I have no idea on what to do my mother is hearing full on conversations that I can't hear, and she says it is because the neighbors programed the AI for just her to hear them. On New Year’s Day I was woken up at 5am in the morning with police in the house wanting to ask me questions. My mother called the police and told them the neighbors drilled under the house to put spy cameras in the vents and used the video to make porn. None of which was true and they told me to get her to a doctor. My mother will not go to a doctor because she thinks it's all real. My mother woke me up at 3am she was outside said the house fell off the foundation and we have a crack in the roof. I had a foundation company look at the house nothing wrong with the house then she said I wonder why the neighbor lied to me then. The neighbor’s never even spoke to her it's all in her head. Then she said she had to turn the gas office in the house because the people in the furnace told the house was going to explode then she told me to look outside they were out there fixing it now. There was nobody outside we had freezing rain that night and I needed the heat back on before we had a bigger problem. How does someone out of their mind know how to shut the gas off? Today she saying we have hole in the foundation and it's a mess so she going to call a lawyer and sue the neighbors. The neighbors have done nothing to the house. I don’t know what to do.
The Doctor wants to give you a general health check? They are into preventative health measures now!
Lets get the Doctor to look at that Mole on your back?
Then inform the Doctor separately of the real reason for the appointment?
Here is a cut and paste from my recent book "Dementia Care Companion":
Sometimes it is difficult to tell the difference between hallucination and other conditions such as illusion, delusion, or delirium. The problem is compounded by the fact that the patient is often unable to articulate what they are experiencing. As a result, it may take some detective work to determine which condition is present. Proper detection is critical, however, since each symptom is a clue to underlying conditions and a possible warning sign that may need to be addressed right away.
Illusion
"It is near sunset. A gentle breeze moves the curtains. Grandpa believes someone is hiding behind the curtains. You turn on the light and pull the curtains aside. He sees that no one is there and accepts that he was mistaken."
In the case of illusion, the patient misperceives or misinterprets external stimuli, such as a sight or a sound, and confuses one thing for another. They may think that patterns on a rug are live insects, or a belt is a snake. They may mistake a distant sound for someone calling and may get dressed and leave home to investigate. However, they can usually be convinced that they are mistaken.
Delusion
"Grandpa is convinced that a neighbor is hiding behind the bushes and is spying on him. You take him outside and show him that there’s no one hiding there. He accepts that no one is there but still believes the neighbor is spying on him."
Delusion is rooted in an internal belief, rather than external or internal stimuli. The patient does not see or hear things, real or imagined. The belief exists on its own.
us fortunately . She would clear off her side table with one sweep of her hand. She used vulgar speech and cuss words that she would never use. She would wander and try to go outside to yell for help thinking we were holding her in prison. I could go on and on. My sister and I took turns being with her while we continued to work our full time jobs. Mom’s gerontologist coached us on how to give Mom compassion and tender care. Mom refused to go to doctors so we would video tape her current behaviors and emailed them to her doctor. As Mom’s dementia worsened we had an arsenal of tools that worked great. The medications the Dr prescribed eliminated most of her frightening delusions and hallucinations. We learned to
Live In her delusions or hallucinations . The last thing you want to do is correct her or argue with her that what she hears or says isn’t real. They are most definitely real to them. Preserving her dignity and respect she deserves you don’t want her to feel belittled or stupid which will trigger more undesirable behaviors, fear and anger.
We learned to not ask her to make decisions which just frustrated her. We would say short words like Mom it’s time to eat. or get dressed or take your pills and so on. Luckily after the first consultation and MRI to make sure her brain was not affected by other reasons for example brain tumor or other space occupying lesions Her doctor fortunately prescribed dementia medication like Seroquel, Aricept, antidepressants, anti anxiety meds. The drugs permitted are prescribed to address the current symptoms as dementia worsens. Please do not ask her if she remembers an event, people…..and so on. Their long term memory seems better than the short memories. She eventually didn’t recognize us as her children. I became a close friend of hers from
school. I was Verna the funny one. My sister was a mischievous one. Of course we took on that person that was absolutely real to her.
Having said all that, dementia is a
family disease. It challenges every emotion you have . It is heartbreaking, confusing, scary.
incredibly difficult to the role reversal of u being the parent and her the child. It doesn’t matter how old u
r it still evokes strong emotions that can be difficult to handle. We
cried more tears than I can describe. Grieving is prolonged and real
Give you and your family grace since we all use different coping methods to experience this horrible,,ravaging disease that envelops misery frustration, helplessness , hopelessness, exhaustion to be their caregiver. There r many state of the art memory care facilities. They
are very expensive and not paid with insurance money If your
loved one could afford long term care insurance it can help. Please read the policy very closely and don’t miss the nuances written in it.
You are probably wondering why we didn’t put Mom in a memory care facility. It sure would have given us some respite We promised her when she was lucid and herself,
that we would never put her in nursing home, adult family home or whatever you call them “to wait to die”.
So sorry that you and your sister have to go through this with your mother. Dementia is a horrible disease. All of my aunts on my father’s side had dementia. Strangely, though, their brothers including my father did not have the disease.
So sorry that you are having a difficult time with your mother. You should call 911 when your mother is having these psychotic episodes and have the doctors at the hospital diagnose her.