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I have been picking up my dad for Sunday dinner for two years now. Last week was a nightmare. It is so hard to get him into the apartment in that wheelchair. (over the threshold). He is about 200 lbs. I have to pick up the front and my sister pushes from the back just to get him in the apartment. He has Parkinsons so his breathing is very labored. Especially when eating. His nose runs profusely, and he spills a lot. I know he can't help it but his eating habits make us nauseous we can't eat when he is eating. Then he sleeps the for a couple of hours afterwards. He wakes up confused. Mistakes his wheelchair for a walker and tries to walk to the bathroom. I have to reason with him to sit down in the wheelchair. Our bathroom only fits in the bathroom straight in and back straight out. He tries to turn the wheelchair around in the bathroom! Then he can't stand by himself so I have to stand behind him. He leans back really really hard. I prop my feet against the wall to hold all his weight (and him pushing backwards) to make sure he doesn't fall back. Then he forgets where he is and keeps asking where we are going.
Really long story... I don't want to pick him up anymore. It's just too hard. We told him and he had a meltdown, demanding that we take him to our apartment or out to a restaurant. I want to just visit and not take him anywhere. How do I handle this?

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"I don't want to pick him up anymore. It's just too hard. We told him and he had a meltdown, demanding that we take him to our apartment or out to a restaurant. I want to just visit and not take him anywhere. How do I handle this?"

Just keep saying no. No dad we are not able to take you out to dinner or to our apartment anymore, but we would love to have dinner with you at your facility.

He will throw a temper tantrum but just like a child you will have to stand your ground and not do it anymore. You and your sister could really injure yourselves trying to bring his wheel chair up the stairs, not to mention the bathroom incident your described with holding his weight like that.

Back injuries are nothing to sneeze at and could debilitate you for life from just one injury.
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Reply to sp196902
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Your father now likely also suffers from Parkinson's dementia which makes it impossible for him to understand why his demands are so unreasonable. Or that his table manners are so gross, etc. He's lost his empathy and power of using logic and reason now, unfortunately.

You are the person making decisions for dad now. You'll be happy to bring him some homemade food on Sunday at his place, or dine with him in the dining room. But you'll no longer be picking him up to take him to your apartment or to restaurants. It's too hard on your back and you can't handle it anymore, period. If he has meltdowns, he'll live thru them. Trust me on that.

We cannot always accommodate our parents every wish when they're old and infirm, nor should we try to. And please leave guilt out of this. You've done it for 2 years and that's plenty. I had to stop picking my mother up and taking her to my house or to restaurants when she became wheelchair bound with dementia too. It was just too much.

Best of luck to you.
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Reply to lealonnie1
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Good advice already given, I’ll only add after you’ve told dad you’re not bringing him out anymore, and what the alternative plan is, don’t keep having the conversation. You’ve answered it, going over it again and again is useless and frustrating for you both, so don’t participate at all in the talk. I wish you peace
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Reply to Daughterof1930
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Thanks everyone for the advise. We did stick to our guns... he isn't thrilled but is accepting it.
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Reply to jenniferheady
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Beatty Jul 12, 2024
While it is natural & understandable to be upset at what we lose.. maybe Dad can re-focus on how lucky he is..? To have family that care, family that will bring a tasty dinner to him. Many don't.
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I was just going to say what @SP said, your going to hurt yourself. Mostly your back.

Your going to have to say No , that's really all there is to it. There is nothing more you can do. I know it's hard, and it's hard for you to. Hard to not have your dad be able to come to your home, and hard to watch him eat.

I get it, every thing is starting to feel like , the last, and you don't want it to be and neither does dad. Your morning those last , and it feels a little like guilt.

Tell him, it's just not safe, your sorry he is aging , and aging just really bites!

Best of luck
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Reply to Anxietynacy
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So he has a meltdown…..did you give in when one of your kids had one? Is this any different?
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Reply to lkdrymom
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Not easy for him, either. These trips are probably the only times he would go out

That being said, sad these have to end. In a way, he probably realizes this too, but won't admit it
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Reply to cover9339
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I so hope your Dad is in a care facility. If not, he should be if Dementia is now present.

No is a one word sentence. You won't do it anymore. Someone is going to get hurt and it won't be you. You don't even sit down to eat dinner with him. So taking it to him would be no different, really. Also, when you say No, your not responsible for the reaction you get.
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Reply to JoAnn29
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Things in life change and we have to change with it. For the elderly that is hard. They don't look at their children as having health problems and becoming seniors too. Taking Dad to your apt is no longer doable. Its what it is. If he can't understand that, then oh well.
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Reply to JoAnn29
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After my last Christmas with my father, I realized we could no longer bring him home as it was too much work. It was impossible to host and be his transportation and hand maiden. He announced he could no longer use the bathroom on his own and I only have a tiny powder room on the first floor. My son, me, my father and his walker had to squeeze in there. My son had to hold him up while I had to do things I don't ever want to think about again. After that day I knew I was done. Luckily Covid hit before the next holiday so I didn't have to tell him of my decision.
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