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.
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.
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.
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.
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?
this is when we decided mom could no longer live on her own and placed her in a assisted living facility.
it’s a very sad disease that definitely needs research to help the aging population we will have with all these baby boomers.
prayers to you…
You take her. No options.
You cannot talk 'reason' to a person with hallucinations.
If needed, you make up a story "we are going to the park to see the flowers and birds." - you do whatever works to gain her cooperation to get in the car and go.
Your mother should NOT be living alone-if she is living with you, doors may need to have locks so she cannot go outside unescorted. She may need to be in a facility with 24/7 care.
You need to educate yourself on what dementia is, i.e.,
* The different kinds of dementia
* How the different kinds of dementia affect different parts of the brain, and how.
* How the brain changes.
* You are 'trying' or expecting to talk to your mother as if her brain / cognitive functioning is in 'full tact.' It isn't. [You may feel you are very very respectful listening to her and giving her options however this doesn't work any longer.]
* You need to 'meet her where she is now,' which is having visions / experiences 'in her mind's eye / brain = hallucinations.
Read / google Teepa Snow. Learn what is going on in your mom's brain so you can better manage the situation. Speak to her with compassion/ate understanding knowing she is seeing and hearing things that are not there. It is her brain chemistry changing / losing brain cells.
Medication may help. Get her to an MD ASAP.
Gena / Touch Matters
I wonder if melatonin will work as I wished she can take that. This goes on everyday and 8-12 hours a day. Nothing you can say or do but nod. If you say that isn’t true she becomes irate for hours. She just sits in her electric recliner and hollers they also coming in from the TV.
Anyone with ideas ? I can only tried to divert attention to something else for her.
These are your words not anyone else's. What does that say to you about what condition your mother is in mentally?
It says to me that she's not in her right mind. For whatever the reason is, dementia, a UTI, a TIA.... there's no way of finding out unless she goes to a hospital.
If you have to have her transported against her will, do that. I'm surprised the police didn't do that when she called them at 5 in the morning about the spy cameras filming her.
It may turn out to be something that can be treated with medication like a UTI or a staph infection (they wreck havoc on a senior's mental state too). It could be Alzheimer's or some other form of dementia. Does she have a history of mental illness? It sounds like she might.
It may be time to consider placing her in a care facility.
TIAs are used often by a NH or a MC or a AL when they have a resident that they want to get rid of as TIAs are real real subjective as to how they “present” or look. So the usual take will be is they seem to be not connecting their words, or there’s seems to be a sense of vacantness about them, or their movement seems weird. And TIAs can be real fleeting, so they can pass quickly. Perhaps some of the RNs on this site can chime in on TIAs???
But TIAs can be viewed as a precursor to a stroke so should be seen by health care provider in appropriate setting and presto! that means mom needs to go to the ER or ED and get seen there so then once she’s there, you tell them all about the other issues….. multiple UTIs and her very much noncompliance for treatment on those UTIs so she gets admitted as a patient (not observation but a full on patient in the hospital) and once she’s admitted you then refuse to take her home as it WOULD BE AN UnSAfE DISCHARGE as you cannot provide the care and oversight needed for her. What all this does is buys you time to get a clear picture of just wtf is wrong with her and hopefully get her on proper meds. If she’s C diff, push to have her hospitalized for that treatment as could be couole of weeks & yes Medicare will pay. Plus gives her behavioral drugs time to get going in her bloodstream & brain for the win!
if mom has one of her psychotic episodes while in the ER, let her. That she goes there’s aliens under my bed, let it roll. You want her hospitalized.
once this is somewhat settled - whether it’s she’s going to be in a behavioral unit for a period of time or sent over to rehab or she’s after a couple of weeks sent home on mood stabilization drugs - then you can start to deal with her financials and property ownership issues and what that could mean for your own future financial stability. That’s to me more of a springtime thing. Realistically until she stops being batcrap crazy nothing can be done on that front. She really can’t sign stuff right now as not competent and cognitive or appear to be even if she would be pleasant and willing to sit at a bank to do what needed totally solo in a bank officers office. Fwiw imho if she sadly is going to stay crazy, then the path is guardianship and you’re going to need all these recent hospitalization records to establish need for guardianship. Getting her onto hospital records and in detail mucho importante, you see where I’m going in this, right?
also please pls do get yourself some real sleep. You have to be able to think clearly and answer questions clearly. Let us know how things go. Many of us on this site have been where you are.
If you are the POA, just take her or call an ambulance to take her if it gets out of hand. It's tough love but sometimes it can get physical if the hallucinations are too bad.
If this is just due to alzheimers or cognitive decline, and not from an infection, my best advice is to NOT try to correct everything they're saying. It only causes more stress and frustration for them. I took care of a man who consistently hallucinated that he was playing baseball, basketball, or working on the farm. So instead of telling him that we weren't doing those things I'd ask him who was winning.
Also, there is a pressure point on the butt of your palm about halfway between your thumb and wrist that when massaged, will calm a person down at least a couple notches pretty quick. I would say, oh your hands look a little dry, I'll rub some lotion on. He'd be fast asleep in under 2 minutes. Hope this helps and good luck.
I hope you can use the Baker Act. Good luck to you in this dreadful situation.
Find out if the home is destroyed, doe the insurance only pay for rebuilding, or can you just get the money? Some people in Florida were blindsided when they found out they had to rebuild after hurricanes because that’s the way their insurance reimbursed them.
How folks get around this is: If you’re well off, you have no mortgage and self insure. Or it’s owned by a LLC that has the ability to self insure. But for average folks, totally screwed unless you keep the homes assessor value low enough to be able to get total coverage by NFIP for flood or State Wind Pool for Windstorm. Only bright light in this is FL insurance crisis is way worse as they have so much more exposure.
On the have to rebuild, yes that is how policy’s are done…. older retired friends of ours when Katrina hit the coast had pretty snazzy primary home. House 800K+ completely gone, pier & bulkhead completely gone, 200K sailboat gone. So over 1M claim. Really good specialty coverage & paid out less depreciation without too much sass which was a rarity for Katrina claim. Right after Katrina, went & bought a condo over in Fairhope (couple hrs away) as an interim place till things settled down & could take their time 2 rebuild as infrastructure was wiped out. About a yr later got a demand letter from insurer for over half a million $ as they had not complied with terms of their policy on rebuilding. LSS condo was too modest in cost & no boat! Lawyers hired & after much back & forth they ended up having to buy another condo and a boat and actually go above the balance of the insurance payout in order to keep the $. Had to get all sorts of letters from county & Fema as to why bulkhead and pier could not yet be rebuilt to keep that payout. These folks had time & $ & resources to do all this. But most stuck in the aftermath of a disaster do not. Dealing with post Katrina stuff was a real touchstone for me…… it was dealing with all types of insurance and real estate issues plus a little bit of everything “at need” either for me or my fam or my MiL. I kept a diary for 2 years. It’s pretty crazy rereading.
You should call 911 and ask for transport to hospital. Do not say this has been happening for a while, but rather say that your mother is hallucinating and you are scared to death she has sustained stroke or other blow to her head from fall, etc. That she needs assessment and doesn't understand she does, and will not allow you to get her to the ER.
The word "stroke" to EMS means they must act QUICKLY to get someone assessed, and so you may want to elaborate on some garbling of speech, whatever it takes to get them to take her to the ER. The more irrational SHE is with them, the better, the more likelihood they will get her in to be assessed.
Once at the ER you need to get everyone on board for a good neuro-psych evaluation and all the testing. Access Social Services as soon as possible.
This has been going on for a while from what you say. This could be untreated infection, but it sounds more like dementia to me, and Mom needs a baseline assessment now. Things cannot go on in this manner.
If none of this works, that is to say, if EMS believes your Mom and refuses to transport her it is time to call APS and tell them what is happening, and that you are incapable of getting your mother to care.
I sure wish you luck. You must be feeling so helpless. Do update us as to whether or not you get your Mom to assessment.
The next time you make a trip to the ER for a UTI or for ANY reason she lands in the hospital you talk to the Social Worker or the Dr. or PA that is assigned and tell them what is going on and that she needs to be evaluated that "SHE IS NOT SAFE AT HOME" and honestly YOU are not safe in the house with her if she is able to shut off the gas or possibly do other dangerous things.
She needs to be evaluated and proper medication needs to be prescribed.
She can not be comfortable with the delusions and possible hallucinations she is having.
When my sister was having hallucinations and delusions it ended up being pneumonia , sepsis, and metabolic encephalopathy .
My FIL's hallucinations got so much worse when he got C-Diff. He was already in a SNF but he called DH and we had to talk him down several times until he felt safe because he thought he was trapped in a church basement, he thought he was at a party in the woods, he thought that the CNAs and nurses were locking him in his room (he had a new roommate and the curtain was pulled for the first time, so he couldn't see the door). But he was SCREAMING at us and wanting to know if we were in the parking lot coming to help him. It was really very sad and we had to call the nurses station at a couple of points to have him sedated.
This was before anyone realized he even had C-Diff because there were no signs - he was just being treated for the UTI and he was quite literally a danger to himself because he kept trying to get out of the bed to run away and kept falling because he didn't remember he couldn't walk. They lowered his bed and had to give him something to calm him down.
C-Diff can hang around for a long time - especially untreated. And even treated it takes a while to get out of your system - and can recur.
Before you jump to dementia - she definitely needs to be assessed for a UTI or C-diff - but unfortunately she may end up having to be admitted against her will to get that diagnosis if she won't go willingly because she is a danger to herself at this point.