I have been caretaking for my mom now and my dad before he died of cancer 5 years ago. after my dad passed i moved in with my mom because she was lonely and needed help to stay in her home.
its been 5 years now. I have no life, no help and feel like i am losing my mind. I get very upset when my sister refuses to give me a break. she says mom wont stay at her house..and she cant stay here. i also caretake for my special needs 21 yo daughter..my sister wants my girl to go to a group home because she stresses out mom sometimes. I'm supposed to choose between the two. not an option.
my brother came out from the midwest but is ready to go back because of the stress.
I feel like our little family(mom jen and me) are all by ourselves.have a big family that is to busy to come around so we never see anyone.. I guess I'm rambling..Feeling like running away and hiding.not an opton. I guess I'm feeling a bit overwhelmed.. I don't know why Im writing this.. maybe someone else can help me cope with everything
This is year 14 of caring for family members. It started with my sister-in-law struggling for 4 and a half years with ovarian cancer before it won. Then we had two good years before my mother-in-law had a major meltdown and diagnosed with cerebral amyloid angiopathy with leukoencephalopathy (long words for a form of dementia). We cared for her and my father-in-law in our home for 5 years until she passed away. Then there were 6 months of freedom with just my father-n-law before my 94 year old mother become too ill with dementia to stay alone any longer. I had been caring for her for 6 years as she could not drive due to macular degeneration. So, I was driving to her house two to three times a week doing all the shopping, cooking, cleaning and taking her to appointments. When she moved in with us following progressive dementia and an illness that left her 24 hour care. My daughter is also living with us while we are renovating her home. She has a 16 month old son, so it is a pretty full house. Oh, we also take care of her son while she works. And my 86 year old father-in-law continues living with us. He has CHF, numerous by-pass surgeries and a valve replacement and beginning dementia, so he is pretty dependant too.
Needless to say, when my mother moved in with us I had no life either and it was both physically and mentally draining. If I got three hours sleep in a night, it was a great night. I was up and down with my mother all night long and all day with her and my grandson. I am an only child and since the death of my sister-in-law, my husband is an only child, so all of the care falls on our shoulders. So, jontur, I certainly can relate to your feelings of being isolated and trapped.
When my mother was diagnosed with failure to thrive, Hospice came into the picture and what a God send to my sanity they were. I was given 14 glorious hours a week of respite time. Plus, a girl came twice a week to bathe my mother and the nurse checked in once a week. We also had pastoral visits and a social worker who would check in once a month. I was out the door like a shot during those 14 hours of freedom. I hope you will contact agencies in your area for some help in your situation. Maybe there are seperate centers your mother and daughter could visit for a few hours a week allowing you a little time to yourself. How do you get out to do the grocery shopping right now and other outside responsibilities like doctor appointments? Even if you can’t find a program to offer financial assistance or Medicare coverage for these services, I strongly, strongly suggest you hire someone to come in a few hours a week and give you a reprieve. It is worth every penny. Use your mother’s money or tell your brother and sister they HAVE to chip in. If they won’t physically participate in her care, the VERY LEAST they can do is help pay for you to have a few hours of sanity a week. Your brother couldn’t take it and bailed on you, so he has to have some understanding of how stressful the situation is and how nerve-racking and demanding the circumstances are for you. He, of all people, should be willing to donate to a respite care giver. Your sister refuses to give you a break or take your mother at her home and has all kinds of advice for you. Tell her to put her money where her mouth is and that would be the best for everyone.
This is a wonderful site and allows people to vent and discover we are not alone. Sometimes that is all we need to know is we are not alone in our feelings of frustration and loss. There are others out there who understand and can offer helpful advice and suggestions. This is the site that kept me from losing my mind and pulling the plug more than once. Thank Heaven we have a place to be understood without judgment.
Sadly, my mother passed away last Dec. at the age of 95 and I deeply miss her every minute of every day. But, I want you to know, when I was caring for her, I had some not so nice thoughts and I still feel guilty for those. My mother was the kindest, sweetest person on the planet and I loved her with every fiber of my being and all my heart and soul, but during the exhausting times when I felt trapped, alone and in tears for both myself and my mother, I asked “when will this all end? I want my life back!”. And I prayed for it to end. I not only wanted my life back, but it tore me to pieces seeing my mother go through the terrible struggles, mental anguish and torment. It was L for everyone. I didn’t want to lose her, but I didn’t want her to live any longer either. It was a horrible time. It was totally against every moral aspect of who I am to put her in a care facility. I just couldn’t do that to her, but I had to relent the last two weeks of her life. I just couldn’t do it any more. She was at a point I could not control her agitation and she would try to get out of bed, yet she couldn’t walk, was dead weight to get her to the bathroom and beyond comprehending anything I tried to do for her. Thank the Lord for my wonderful husband and his help and support. I finally had to let go and let God. That was the day before Thanksgiving last year and my small grandchildren were coming for the holiday. I couldn’t care for my mother, cook and spend time with them in her condition. I was trapped by her bedside 24 hours a day. But, most of all, I know she would not want them to remember her like she was, so I placed her in the marvelous care of the Hospice House. I could not have given her the excellent care they did in her final days. Shortly after Thanksgiving she slipped into a coma and within two weeks was gone.
I was relieved, but had such horrible guilt for some of the awful and unforgivable feelings I had while caring for her. I never, ever let her know how I felt, but I hated myself for wanting it all to end so I could selfishly have a life back to enjoy my grandchildren and my “golden years”. I am 62. I think I am finally beginning to forgive some of my feelings and love myself again and I have to admit, it is wonderful to have a bit of my life back. Like I said, we still care for our grandson and my father-in-law, but it isn’t the 24/7 draining kind. After what we did, this is a piece of cake.
What I guess I am trying to say to you, jontur, is there will come a day when you will have your life back, even though it may not seem like it at the current time. I know when I was tied to my mother and the house 24 hours a day, I thought I was never, ever going to have a life again. I hope your daughter’s needs are not so severe that they require you to have 24/7 in home devotion to her. You deserve to have a life and some free time to call your soul your own. It is worth every penny you may have to spend for respite care. The time you are spending with your mother will bring beautiful memories and cherished times you would never have if she were in a care facility. When all the doctors and nurses were telling me I needed to place my mother in a facility I fought with them tooth and nail to keep her with me. They told me she would have been gone over a year before she died if I had not cared for her. Those precious times with my mother were gifts from God and I wouldn’t trade those moments for all the freedom in the world. Remember when things get unbearable, stop and think it will all end one of these days and all you will have left are those treasured memories.
Allow yourself the bad thoughts, they are only natural, for they too have there place in the stress of care giving. During those times, come to this site and share with others who will understand and not judge. And then go back and grab a hold of those special minutes in time that will stay in your heart forever and realize what a wonderful daughter, mother and person you are. Your brother and sister can not hold a candle to you and someday, they will realize what they missed. You truly are a beautiful person and immense blessing your mother and daughter. You carry a strength and love in your heart your sister and brother will never know.
Even through all the heartache and suffering with my sister-in-law, my mother-in-law, my mother and now my father-in-law, I wouldn’t go back and change a single moment or decision we made keeping them with us. My only regret is I couldn’t have made their suffering and struggles go away. I look at those times now and wonder how I made it through, but it was one day, one hour, one second at a time putting one foot in front of the other and doing what I had to do to manage. You discover a lot about yourself and what you are made of when you survive the tough times. You are a truly loving, caring, kind and good person, jontur, as well as, all the others who so selflessly give of themselves so others can find love, security and as much happiness as possible as they struggle through this life too. Hang in there, you are not alone, there are many of us who have been there and done that in very similar fashion. All I can say is enjoy those special times, for they will all too soon be over and there will only be fond memories in your heart to hold instead of your mother. What I wouldn’t give to put my arms around my mother just one more time and tell her I love her just one more time. God bless.
Cleaning up for the day... Almost time to start job #2 (ha ha ha)... Hang in there everyone. We'll all be here tomorrow - God willing :)
I've also started a small group of ladies on Facebook (most of them being classmates of mine back in the 60's all going thru the same "living with a parent with dementia/alzheimers". We laugh * Cry * vent * and sometimes just be silly ..it helps so much. I pray for all here who are making this sacrafice for their loved ones...we are a special breed...God Bless.
You are a strong woman and I'm sure you will be able to care for your mom, just remember to care for yourself too. That can be very hard when you are out of funds. Would your mother qualify for Hospice? My mom has a nurse come in twice a week and an aide comes 5 days a week to bathe and dress her. That is a tremendous blessing. It wouldn't hurt to check on this.
I too am isolated much of the time. I've found out who my real friends are. Mostly cyber friends I've met on this site. I thank god that I've found them. It helps me stay sane. I mostly post on the Grossed Out thread, but sometimes I just have to drop in to others when I feel expecially drawn to the plight of a caregiver. Generally one thread is as supportive as another, but I like to stay with one so I can develop personal relationships with ones I talk to the most. Stay with this website and I promise you it will help.
A big hug to you,
Ann