She is 84 and had a stroke a couple months ago. Although she can maneuver fairly well with walker assistance, she is no longer able to live by herself. I am a single mom, and my son will be moving out within the next month to a place of his own. I was looking forward, at 55 years old, to finally, for the 1st time in my life, taking care of just myself, enjoying time alone (which i love and crave), and this happened. Now im mentally devestated. My mom and i are extremely different, yet we get along fairly well because i do what i have to make it that way. She has another daughter and a son, but they live too far away to be of assistance. Mom is not financially able to live in assisted care, and refuses to be anywhere than with me. Im having a very difficult time being a shell of an existence. My mother did not raise me, yet we have been close most of our lives. I just to know how to find a way to accept my new responsibility, knowing that it will change everything about what i was looking forward to. I know this isnt how my mom had hoped to be either. She is a beautiful lady, and i would never say anything that would hurt her feelings. Telling her how im feeling is not an option. It would destroy the level of calm that exists now between us.
t took me five years to discover there are "Frail Elder Waivers" that we received with the help of a elder lawyer who is savvy in things medicare and medicaid. My ADW is now receiving terrific caregiving paid for HER medicaid because they separated my assets and income from her's. Processing a waiver is for the strong of heart. We have had terrific advice and suggestions from our local Alzheimer's org. Funding for A Aging Agencies is such that if they don't know you and you you luck out with a seasoned case manager you don't learn of publicized help. Ask and push for help ...be assertive and nice...
The poster who said this is in an entirely different situation, IMO. Caring for a spouse. A spouse is someone you choose, someone you make commitments to that are intended to be for life, and someone who hopefully would do the same for you if positions were reversed. I do believe in caring for one's spouse if he or she becomes disabled. I don't agree with any obligation to sacrifice yourself for someone you did not choose or make any mutual commitments to. That's not living up to your end of the bargain - it's out-and-out self-sacrifice. I don't believe you have any obligation to sacrifice the quality of your life for the quality of your mother's life, especially not for an indefinite period of time that will only end upon her death.
It's one thing to give up a week or two, maybe a month even, while looking for a placement for Mom. It's another thing to become the placement, indefinitely, when you already know you have neither the desire nor the willingness to do that.
We had horrible blow outs as she slowly realized she could make the mental switch to relying on others and having me as her backbone support: my duties are one daily phone call, once a week shopping, emergencies, and anything else she can't get someone else to do or do herself. She's 94 and relatively healthy. I am lucky but it was hard emotional work to go through this.
She'll be aging in place no matter what.
Use every darn resource your community and the government offers while we still have it! It's a matter of survival. Good luck!
I like freqflyer's idea of establishing boundaries in advance, but it wouldn't have worked for me and it still really doesn't. I had no idea how my mom was going to respond to getting help from her children. Greedy, demanding, entitled, always asking for one more thing than I would have done voluntarily. Responding to any resistance with hissy fits and guilt tripping. To this day, I can't get her to ask for help in a manner that sounds like an actual request and not a politely-phrased order. Those parent-child dynamics freqflyer mentioned - if she treats you like you're twelve years old, it almost doesn't matter how you respond - if you're anything like me you'll be furious no matter how you respond.
The likelihood is you'll also become furious with your siblings for not contributing, not calling you to offer support, going on their regular vacations instead of coming to relieve you with Mom for a week, etc.
Don't go into a situation knowing you'll be an unhappy caregiver. It's much harder to unwind one of these situations than to not step into it to begin with.
Take care of yourself!
Carol
The level of calm that exists between you is based on the falsehood that you are happy with this situation. I'm going to mull that over for a while and come back to it. Would you like to do the same?
Before your Mom moved in set boundaries NOW. Depending on her medical issues, you and her can be like best-friends room-mates each with your own set of chores. If you plan to be away for the day, you should be able to leave the house without having to answer to Mom, just let her know you are leaving. Maybe for an extra sense of protection, get her one of those medical alert devices to wear.
If Mom no longer drives, she will need to plan ahead on what she needs... that is where I had wished I had set boundaries with my own parents, they had me on the road going here, there, and everywhere, and got to a point where I hated to drive. I couldn't get my folks to use the internet to shop and have deliveries made to the house. Nor would they call a taxi.
And whatever happens, try not to have the child-parent dynamics happening where Mom thinks you are 16 and needs to know what you are doing every minute. Even though you mentioned that she didn't raise you, she might want to correct that by wanting to oversee everything you are doing.
Hope this will be a win-win situation for the both of you :)