guardian, awaiting Probate takeover. And whom do you think they believe? I pray for God's mercy and grace; without which, I undoubtly will perish before Mom's supporters, and appointed tribunal.
I probably don't need to tell you readers, that it is imperative to watch everything you do, and be careful of everything you say. One never knows what can be used against them, even an innocent comment or remark. As we were warned, and I have learned the hard way, "Avoid Probate at all costs!!!" I now understand the meaning of that admonition, much too late. We were asked to step in and "help," which we did so willingly. In retrospect, I'm wondering how much help we actually gave. I fear the court will "help" Mom by taking her remaining assets, as they pay someone else to manage them for her. They will take care of her at her expense, not theirs. And she will wonder what has occured.
Will she ever see our efforts as helpful? Doesn't matter. I stand before God, who is my ultimate judge. It is the eleventh hour. Am I being overly dramatic? I hope so. But my heart grieves reading about the convulted charges against me, by strangers who only recently met Mom (and don't see the schemes); and by my own sister, who has done so very little to "help" our mother. I have watched her help herself to car loads of antiques and possessions, and felt the sting of her anger against me for opposing her efforts to avail herself of more.
We are praying for a miracle. I don't expect Mom to suddenly have a change of heart or revelation, but I do expect God to answer prayer. Where doors have closed, I'm praying for the opening of windows. My faith is small, and my energy spent. am weary of my groaning. I am tired of hurting. Will you pray along with me? Please forvige my vent. Thank you.
Samuel Beckett wrote a whole novel about a bedbound old man whose only possession seemed to be a pencil and notepad. The old guy wrote a story, jumping into the reality of it (taking us with him). This was the bulk of the novel, but occasionally he'd write about food being left for him, and how he had to sharpen his pencil with his fingernail. His only pencil, getting shorter and shorter. Then the book ends. ACK...did he die? or lose his pencil? "Malone Dies."
Actually, you'll find a lot of meaning for caregivers in the works of Beckett. In the novel "Murphy," Murphy escapes those who are clinging to him by getting a night shift in a looney bin. Whenever he could, he'd go into Mr. Zero's room and look deep into his endless eyes. In the play "Endgame" two disabled characters are needy of each other to live, struggle to get away, but can't won't. Lots of implications for living with Alzheimer's person, and finding life where others may not...
Well, sort of veered away from lost items...the pencil of Malone...
Obviously, she is nearing or at the point where she should not be living alone. If she's unhinged in this area, she's probably not operating at full capacity in others as well. Leaves burners on? Wanders?
And this... "I am seriously considering telling my mother-in-law that I will not be seeing her as much if I have to listen to the constant litany about how the people where she's living are stealing from her"... won't do any good. She won't remember what you said. She can't help herself. (On the other hand, I've been able to replace Mom's lintpicking OCD with some other activity, an one day she forgot her obsession with lint.)
At this point, you are at crossroads. Just read a quote in a newspaper letters-to-the-editor today:
"Character is who you are when it is inconvenient."
See all the longterm caregivers with deadbeat siblings nodding their heads... yes yes. Your mother-in-law is now someone who needs caring for, looking after...a lot, and for the rest of her life (unless meds can handle the hallucinations...or less meds, perhaps this is a drug interaction problem). You can always hope it's that simple.
Distracting her and moving on are your best tools. As Lilliput
says, tuning that out and moving on to some other subject will work as well as anything. I know it's hard but she's responding to what her brain tells her.
Keep coming back and reading other's stories. You aren't alone.
Carol