My mother in law lives with us and I’m having a hard time getting her to respect my boundaries in regards to my time, in the past I’d respond quickly to her every request but now I realize she’s manufacturing issues in order to get interaction/attention. I am busy and have a life and cannot entertain her all day, and no longer want to enable this dependency. For example, she will interrupt me working to ask where a pan is, or where something in the fridge is , without even looking. I will tell her, I’m busy now maybe look again? Etc but it seems she’s pushing back. Another example, she will ask if she can help with something and then ask the most ridiculous questions every step of the way, like is this how you want it? Is this enough? Etc. It is like she is forcing me to stay with her, when the whole point is to take a chore off my hands. or she will drag on basic conversations. For example, does the food need salt? I reply no it’s good. She will literally keep asking, so it’s good? Doesn’t need salt? Etc etc
how can I gracefully curb this attention seeking behavior? I also have young children who she will literally talk over with her unnecessary questions. I've tried being direct and isn’t working
I should add I’m also an introvert who needs my quiet time, and rarely has any. So I find this behavior extra difficult because I feel my needs are not being considered, only hers.
You also implied this has been gradually getting worse. This likely rules out UTI, although it can't hurt to check. Usually the UTI will cause more abrupt changes in demeanor or behavior. She really should have a checkup and assessment for dementia/cognitive decline. Some regular doctors are not very good at this, but you could start there. Our doc tried giving the test to my mother, even though she had already been living in MC for 2+ years (couldn't even complete much of it) and when I went later for my checkup, I had to take the test too! It does, at the least, give a baseline. If you don't think the regular doc would be useful, you could take her to a neurologist for testing/assessment.
If this is dementia, which I do think it might be, she isn't doing this deliberately, nor can she "help" herself. Think of when your kids were toddlers, trying to learn things and be "helpful" - often they can't find things, ask questions over and over, seek more time with you, etc. This is how dementia is. The sad part is toddlers will eventually learn and grow, become more independent. With dementia, the process is in reverse. She WILL regress more.
You should get hubby involved in this, since it is his mother and you can't tackle this alone. Both of you need to learn more about dementia, because it won't get better, it will only get worse. Being armed with knowledge will make this "journey" a bit easier (just a bit), because you will be more aware of what to expect as it progresses.
The repetition is mainly because short-term memory loss is one of the first symptoms (it was for me - I had to do my research as I knew nothing about dementia at that time), so they don't remember that they just asked/said something. It's like a record getting stuck on a scratch. Sometimes you can "bump" it along, but it will get caught on another scratch later. Although using controls is more long term memory, there is also the issue of becoming unable to follow instructions - it gets jumbled so trying to operate something, or sometimes trying to follow a recipe, they find they can't figure it out, even something they have done or made for years.
So, recommendation is to get an assessment done asap. While waiting for appt, start learning the stages of dementia. It is helpful to know what you might encounter (the stages are guidelines, not everyone gets every symptom and not everyone gets them in the same order.)
I don't think she is a good candidate for IL and may not be for AL either, She may need MC, but during this current crisis, there isn't likely going to be a place that would take her in. You mention something about this not being doable. If family objects, then they need to take care of her instead, to see for themselves. If she has no real assets or savings, you would have to consider Medicaid.
But, start with getting a checkup/assessment. Until you know for sure whether this is dementia, you are working blind.