Besides my 2 adult daughters who have their own lives to live. there is no one to help at all. My mother has no family besides me and my kids. I am an only child. I love my mother, but I am at the end of my rope. When I dropped her off today at her house I was crying on the way home, begging God to either take my mother or to take me, because I cannot live this way anymore.
If I had a choice I would see my mother once or twice a week tops. I don't have a choice as she is very demanding and does live along and does have dementia and doesn't drive and is disabled (bilateral hip implants and walks with a cane). My mother feels it is my duty to care for her. I know that it is my responsibility to help her and to be with her as much as I can but it is emotionally killing me.
Because she has dementia she can't remember from one day to the next. She is very demanding. Just take today for instance. She likes to go to the movies every week. She hates most of the movies we go to, even when she picks them out. She refuses to wear her hearing aid so she complains at EVERY movie we go to that she can't hear it. When I say to her that it would help if she wore the hearing aid, she gets angry with me. After the movie we went to IHOP and in traditional complaining mode, she complained that the tea didn't taste right (the exact same brand she has) and that the ice cream was too hard and that the pancakes didn't have fruit in them (she didn't order fruit in them). Everytime we go out to eat she ALWAYS complains about EVERYTHING and says she "never wants to come back here" again. There are only 2 places out of about 30 that we go to and we don't like those places. Sorry.
While we were eating, I asked her about a letter she had received from an old friend of hers who has dementia also and lives in nursing home. She insists that this woman is dead (her husband died about a year ago but she is very much alive, just in a nursing home). My mother insisted again that she was dead. She said someone else had written the letter. I told her that she was alive and she got very angry at me. I said to her "hey mom, you keep saying she is dead and I tell you every time that she is alive. What do you want me to do next time you say she is dead." Idiot me expected her to say, "I want you to tell me the truth". Well, she didn't. Instead she said "I want you to stop arguing and disagreeing with me." Are you f-ing kidding me? She really wants me to not say anything to her when she says that her friend is dead and starts crying about her. Are you kidding me????
I am not allowed to see a movie without her. I am not allowed to go on vacation without her. Do I see movies without her? yes. However, "sneaking" away for vacation is so much harder.
I am forced to see her on Mondays, Fridays, Saturdays and alternate Sundays. I hired a caregiver on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays and alternate Sundays. She does about 17 hours a week and I do about 17 hours a week. Yes, the caregiver has helped somewhat, but my mother is still driving me crazy. Her whole life revolves around me and she is emotionally strangling me to death. She has no problem if my kids want to do anything without her but pitches a fit if I dare to do something without her.
Growing up she was the same way with my dad. She would complain that he was exercising or taking a class at college when he retired because "he doesn't want to be with me." Yes, it sounds like deep emotional abandonment issues. I am not a heartless person. I feel so very sorry for my mother. She has been through hell and back but I cannot go on like this as I am being dragged down into the misery.
I hate being with her. There, I said it. I am a lousy excuse for a daughter. If I truly loved my mother I would want her to live with me, and I would want to be with her all day long every day. I would rather shoot myself than have her here more than she already is.
I guess if her attitude was a little more positive, it would be easier. But someone who refuses to wear a hearing aid and makes me repeat things twice. Someone who demands that I don't tell her that her friend is alive. Someone who demands that I spend time with her because she is "alone and lonely." I am ready to hang myself.
I have encouraged her to participate in senior related activities and she won't. I have begged her to contact her neighbors but she refuses as "if they wanted me they would knock on my door.
If I had a gun right now I am scared to think what I would do with it.
She is already on a ton of meds including an antidepressant and two memory meds. Every time I am with her, I feel my happiness draining. I am not allowed to disagree with her. Today she asked me when we had to pack to go home. We haven't gone anywhere! when I told her this, she started getting upset with me again. There is nothing I can do every to make this woman happy except to agree with her even when she is wrong.
PLEASE give me some advice. I am at the brink. Than
People with dementia have been bad all their lives, normal people just grow old and fade away quietly. These people all had serious personality disorders for most of their lives.
Now, here are the big differences.
One: I volunteered for this. Nobody made me. My mother didn't ask - I suggested, she accepted. If - I can't imagine how, but if - it ever came to pass that I really couldn't cope with her care, I would feel under no obligation to continue.
Two: my mother, though a depressive and at times unbelievably negative and insecure, is a sweetheart. She irritates the bejesus out of me, sometimes, but it's not because she's demanding or unkind.
Now then. How is your mother able so successfully to pull this MASSIVE guilt trip on you? How is she able to "make" you spend one second more in her company than you willingly agree to? She may think it's your duty. What on earth makes you agree so wholeheartedly?!
STOP VOLUNTEERING!
I'm sorry your mother has had her lifetime of insecurity. But it's not your fault. It is therefore not your responsibility to try to correct it, even if you could (believe me, you can't). Are you still surprised that your father didn't want to spend all his leisure time with her? Sensible man, to keep his sanity through outside interests. Otherwise someone else might have been glad he didn't have a gun…
Do what you can do for your mother without losing your marbles. Cut back the hours you spend with her to a schedule you can cope with cheerfully, getting in more outside help as required. Take her to the cinema once a week, for example, and amuse yourself by betting internally on what she's going to dislike most this time. My daughter told me a joke about this (context being her other grandmother) - two elderly ladies are having lunch in a restaurant. Waiter goes over to them and says: "is anything all right?"
Your filial duty extends to ensuring her welfare. Nowhere in any good book does it say that this means you have to do the work, let alone most of the work, certainly let alone all the work. Make sure that no harm will come to her, and that's you done. Anything more is purely VOLUNTARY. You choose to do it, or you don't. It is not up to your mother to decide.
Your diary, similarly, is not in your mother's hands. It is yours to fill as you wish. Do so.
Your mother will complain bitterly. And? So? What will happen when she does? Nothing will happen, except more complaints. Hang up, or leave the room, whichever applies. Come back when you're good and ready. If you can't leave for safety reasons, then just don't listen - say "blah blah blah" or sing or whatever helps you ignore her.
Your mother is old, she needs your help; but it's time you took control of both of your lives. Her unhappiness is not your fault. Always, always remember that you cannot make a deeply unhappy person happy. If you continue to sacrifice your own welfare to this futile crusade, you are on a hiding to nothing.
By: Dr. Henry Cloud, Dr. John Townsend. It is a paperback and not expensive. I was raised and treated in a similar manner as a child and now, have a mother who acts very similar. I, too, was drowning and depressed with my parents demands. This book helped immensely and will also help in all other areas of life. The others are correct, that arguing with or telling a dementia pt that they are wrong, only escalates behaviors. I didn't know this when my Dad was still home, but observed the increased fighting between him and my Mom. I understand now, that because Mom was and still is, a big nagger, who always has to be right...as Dad's dementia got worse, he could no longer tolerate her constantly telling him what he had to do, and how he had forgotten this or that or lost this or that or how she had to 'fix' things for him. He had always been able to 'enable' her, but going along to get along, but his brain wouldn't let him control his thoughts or behavior anymore and he was struggle with not wanting to see that he was getting worse. Ex. he would forget to take his meds. She would tell him he didn't do it...and he forgot. He would say that he had taken them and that 'someone was messing with his med box'. She would fight....and then, either he would take them, and perhaps have taken a double dose, or she would call me who lives 5 hrs away to 'talk some sense into him'. I didn't understand all this early on. NOW....ex: I phoned him on Veteran's Day to thank him for serving in WWII. I always have done this and reminded him that he is MY favorite soldier. He tells me about how General Eisenhower had stopped to visit with him during the night last night. OF course, I know he's somewhere else in his mind....but I 'go along'....and encourage him to talk. I say things like ," Wow...that must have been interesting! What did you talk about?" Depending on what he says, I might try to reorient by saying..." That's strange Dad. I thought I've read that Eisenhower died a few years ago?" Generally he might say OH YEAh...that's right, I must have been dreaming....or he might argue a bit and tell me more. Then, I would say, 'What time was this" and he says, Oh I don't know...in the middle of the night sometime' and I might softly suggest " Do you think you could have been dreaming that if it was middle of the night?" In variably, he will agree that he was probably dreaming and he will be able to pull the info out of his head that Eisenhower did die. And he will laugh and say, " You know, my memory isn't what it used to be at all!" And I will say, Well, you are still my favorite soldier and I will love no matter what happens to your memory or anything else'. Bottom line, I now understand, they want to KNOW that they are loved, respected, cared about as a person, and that they WILL BE SAFE...because they know they are losing it and are NOT safe by themselves. But...YOU...the caretaker, needs to NOT take abuse either. This book helps you learn that, and learn what to say and how to say it. It teaches you how to repeat the same answer over and over and NOT get hooked by the manipulation. And it teaches how NOT to give out more information about something that will give the other person more things to complain or manipulate you about. For example....you can't visit on Wednesday because you are doing something else. There is no need to give out the info that you are going to the movies with friends and leaving Mom at home alone. You simply give the info she needs to know she will be safe and the timing of when you are not available. When she pushes about why or where or what you are doing or with whom....you learn to simply repeat the same short sentence and work to change the subject. That is one technique. Changing the subject is another, or making a joke of her demand is another. Bottom line, you are an adult woman on your own, and you don't have to explain everything to anyone! Your main job with your mother is to assure she is SAFE! That's it. You are not responsible for making her happy, or for doing everything when or how she wants it done. Just because you are her daughter, doesn't give her anymore rights to YOU, than anyone else has....beyond you assuring that she is safe. I urge you to order the book or find it at the Library.
To all of you who are financially able to have your parent in assisted living but are feeling guilty about it, and hating your life because of it; DO IT!! You won't regret it if you do, but you will regret it if you don't.
And I am so happy that you took charge, brilliant. Well Done You xxx
Because I didn't live near her in the past, I didn't realize how bad she was getting. Over the past 3 years, her memory is going, but it's selective, it seems. She is now worse. Forgetting to take her pills, asking the same questions over and over...telling me "we never had that conversation" about something the very next day...repetitive conversations...getting hooked on one thing (i.e. Did you turn in the winning bingo card for Publisher's Clearing House yet??? asking 2-3x a day)... But that isn't the worst part of it. Not only is she putting freezer food in the fridge, where it gets mushy. Not only is does her house smell like piss because she won't let her 2 year old Maltese in the yard to pee. Not only has she become a shopaholic borderline hoarder of fake flowers and stuffed animals..... no it's worse than that.
She doesn't want any other "friends". Everyone is a stranger, she says. Well, yes, everyone IS a stranger until you BEFRIEND them. She has no interest. None. She says "I just want you."
Well, that's fine and dandy but I have a 13 year old, 17 year old, and a partner of my own that I need to have time with. I have a house to clean here; meals to prepare; laundry, etc. I have a life here paying my bills. Keeping my own house in order, and now I find:
I have to pay all her bills because she loses them, doesn't understand them, etc. We spend time every day with her asking me to explain her mail to her.
She thinks Publisher's Clearing House is going to pop up at her front door with a big check. So she keeps throwing the papers at me every time they come in, insisting that HER bingo is the winning bingo. (I tried telling her EVERYONE gets a bingo but she insists she has won something...)
She does not drive. She tells me every single day she needs to get out of the house. I take her out EVERY DAY to the same stores. Grocery maybe 5x a week. She cannot make a list and just go one time a week. She has to buy one thing, then the next day she wants something else. She has a closet PACKED with new with tag clothes. She is buying more.
She has no appetite. She is 5'0" and weighs about 90 lbs. If I don't cook for her, she will not make anything. So, every night, I make dinner and run like the galloping gourmet across the street to her house, where I deliver a ready to eat plate of dinner. She will not come here to eat. She doesn't want to leave her dog. (I have 4 cats so bringing the dog here is not a good idea.) I lay her pills out every evening at dinner, turn her little TV on, set her place at her kitchen table, etc. Then I run home to eat.
She doesn't ever want to come here to visit. I don't know why. She wants me THERE. She lives ACROSS THE STREET I don't understand, if she's so lonely and bored, she is not willing to come over while I fold my laundry or do my dishes and sit and have a cup of coffee. No. She wants all the attention HER way. She wants me to sit WITH HER and I have 2 households I am trying to maintain here.
Last night was my breaking point. I had taken her out (as I do EVERY DAMN DAY) - I even asked, Mom, WHERE do you want to go? It's Sunday and my bf finally has a day off.... after 9 days working. I would like a LITTLE time with him. She said, "I don't care if we drive around the block 10x. I just need to get out today and see something." So I took her to Wal-Mart. She bought shrimp and told me she would make her own dinner tonight...with rice. I said great. Then I will have leftovers at my place.
We get home. She calls every hour for nothing, incidentally. Finally, it's 6:30 and I called her. I said did you eat? No. I'm not hungry I just had coffee.... ok.. I said do you want me to make you a plate tonight? No. I want my shrimp and rice later... I will make it. I said ok then I will talk to you later.
9:00 she called me and asked me (DEMANDED TO KNOW) why i didn't call her or bring her dinner. I explained she told me at 6:30 she was making shrimp and she retorted I DID NOT! I said yes you did, mom. She said I can't believe you didn't call me. You always bring me a plate. I'm sorry I bothered you...I think you're a terrible daughter...and she started crying, threatening to sell her house and move. I'm ashamed but I got mad. I said I DID CALL YOU...she said whatever.... by this time she is basically saying I'm going to bed.... I did not eat dinner... I had nothing all night.
She is, and has always been, a "woe is me" type... but now it's getting worse. I am expected to be her everything. She will not go play bingo at the senior center unless I am sitting next to her playing too. She will not make friends. Another senior in the neighborhood tried to befriend her. My mom said "she scares me..." I said why? She said, "She is too tall."
Mom has mild-moderate dementia. Does this always lead to AD?
I don't know what to do anymore. She is like taking care of a spoiled bored and lonely child and I feel guilty for needing time to myself.
She refuses to let any "strangers" into her home.
thank God I am durable power of attorney over the finances and her health. But I am really stuck as to what to do here. She is not so far gone that I can "force" her to let a companion into her house, but I need a rest. It has been almost 4 years just about every single day I am at her beckon call.
One time I took a day, after preparing her, for myself. ONE DAY. I went to an amusement park. She called me a couple times laying guilt on me, saying she felt like an orphan and would spend the day talking to her furniture waiting for me to get home.
Another time, recently, we went to her bank to get my name added onto her checking account. She understood it, signed the papers, and everyone told her this was a good protective measure to take, in the case something happened to her. She is 90. She agreed. 2 weeks later, her statement came. She flipped her lid when she saw my name on it, telling me she never agreed to put me on the account. For the record, I have not touched one dime, nor would I. But it really hit home that she hasn't an idea what's going on from one day to the next.
What do I do? She is lucid and sharp sometimes. Other times forgetting the simplest things, and lately she is telling me she is going to move to where she won't be so "lonely". I feel like a failure and she will not allow anyone else into her life. "SHE WANTS ME". Help ?
If I could give you advice, I would say you have to stand your ground and put yourself first. The thing is, I know you aren't doing that because you are worried mom won't understand....the guilt, the look of abandonment in her eyes when she stares at you. I know you are trying to be everything to everyone. I get it.
The big house they shared was sold, the contents put in storage and she (and her 3 dogs) came to live with me in my apartment for 9 months of living hell. She eventually bought a lovely little house near where they used to live but of course it wasn't good enough and she bought a huge house she really couldn't afford to keep, heating was kept to a minimum and turned off at supper time no matter how cold it was.
In 09 I sold my home, quit my career and moved to care for her (Parkinsons & dementia) for four years of nightmare, housebound at her demanding, nasty beck and call 24/7. Living far away I had no idea how bad she was either. She never had any friends, either alienated or avoided the neighbours so I was "it".
She's in a NH now unable to do anything for herself, mostly bed ridden, barely able to speak and her dementia is full blown. She's been unable to dial the phone for some months and for some time when I called her I couldn't understand her. I'm the only one that calls or visits so I've had the phone cut off (saving $45 a month) but left the actual phone as she won't remember it doesn't work.
She's deteriorating rapidly and the NH calls me for every little thing - 4 calls late Christmas eve alone - to the point I'm always anxious and dread the phone ringing. I've turned the ringer off so any calls go to voice mail.
I don't know what to suggest except getting her evaluated and perhaps into assisted living, however if she won't let anyone in the house (mine wouldn't either) she's unlikely to agree to an evaluation. Is there some social agency you can contact for advice and possible options? In any event, you cannot go on like this as you will make yourself ill and your own family must be suffering terribly.
My mom constantly tells me she has plenty of money and she worked hard for it (yeah for 15 years. Dad built his own business and invested in stocks. THAT is why she has money.) - She always gets her hair done 1x a week since I can remember. Daddy always said "If you want it, buy it!" (I think just to be left alone to his newspaper to be honest) - He kept her very comfortable. He was a beautiful man, inside and out.
I talked to her this morning. I called and when she answered, I said "how are you?" (I could hear the "woe is me" voice already) and she said she felt tired, not well.... weak. (guilt guilt... from the phone call the night before) - I said mom from now on you need to come over and get a plate if you want dinner. I cook every night. She responded, "I feel like a burden....." I said you are not a burden; I already cook for 4. 1 more is not a burden. I also told her she needs a social life. Let's go to the Senior Center. She adamantly refused. "I don't want THEM! I will worry about THEIR ailments! I don't want to hear their problems....besides... I HAVE YOU!"
UGH!!!!!!!!
My advise to you is to encourage her to find a place where she "isn't lonely." You are not a devoted 8 year old daughter with no responsibilities. You are a grown woman with a family and tons of responsibilities. You are NOT a failure. You obviously love your mother. She is LUCKY to have you.
I hear a lot of similarities with your mother and mine. I let the guilt get to me as well. It ate me up inside and I felt like crap. Since my mom has dementia I can speak from experience: Change the living situation. Things will get WORSE as her world gets smaller and smaller and she will rely on you even more.
You have two choices:
1. You can BOTH maintain your misery and unhappiness (clearly she's not happy either), or
2. You can change the situation so at least YOU are happy
She will likely never be happy. Her happy days diminish as dementia takes over
E.g. you type in: "I -
oh damn the beeper's going. Back in a while…!
Your objectivometer displays a) b) etc. options, e.g.:
a) check when the news is on, because you know that's what she wants to know, turn on the TV for her, swap her glasses over and check the subtitles are switched on;
b) turn to the correct page of the paper for her;
c) remind her that she knows very well how to find the TV schedule, and that you will come back when you've finished what you're doing to check she's had more luck;
d) fly into a screaming rage about endless trivial requests, smash the TV to pieces and storm out of the room.
Each option would carry a mark ranging from 0 (caring to the point of disabling your loved-one) to 10 (are you sure you should be doing this job?). The really clever bit, which shouldn't be impossible in our age of microcomputers and algorithms, is that the device would be preloaded with exhaustive, updateable detail about the cared-for person: age, sex, health conditions, mental health, lifestyle manner to which he/she is accustomed, good day/bad day, and so on.
Or you could swap it round. You type in: "mother claims she is made to feel such a burden." Then you press "Guilt."
a) You have suggested she might like to spend a little time with friends or family;
b) You have suggested getting some outside help;
c) You have suggested she consider ALF;
d) You have told her she is a burden.
And, again, you can check your 0-10 reading to see how appropriate the guilt you actually feel is.
You get the gist. Fortunately AC works almost as well. And there goes the beeper… Wonder how she's getting on with the TV schedule?
I will be using some of this advice as I begin my journey into the daily challenge of caring for someone with dementia. This client was one of the most kind and patient persons, sharp and capable. Up until a few months ago I enjoyed a relationship with her that was centered around the assistance I provide by doing household work, shopping, errands and etc.
But recently, I begin to notice a change in her attitude, fortitude and mental ability. It came so subtlely that I admit I did not handle my response to some of her behavior as I would have had I recognized early what appears to be behind the behavior. She is definitely showing signs of dementia. Whatever the cause behind it is, she is showing the symptoms.
Anyway my continuing in my usual way with her after these changes in her mental outlook was apparently beyond her ability to deal with. As a result, she unloaded on me (yesterday) with a verbal reaming that was hard to hear, she said some very hurtful things and with a venom I had never seen in her.
I bit my tongue, swallowed my heart, and thankfully kept my mouth shut. I didn't try and defend myself and I agreed with her that she didn't need stress in her life. I told her I had not intentionally acted in a way to cause her stress and that I appreciated her being candid with me and that I would act in accordance with how she described she wanted things to be. She told me she wanted quiet and peace in her home, did not want me to be so "noisy" or to make noise etc. Later I asked her how I had done and she stated that she thought I was pouting! Shades of the no-win scenario. I simply told her that I do not pout and that my quietness was in respect to her request. Which it was and I had no animosity in my behavior. It was unfair of her to ask me to not talk and then state that I, because I wasn't talking, was pouting, but there you have it. (The question I ask myself is how much of this can I respond to calmly and without anger? and the answer I tell myself is "I'll see")
Afterwards , on the drive home, I vented. This morning, I wept. And prayed.
Finally, I came to this site and read postings to gain some insight and some knowledge as I realize that I am facing the same challenges that so many are and have been facing.
I also realize that I have lost the companionship I had enjoyed with her and which I don't have expectation of regaining.
She may not be a relative, but I love her as if she were and with this comes the potential for loss and grief.
Now it will be time for me to learn just what I am made of. I believe I love her, it's time to prove that love. It will be tested sorely, I can gleam that from reading what you all have said before me here.
Even if she has all this time been nothing more than a manipulative and selfish person, I can still provide the best care I am capable of providing, knowing in my heart that the things she tells me about myself are for the most part not about me at all, but about her pain, her medications, frustrations and mental impairment.
I am not going to contradict her, correct her or talk over her. I'm going to listen to her when she is lucid and when she is not, I will be careful to be attentive but I will retain none of it.
And especially, when she tells me that she loves me, I won't think to myself about how little she shows me love, I will instead think of how I can show her my love. I don't expect anything of her. I expect of myself. I can forgive her and I can forgive myself if I stumble along the way.. That's what is most important.
Thank you all who have written for sharing your experiences and insights because they have been of much help to me and I am sure they will continue to be of help.
Oh, I will add, in case any of you are wondering, there has not been a change in my behavior or my treatment of my client in the past few months (she pointed out that I had changed in the last few months) at least as far as my subjective opinion is concerned, however, there has been a change in health and in circumstances in my client's life recently. It would appear, that I , the closest one to her, will be the outlet for her various negative emotions. It goes with the territory, I know.
I will write again and update how I am handling this unanticipated and challenging change in my client.
I came to the realization a long time ago that there is NO winning with my mother. If she says the sky is pink, it is. If she says she's only been in assisted living for "days" (it's been almost a year), then so be it.
This is what I do, and it works:
She says something untrue
I don't say "no mom, not true, here is the truth....."
I don't say "oh yes, you're so right mom"
Instead I say NOTHING
I'm not going to disagree with her. It does nothing except stroke my ego so that I know I'm right and she's wrong. And the repercussions? Her angry, hurt. Me angry, hurt. So I get my ego boost eleswhere.
I'm not going to agree with her. Maybe others out there WILL say "yep mom, the sky is a lovely shade of pink." I can't say that. I just can't.
So.....I change the subject to ANYTHING.
Hey mom, wanna grab an icecream.
Mom, you look so beautiful today
Mom, when did you get those shoes? (really not expecting a truthful answer here, just a lovely and welcome diversion)
There is NO winning with dementia. It's an evil, insidious beast.
The only winning is in NOT allowing it to eat you alive. And that my friends, is often hard to do. When my mom starts to argue with me, I think of ANYTHING to divert her attention, and it works 99.9% of the time.
In the past, when I HAD to "tell her the truth" it resulted in us both going down the drain together. I am only human. I have to fight the urge to tell her the truth, every single time I am with her. And most of the time I sigh inside and just divert her attention. When I am feeling particularly depressed/unhappy/righteous/angry/dictatorial, I argue back so that we can then BOTH feel like crap. See what I mean? All arguing with them does is destroy you BOTH! Don't let i!
It's hard for war to be waged alone, in the battle of words, saying nothing guarantees we don't end up among the enlisted! Nor does it require compromising our moral values (such as what happens when we agree with an untruth as if it were true which is being untrue about an untruth lol).
I am thinking that nothing is a good response to a great many things people say when what they have said has no merit, truth, or purpose.
Plus it's quite easy :)
Works for me!
And yes, it is still possible to indulge in the occasional battle of words, when one has the energy. It would seem that if confrontations are rare than a confrontation every now and then would probably have more impact or at least give the person a surprise now and then lol
This situation has all the ingredients for a good episode of "The Twilight Zone."
The new number won't take effect for a couple of days and my mother was able to call me this afternoon, not nasty this time but she'd received a greeting card and someone stole it. People are always stealing her stuff {sigh}.
I met with the NH admin this morning and we decided on fibs. Come a time when she tries to call and gets "no longer in service" staff will tell her my phone's out of order. When I visit and she asks about it I'm going to say I rarely use it so I'm just using my cell now but there's no point in her having the number because I only turn it on when I want to call someone.
Of course I'll still visit, get her shopping, ensure she has all she needs and take care of her affairs but I'm finally free!! It hasn't quite sunk in yet!
Also three cheers for Karen P. who posted this - if you go back to the original question and earlier posts, you've come a looong way, baby!
Hope and humor both - and a respectable dosage in a highly palatable form!
THANKS to both of you!!
Anyway, her meds and meals are taken care of, and she is/always has been quite social (she plays all the card games, sits in on visiting entertainers, and goes on most of the excursions).
Despite all of this, she STILL drives me 'round the bend. Despite her being in a place where most of my worries are lifted, I get no joy in being with her. None. She is whiny, high-maintenance, stubborn, plaintive, completely self-absorbed and uninterested in others. I see her twice a week now, and talk to her every day. I do not know this woman. This is not my mother. We used to have a real giggle-fest together, and relish each other's company years ago. I "get" that this is the disease. This knowledge does NOTHING to help me like her, or to enjoy my time with her.
They say that this moderate stage is the worst: the patient knows that they are losing their grip, and they fight against the tide and unknowingly give others a hard time.
So, yeah, I'm happy she's somewhere safe. I don't know how other people -- who care for loved ones at home -- do it.
I visit maybe once a week and ensure she has all she needs but it affects me badly for the next day or two. At least now I've changed my phone number she can't get at me on a daily basis. That was making me ill and it's taken a few weeks for the stress to subside.