Are there any other caregivers in their 30's? In July of 2014 my parents became unable to care for themselves four days apart. I took FMLA leave but eventually left my job. It was the best decision I ever made because my dad unfortunately died a year later. I'm so thankful for the time we spent together. I was his full time caregiver while in a rehab hospital and nursing home because of lack of care from the staff. My dad had a second stroke but he was mentally there and able to talk. He was unable to walk but was working hard in therapy up until he had another stroke in 2015. My mom was diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia at 59. Since my dads passing in July 2015 my moms dementia is progressing. Today after a lot of praying and crying I put the deposit down for memory care. I feel like a failure because I told my Dad I would take care of her. She is refusing medicine and not wanting to listen to anything I say. She is physically OK and able to do a lot of things but needs reminders and guidance. She doesn't cook and sometimes refuses to eat. She is currently hallucinating and acting out on the people she see. Its been very hard trying to sneak her medicine into her drinks. Also we don't get much sleep. I know overall placing her is what's best for her but its hard when I watched and had to report nurses and CNA's while my dad was in the hospital. I'm 33 and my moms siblings tell me that I need to live my life. Her parents want me to continue taking care of her at home but they don't try to understand the disease. They don't understand that I need help. My siblings have been hands off since 2014. I thought if I moved my mom from FL to SC my sister would help but she hasn't.
It's not a burden, to those who truly love and want to help. It becomes a burden, when the ones who need help, think they are truly capable and does not require help. Proud, vain, afraid of losing their identity? who knows?
Why not accept a helping hand? Age group? or just cannot accept losing control? No one loses control, unless you let it happen. Some people are there with loving hearts and truly want to help. Isn't that what you, as a person would do?
You're not alone!
First, *hugs* Second, and I'm using caps because it is important. YOU ARE NOT A FAILURE. This disease especially makes it almost impossible to care for your family. I work as a CNA in assisted living/Memory care. It is easier for me to care for 25-30 residents overnight (in assisted living) than my one, singular grandmother. She sees me as family and not a licensed healthcare professional. She listens to the other professionals more than she will listen to me, her granddaughter. There is enough familiar to me that it makes it harder for her because I also bring the past with me when I am with her. I know when she is misremembering and when she is with it. I don't correct her, but it makes it harder. I watch the family of my residents feel the same inadequacy when I can get their loved one to eat/shower/do whatever when they just won't for them.
Just because mom is in memory care doesn't mean your work is over. It is just different. The facility will still be calling when they need clarification, assistance, supplies, anything really. You will still be making decisions. It is still a hard job. You are still a good daughter, and providing mom the best care possible.
In 2011 my mom started complaining about headaches that wouldnt go away but they didnt find anything on her brain scans. In July 2014 my mom was seen by multiple specialists the hospital called in an additional one before they gave the final diagnosis. They had brain scans from 2011,2013 and 2014 to compare along with their evaluations and she was diagnosed with moderate to severe FTD. She gets confused very easily. So ive never been able to leave her alone.
Someone stated my parents wouldnt want me to stop living my life. Very true my dad had a lot of guilt about me taking care of them especially because of the lack of sleep and my own medical issues. I always reassured him that i was thankful for the time with them and i didnt want it any other way. Our plan was an assisted living for the two of them this year. He was ok with it because they would be together and i could go back to work. My mom enjoyed her stays at the behavioral units and was very vibrant when we went to visit so im hoping the transition into this beautiful and very active environment is quick. My parents knew each other their entire lives and were married for 38 years so its been very hard on her and she keeps saying she wants to see him and touch his face. Since i wrote this post we have had days that prove i made the right decision for her. Im sitting in the ER now as i write this comment because the man she sees in the house touched her inappropriately and caused her to become very upset and aggressive. She even blamed me for him being in the house. They gave her a pill that dissolves on the tongue that should help with the hallucinations. They didnt recommend a stay at the behavioral unit with her being so close on the wait list for memory care . We told her the medicine will help with her asthma and allergy to pollen so hopefully she will take it everyday. Once again thank you all for sharing your experiences, giving your honest opinions and encouraging words. I was crying while reading the comments. Im glad i posted.
Thanks again for your words and understanding!!
Tragic, but it feels better to hear that I am not the only one in this situation. Although I was 38 when my (widowed) mother Diane was diagnosed 4 years ago, I still haven't settled down yet, tons of problems to solve for my Mother and no support whatsoever from institutions, government or siblings, including sister or aunts and uncles. We have a special situation that leaves me isolated with my mother in Florence, which is not too bad a place, as my parents had moved to Italy from Canada when I was 11yo, ironically for the same reasons, as my grandparents were getting older and less self sufficient. There too, I remember being left with them alone at their house in the summer several days.
This tragic neurological degeneration first gets a toll on you, makes you take leave from your work and you soon become redundant from your job, your relationship starts failing and it is hard to start a new one.
To be optimist, things can only get better. After loosing my father, my mother lost her memory, she lost her autonomy, I lost my freedom, lost my job, lost my partner, lost my family and siblings who all disappeared into selfishness, lost my house when I started renting it out to pay for a caregiver for Diane and we'll loose her house when she will go and my sister will force me to sell it.
So things have been going pretty much downhill the past few years. Lost myself a bit too. I was told to look after myself, as it is the case, at this stage, when few of the people surrounding you realize that you have no life, although they wouldn't have the solution or advice on how to do that, other than telling you to put her into a home.
So I will read this thread carefully and see if there are any other solutions, otherwise, she'll end her time at home with the caregiver this year and I'll find a nice place for her, rent her house to pay for it, get my home back and possibly my life... if I don't have to manage the home full time to make sure they take good care of her. We still have to visit and probably spend most or all of our spare time visiting our loved one, who normally refuses to go into a home.. but she thinks she is still sane.
I purchased a book for mother, to help deal with dad's passing.... How would you feel, if you sister in law, who you are not very close too, but is to mom because she calls her everyday, thinking (and I'm not exaggerating) that she is mother Teresa.. I think she has something wrong with her too... but, after finding out that I bought the book, for mother, she said, "make sure you tell her we appreciate the thoughtfulness of her gift to you".... like I'm some outsider, dealing with all the hatefulness, hopelessness and deceitful ways of my mother?
My question is: how would you feel? I'm her daughter, been there for everything, for my father, for her, but my sister in law acts like I'm some family friend or something. Am I being hateful, jealous, a bitch or what.... I am so confused everyday with dealing with my mother, but she has everyone thinking she is a very sweet, kind loving individual, while I'm a hateful bitch..... am I crazy? I feel like I am....my life too, is completely on hold. Everyone thinks that I'm some kind of witch, and treats my mom with cruelty...I guess... please, need some help sorting this out...my family, is out, because they don't want to hear it, or help out and they have lives that don't include my parents, and never have.
I am also 33 and going through something similar. My father passed away at age 64 and right around the same time that he got really sick, my mom was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer's. She does not believe she has the disease yet I have had to quit my job and move in with her also because she doesn't eat on her own and can't take care of her house. I don't feel right putting her in assisted living (why are there not assisted living facilities for early-onset?? She is only 63 and I don't want to take her entire life away and surround her by 90-year-olds). Besides, she has just lost her husband and had so many life changes that it would be very detrimental to her. She also hates me because according to her I "stole" her car keys and forced her to live a "miserable" life by taking away all her independence. Anyone who imposes the new limitations of this disease (i.e. me and the doctors) is evil and crazy in her eyes. The verbal abuse got so bad that we had to get her on anti-depressants to calm down her temper tantrums.
Most importantly, Lena, and everyone else in this forum who has had to become a 24/7 caregiver at such a young age, if your parent or loved one has Alzheimer's/ Dementia, there is a support group for caregivers under 40 through the Alzheimer's Association which has really helped a lot. We have a google meet-up every other week and I have gotten a lot of support and really good ideas from the girls in the group, ,most of whom have been doing this for many years and are very experienced. It's also nice to have people to talk to about this who understand. If you'd like more information feel free to contact me!
Memory Care is the way to go, you can't help your mother 'recover', the course of the disease is inevitable. You have done far more than most. Please please please read these messages. Destroying your life (and it will be that, destruction of your life) isn't going to make your mother all better. you could die before she does. Heck, mine is now in a nursing home, is doing absolutely GREAT, though I lose a lot of my health, wealth, and happiness until I got her in there. (I swore I was not going to endanger my marriage or retirement savings no matter what.) Good luck to you, I wish you happiness in the rest of your life