When we visit my husband in dementia care facllity he immediately asks "When can I go home" Or, I want to go with you and stay at your house.
We try to divert but this works only for 2 min and he asks again and again. And we go in this circle until we are worn out and have to leave.
My question is: Are we using the wrong type of diversion? We have also tried to explain that he needs "special" care which only the people here can give you.
Or the dr said you must stay here for awhile His reply is I have never seen a dr. there is no dr here. (The dr sees him once a week)
Any help from anyone who has gone through this?
Divert. If they complain about the food, offer to bring a favorite approved snack or take them to lunch or breakfast. If they complain about being in a home or AL, etc., I just say I have no say in it, that the attorney is overseeing it along with the doctor and I just say I'll look into it a bit.
I used to want to say "you're in this home because you forgot to eat and thought people were talking to you through your heat vents and you dropped your lit cigarette on your bed and nightgown and there were burn holes all over." Now I just say, you're looking better and let's keep mending, and I leave time out of it, except for things like "I'll be there Saturday at noon to take you to the shoe store," things like that.
Learning to stop reasoning and arguing is huge. And hard to do... You always expect a partner or parent to know better, and sadly they don't once dementia sets in. And if it's a bad day, usually it'll pass. Sunny days seem to be better, too. If it's overcast and sleeting my mom acts like a crabby toddler. If it's 70 and sunny, she's in much better spirits and mindset. (Has anyone else noticed that?)
On your "heavenly home" comment, I have not ruled that out! When my father had dementia and was in the home, he would report to me that he had visitors - and they were always friends or relatives who had predeceased him. I have not ruled out the possibility that as he got "closer to the door," these people were coming to greet him in preparation for the final journey "home."
Three months before he died, my FIL got up early one morning saying that this wasn't his home and she wasn't his wife, it was a trick.
Dementia is a terrible disease, robbing them of their minds and us of our loved ones long before they pass.
When my mother does, it will not be a shock at all for me because, actually, I lost her years ago. I do see a faint shadow of who she was in her now. But mostly, the person she was has already left. I have had years to adjust/grieve and am truly grateful for that.
I also did not ever say "goodbye I am going home". I asked a staff member to distract him and I left quietly. When he remembered me, he looked for me at the center. He always thought I was around somewhere.
I just tell her "this is your home". She is in a group home that is very nice and they treat her very well. She doesn't like the food there because it's an Asian home. I bring her comfort food a lot. Choose a place that is close to you so you can visit frequently. I know it is so very difficult. I still feel very guilty for uprooting my mom who lost her husband and lived in MO and I live in AZ. Tried to do assisted living in IL for her and that did not work. Put her in an nursing home in Missouri which I hated and finally paid some people to kidnap her and bring her to AZ. I was in the car every step of the way and it was so difficult. So glad I brought her here. I am able to see her every single day.
May I ask where you are/he is?
May I ask where you are? California? New York? Mississippi?
Even if you found the old homeplace that they have in their mind from childhood, once they arrived, it might upset them, since the building may be in ashes and neglected.
Your home may not be what they expect either. That might be upsetting to them. And of course, that might not be the place they recall after all. So, you then return them to the Memory Care and they are disoriented and confused. So, I'd be aware of what potentially could happen if the person with the dementia is allowed to make their own decisions. I discovered this with my loved one by taking her out of her Memory Care for visits.