Is it even possible? Hub says my mom spoils for fights and wants to argue w. everyone. He says she'd poke a bear for a response. I am not sure of all that but when she screams at me or lies about me or something that has happened it is difficult for me to handle. She is mean, bitter and hateful. I want to get through to her. There are still good days but when this is an every day thing it is really hard. I prefer to be calm and peaceful... I want to be positive, serene and like a duck... roll it alllll off my back. Mom is exact opposite. I try the "calm down" "settle down" approach in soothing, mantra style voice. It doesnt work as well as it used to. So... then I catch myself screaming back. Today she began yelling that I said she was stupid, an idiot, and had brain damage. I never once said this today or EVER. But she continues to say I did and it comes up often. So, after insulting me about the way hub and I do things and how we do nothing right and a few more times saying I said shes stupid/idiot/brain damaged... I finally yelled back. I am not proud of it and as soon as I did she caught me on it like "what are you doing right now?" (screaming!!!) if a stranger heard this they would think I am abusive to her which is so far from the truth. Who calls people stupid and idiots except for abusive people and I promise I have not said that about her. I think shes intelligent! Hub says he doesnt care what anyone thinks... as no one but us does anything (friends who may comment) no family here and I am her only child. Sometimes I like to pretend or daydream I had children who could go take care of her but that just leads me back to negativity or sadness as I don't have kids and why would I want to put them through this anyway? I guess I needed to vent as I know I should just keep my mouth shut around mom and just agree but that gives me headaches too. My hub retired from law enforcement so hes met all types and hes told me my mom is one of the meanest and difficult people hes ever met. I guess I don't want to accept that. I have to learn boundaries. Thank God for my hub who helps me but hes only 10 years younger than my mom and she treats both he and me like we are ten years old and he works his butt off for mom and me too! Anyway... all this said... tell me how you remain kind, positive, happy, sweet, gentle? I want those things. I don't want to turn out like my mother. And I don't want to stroke out from all the stress. I told her one time recently how stressed I was and she made fun of me for ages. "What do youuuu have to be stressed about?" I turned with tears in my eyes, did not respond that *she* was my biggest stress and then just listened for days to jokes about me not having any stress :( ... I do things for my mother because she's all I got other than hubby. I do it cos I do love her and its the right thing. I do it even as a "religious" type thing... yknow honor mom so you'll live long. Mom talks how bad a life she has tho. She doesn't! Ive been reading on this site longer than joining just the other day. Prolly reading nine months. Some nights hours at a time. It has been one thing that has helped as you can't vent to friends too many times before they give you just cliches and you can tell they are tired of it and have their own probs. Even when they ask "hows mom" I have trouble responding as I dont want to "out" her or talk about all that goes on each and every day. Im damed if I do and damned if I don't. Half the people say things like, "you'll be like that one day... we all get old" (uh I'm already old and I do NOT ever want to be like that...will try hard not to be!) and the other half, "why didn't you warn me...she's so mean...what's wrong with her?" etcetc so im glad I have this place. Thankful you all are here x hugs x
From your description it sounds like she has dementia. Definitely some mental health issue! What was she like while you were growing up?
Does it help to keep telling yourself, "This isn't my real mother. This is the mental illness."
Honoring you mother means (in my interpretation) seeing that she has life's necessities and the best care available to her. It may be that at this point in her mental illness she cannot receive the best care in her daughter's home. This is her limitation -- certainly not your failure. All of you might be happier and she might find some serenity if she were in a care center that could deal with her outbursts without getting emotional.
"Mom, I know you think we aren't doing our best for you. You are unhappy here, and that makes me very sad for you. I have found two very nice places where you could live and hopefully get the care you deserve. We can visit each and see which one you like."
And ionehart, please don't be too hard on yourself for losing your patience sometimes. You are in a very challenging situation.
Jeanne, once I had just taken so much of the negative verbal abuse from my mom. Yes I know it is the disease but it can still hurt your heart. I did similar to what you said, "Mom, I love you and I am doing my best but if you think I am doing such a bad job, I will take to to visit some nursing homes and you can pick one. No one else is willing or able to care for you. So you have me, or a nursing home." Interestingly she went quiet, and later told me she was sorry and loved me. I have always felt guilty for sinking to that level, but.... Well at least I did really see that she does, deep inside, appreciate me. I never did that again. Mom every now and then would have more "with it" moments and always would say sorry and that she lives me.
I also tell people that one of my grandsons (who was 18 months at the time) taught me how to deal with Mom. She was stage 5-6 Alzheimer's, in a wheel chair. He loved her so much and would come in, stand on her wheelchair foot rests, lovingly look up at her and say, "hi bramma marbo"... If she was in a grumpy mood, she might say, "get away from here"...he would lovingly smile, wave and say,"okay, bye" and go play for about 5 minutes. Then her would come back and again approach her with his same loving, happy way... Almost every time her attitude would shift and she would say, "I love you". They still have a very special little relationship.
After so many years of caregiving, mom was diagnosed in 2009, I have just found that if I am frustrated, I need to walk away. Go do laundry, mop the floor, take out the trash... Then reproach in a fresh positive attitude. It is difficult...I always say you couldn't pay me to do this job...only love for my mom would be good reason.
It's my DH and not my mom but you get the picture.
I am having the same problem with my mom. Have you had her hearing checked? Because my mom can't hear good, she thinks everyone is talking about her too. It can get very frustrating sometimes. We are going to get her a hearing aid when she can get back on her feet after a big fall. I hate to say, but I just try and stay out of her way as much as possible, for my peace of mind! Best of luck to you!
My mother has dementia mid stage 5/6 combo and lives in an Assisted Living Memory Care. She rarely yells at me but can get her digs in without doing it. Mother is an undiagnosed narcissist and the adult child of an abusive alcoholic father. I am her only child and adopted by she and my father at 7 weeks. He died 24 years ago next month. She continued to live her life in the house they built 3 hours away and came to live with me after total knee replacement in 2013 and again in Jan 2015. We managed okay but the interpersonal difficulties that had started becoming more frequent from 2005 to present only got worse after we built a house together in Fall 2015 and moved from our previous home of 23 years. The change of location really threw her into a tizzy and that led to an eventual dementia diagnosis. Mom was always jealous of my relationship with dad, still is and does not get that it is not because 'she had to work as a librarian' while we spent his days off together. He gave me very unconditional love and she does not have the capacity to do this but is very conditional with her love. The turning things around on you "saying I said shes stupid/idiot/brain damage" is called 'projection'. They (narcissists) think and feel these things about themselves but because of their fragile egos they cannot and will not admit it to themselves or others. Mom tells me all the time that "I hate her and do not love her" yet it truly feels that is how she feels about me as I feel emotionally abused much of the time. It may be that she hates herself and cannot love herself as my therapist has suggested. The reason I say she is a narcissist is because of all the reading on this website and after researching it it became clear I was dealing with not-a-normal-mother. Know that none of us can take emotional, verbal abuse and manipulation for long without an effect on us. Occasional outbursts are sure to come but think on this, she may just be wanting to get her narcissistic feed (drama) from you which is why she provokes. I hope you can get some respite from her tantrums and walk away from her anytime she starts in on you or the hubs. Hugs to you!
It's time to get your mom a cognitive evaluation. Just speak to her doctor about it, and he/she will add it to her next exam.
I feel your pain. Grandma was fairly abusive to her kids (I didn't know until it came my way) so I spend a lot of time wondering how much of this is her disease, and how much of it is her personality that she hid from me my whole life. That's the hardest part. I can't just say "it's not her, it's the disease" because I'm discovering, at least in part, it is her.
Now she's reached the point where she can't articulate like she used to and most sentences, while sentences with actual real words, make no contextual sense, so there is no more verbal abuse.
Now it's just wanting constant loving attention. And when I say constant, I mean constant. As in every moment of the day. And if there is no attention (say I look away and check my email for a minute), then the meltdown comes in the form of tears and threats of suicide. Sometimes I just have to walk away. I ask my husband to talk to her or take her outside. Or something just to give me a moment's peace. Sometimes, I take my phone in the bathroom and after telling her I have to go to the bathroom, that's when the fan goes on and I have my 15 minutes of peace.
I've ultimately learned my own breaking point. And while I feel a little guilty and wish I had more patience, my brothers and sisters agree that she would be better in a group home where she can have caregivers give her attention all day long and throughout the night and we can give her love and attention during the day but be able to leave when we need to without worrying that she is unsafe. I can handle the showering, cleaning up, med administration, and general helping that she needs.
But it's the constant attention I can't do. I'm only human. Even with my kids, they could occupy themselves for a few minutes at a time at babies and longer as toddlers. She cannot occupy herself for even a moment. It's devastating!
So I have a light at the end of my tunnel. When I get things settled with her medically in the next month or so, I will be moving her to the state where my brothers live (and where she lived before she came to live with me) and starting the placement process. I'm going to stay with her throughout that process then return home. I doubt she will like it, but at the same time she is always saying she hates it here and wants to go home, so I don't think she will be "happy" anywhere. I think we will all have to settle for safe and cared for.
If your loved one doesn't qualify for Medicaid so you can put her in a nursing home and private pay isn't an option, then...how about noise cancelling headphones? I know this may read ridiculous but I use these whenever my mother is having the temper tantrum from H*ll. I actually double up; I wear ear plugs, put on the headphones and then do what I need do. My mother is very, very reactive whenever I or another caregiver touches her, like bathing her or changing her diaper. She just wants to be left alone. Just because I'm taking care of her doesn't mean that I neglect myself and I refuse to let her screaming blow my eardrums - and the neighbors, too. Before I doubled up on ear protection, her screaming would get to me and I would scream back at her some very nasty stuff. I would then immediately leave the room to cry it out. It was then I realized I have to do something because I was fully aware her screaming is the disease process.
I completely understand where you are coming from and how you feel. This is an everyday struggle that my hubby and I deal with as well. I am so sorry that she hurt you and didn't even acknowledge how truly stressed you were. Then to make jokes about it {{ HUGS }}. I too feel I'm damned if I do and damned if I don't. That in its self is very frustrating!
I'm here to listen anytime. I may not have an answer for what you are going through all the time. But just sharing with others, I believe it helps us cope.
I'm not going to let dementia/Alzheimer's change me into a person I don't want to be around. I will, however, let it change me into a more caring, kind, patient and compassionate person. The many lessons to learn about yourself when dealing with someone who has dementia/Alzheimer's. Life changing in a powerful and positive way. Good Luck. Take care of yourself and hub.