My mom has end stage parkinson and sleep all day and all night and has no appetite. about a month ago I asked her if she would ever want a feeding tube and she said no. my dad pass away 2 months ago and my mom has been going down hill rapidly, they were married 59 yrs. I know at this rate she not going to last, and I feel helpless. I guess i'm asking how long will she last?
@bls0901 hospice gave me a book like a guide of stages of what a person feel like toward the end of their life, like my dad a day b4 passing all he did was sleep, i kept warming up his soup to feed him, but according to the pamphlet they are more in the next world than here with us.
but we have no way of knowing what the baby experiences. They spend nine months in the womb, freely turning somersaults, kicking and sucking their thumbs and suddenly they are forced to go head down and squeezed into a claustrophobic position as they enter the birth canal. Pushed and squeezed for a few minutes or many hours. They don't know what to expect Suddenly they are expelled into a cold world of bright lights and strange noises. They scream in fear and some one stuffs a binky into their mouth . People mean well but things happen so fast. No one stops to consider the feelings of the helpless infant. The womb was free and warm. There were no restrictions the fetus could roam and explore. now they are tightly wrapped and the bright lights in the nursery are never dimmed. Some times they are attached to tubes and monitors and the person they are most attached to can no longer contact them intimately Many people are scared of hospice they think and say they give you morphine and then you die. I am here to tell you it is true. Hospice does give you morphine and you do die, You are in hospice because you are going to die but there is more to dyeing than a trip to the funeral home and a nice service and lots of flowers. We do not know what happens when we die but many people have had near death experiences and it is rarely described as being frightening or painful. Hospice helps you to be comfortable in body and spirit. if you need medicines they get them, if you need spiritual care, it is available, if you need help putting your affairs in order help is forthcoming. Your caregivers may need help with practical nursing tasks, then hospice is there. Hospice is a shoulder to learn on, a source of knowledge, a non judgementel friend and above all someone to share your grief in the middle of the night. Hospice will always tell you the truth so don't be afraid to ask difficult questions. Above all hospice does not judge or criticize they work with what they have got and always in the best interests of the patient and family. Every hospice will not have all the resources you might like it is all governed by money like everything else but if they are any good they will bring you much comfort