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What bothers me the most is that my mother always argues with me about every single thing and never believes me. When she told relatives about her porch falling down I said, "No, it's not." Then she screamed at me, "Shut up!" Should we not correct people with Alzheimers? Just let it go? Just let them tell their stories?
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hereiam May 2023
You have to pick your battles. Some things are worth contradicting. You have to judge yourself, when it's worth it. HUG. You're doing your best.

Regarding her arguing with you, she likes it. It gives her an adrenaline rush. Makes her feel alive to argue! To try to make you miserable, stressed.
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For me it was missing my mom as she was and watching her wither away slowly. This is the worst disease so heartbreaking
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I'm really relating to the ALL ABOUT HER in the headline today. My mom has this image in her head of the attitude she thinks I should have toward her, namely the old 'sainted mother' routine. I guess *she* thought that about *her* mother, who was a homemaker, but I certainly don't think that about her. When I was a little kid mom went back to school, got a professional degree when I was 11 or 12. I mean, fine, more power to her, have a career, but the fact is that plus her extremely busy schedule of volunteer work meant I spent a lot of time alone. I don't really remember much time with her at all. I have one lots older half sibling who bullied me while Mom did nothing. Again, it seems like a lot but I've gone to therapy and dealt with some of it, and I'm willing to help Mom but as the saying goes I'm not willing to set myself on fire to keep her warm. According to her I should fix everything for her including stupid mistakes she made on her finances, such as very early retirement, selling all her stock at the bottom of the market in 2008 - now she can't afford to keep her hoarded house and is looking to me to help clear it since she's in her mid 80s and disabled.

I should note that Mom lifted not one finger for her own parents (since she was in another state busy with her career), and when my dad got sick from a terminal illness she left him and shunted his care off on me. I had to leave my own career and move back to our family's hometown to take care of him, luckily it all worked out b/c I met a guy here and got married, but I really would have chosen differently had I known how all of this would play out.

Mom is medically fragile with a couple of lung conditions and recently lied to me about going out to a gathering of people while unmasked, before she knew I could see her on Zoom, long story. Honestly I was so upset since I'm high risk covid myself that I told her I would need a little break from her and honestly it has been wonderful. I'm sure she's sitting over there stewing that I'm not waiting on her and jumping to her every beck and call, but y'all - I just can't. I don't think I had realized how depressed I've been dealing with both her and her sister to whom she's inordinately close, the same sister SCREAMED at me a couple of days ago for saying I was upset over Mom being reckless with her health and mine. How selfish I am, it's not all about me and on and on. I mean, what the heck? I know this sister doesn't think I'm doing enough for Mom, but she also didn't live through being ignored and bullied.

I just don't know how much more of this I can take. Mom won't call my half brother she wouldn't protect me from because she "doesn't like him" - well, what would she do if I died, or more likely moved as far away from here as I can get? She'd make do and frankly I think I'm going to stay away a while longer and make her find some other resources. I just can't carry this load any longer by myself, thank heaven for my cousin who takes care of my aunt or truly I would be in the loony bin. Thanks so much for this place and a space to vent y'all. I'm going to need it I have the feeling.
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A new problem has appeared, just as I was relaxing. It must be solved. I’ll help my elderly sister again.
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Just sad witnessing my parents’ declines and very depressing. I wonder how long their bodies can continue on like this. It’s amazing and horrifying that they their bodies haven’t given up yet.

And I’m horrified because I am looking at how it will be for me in 27 short years and I don’t want it. I decided to start smoking again and up my drinking and hope for a massive heart attack.
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hereiam May 2023
"I decided to start smoking again and up my drinking and hope for a massive heart attack."

Don't do that. HUG. That kind of planning ("I decided to start smoking again and up my drinking") might end up with a completely different, unintended, much worse consequence.
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@ Hothouse.
My DH would agree with you about watching the decline . We’ve noticed a significant step like decline in physical condition of his father . He was walking much better 6 weeks ago after rehab . I encouraged DH to take this weekend off from seeing his Dad . So we took FIL out last night to a diner . He was having a lot of trouble walking with his walker especially up the outside ramp to the door to the diner . No more . From now on we take him out in the wheelchair until we can’t get him in or out of the car anymore.
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My mother has been confused for a couple of days. She seems better today. This came out of nowhere. Brought her to her PCP today to rule out a uti. Will get results tomorrow. Also asked Dr if she now needed oxygen because she was complaining of shortness of breath. Her EKG was good. Her bp is 120/59 way better than mine, and her blood oxygen is 100%! I now don’t know if her complaining is manufactured attention seeking drama or not.
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Neen1954 Jun 2023
Perhaps she is experiencing panic attacks. My mother had ER visits, paramedic calls, and hospitalizations because she insisted she could not breath and that she was dying. It was awful. Like your mother, her vital signs and oxygen levels were excellent. Eventually, she was diagnosed as having panic attacks.
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Dear Maria,
You truly hit the nail on the head. There is no “ You” in their world, only “ Me”.
And it invalidates you as a person.
In a very long career of caregiving I have been worked like a rented mule.
I try to remind myself that a drowning person is just trying to get the next breath.
They can’t think about me. But, bless you for what you do. You are storing up your treasures in heaven. The world needs more people like you, selfless and caring.
But right now, I have the opposite issue. My client, who is also a dear friend, is profoundly disabled. He is totally dependent. Because of this, he is extremely aware of his caregivers needs and what he can do to assist us. This may sound like a beautiful thing, but in fact it is heartbreaking. If I am tired or not feeling well, he will refuse certain things to make it easier on me. He does the same with other caregivers, including his family.
Frankly, I have never seen this conduct before. But he was disabled as a child almost 50 years ago, and is an exceptionally intelligent person.
When the one who needs help is concerned about the helper, well, it’s just too much on them.
Better that they stay in the stratosphere of “ help me” rather than take on even more issues.
Does anyone else out there know what I mean?
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My Mom does not even have Alzheimer's disease. She is nearly 87 years old and every conversation leads back to subjects about herself. Over and over again. I ignore it and change the subject. I am a retired RN yet she dismisses and argues with every suggestion that I give regarding mobility or the importance of taking her medications. She won't use a walker, wear shoes or get rid of her throw rugs. She turns a wheelchair backwards to help her walk. Yesterday she got up without using any assistive device, she fell (again) and hit her head on the floor this time, she broke her pelvis two years ago. My sister was present and the event terrified her. Because she is on blood thinners she went to a Trauma center in the city. Big problem for her kids, we are all in our 60s now. Thankfully she just ended up with a few sutures. Today another sister and I are going over to my Mom's house. We are hiding the wheelchair, getting out her walkers and moving furniture and rugs. I am not being accommodating anymore. She will ACCEPT my expertise and experience now and do as I say. I raised 4 children and taking care of my Mother is harder and more frustrating than taking care of toddlers and teens.
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lkdrymom Jun 2023
How did that work out for you?
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The one thing that bothers most is that I'm an only child and I do not have anyone to share in the care giving. Everything is on me. I'm taking care of my needs ( which often go undone) and my dads.
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Hothouseflower May 2023
That must be difficult for you. My daughter is also an only child and my current situation managing my 95 yo parents last years has made me think about this. I have one sister who is really helpful and the other not so much. This situation sucks big time. To be honest we’ve been at this for years and it can’t end soon enough. It makes you realize you need a plan.

For my older years I plan to go into assisted living and rely on paid help. I want my daughter to live her life to the fullest, travel and enjoy her grandkids without having to deal with my crap. . If I see her a few times a year for a brief visit that’s fine with me. I am not going to encroach on her life. I didn’t have her so she could be my nursemaid.

Actually hoping I just drop dead of a massive heart attack well before I reach 95. There is no point to growing this old if you are unable to have any quality of life anyway.
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I am sick and tired of home health companies. They don't pay their staff well enough to attract high quality candidates, they don't train them enough, they don't educate them and how to comfort and upset or angry elder, they don't do anything if a caregiver doesn't show up, the turnover rate is impossibly high.... I could go on and on and on.
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bundleofjoy May 2023
i had the same bad experience. even thieves. so i searched and searched for private caregivers. interviewed many candidates. found very good ones. so far, they're genuinely good.
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I provide total care for my husband. He has stage 4 Emphysema, diabetes with severe neuropathy in his feet/legs. He is alert but mobility is an issue. With assistance he uses a walker to move from bed to lift chair or bedside commode. I finally with encouragement from his MD put him on long term Hospice care. Yes, I have a lot of anger issues. He is a retired RN but refused to take care of his medical issues when he could and should have and now I have to give up my life to care for him. (I have extreme GOOD health.). Oh I forgot to mention his alcohol and gambling issues. (No gambling now) So now I keep him on a strict diabetic diet, do not allow drinking and we argue about my bitchy ways. My elder years are being used up caring for him and my anger is because he did this to himself. I get mad at myself as well for not being more forgiving. 57 years and I can’t seem to get past my anger.
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Dupedwife Jun 2023
My heart goes out to you. I can relate to the anger you are experiencing with your husband. My husband is also a retired RN who also has a plethora of medical problems including diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease. The problem in my case is that my husband is a narcissist. I have lived with the regret of not walking away from this marriage 40 plus years ago. Some people wonder why I stayed in my marriage, but it is for financial reasons. While I have bitterness toward him, I am angrier and bitter at myself for staying in my marriage. His narcissism has caused me to be on psychotropic medications, and I have been in counseling for it also. As a RN, my husband has had years of experience dealing with patients in hospitals as well as nursing homes and yet he has no plan in place for now that he is old. He expects me to be the one to take care of him as he told me that he does not want to go into a nursing home. Well, I have news for him as I am planning to put him in a nursing home and walking away once he becomes a candidate. Because of his narcissism, he has pushed everyone away. I have no empathy for him as he has no empathy for me. Whenever he complains about being in pain or any of his medical ailments I just get up and walk away. I still continue to cook his meals as I don’t want him burning down our home, and I also do his laundry. I am looking forward to the day when he becomes a candidate for a nursing home and I will, without hesitation, put him in the nursing home and I will move on with my life.

Perhaps it’s time to put your husband in a nursing home and move on and enjoy YOUR life. I pray that you will somehow find peace and happiness that YOU deserve.
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I hate when there are compound crises and everything just snowballs. Today was that day. The smoke situation in NYC is beyond awful. My mother woke up short of breath this morning and needed to use oxygen for the first time. That was upsetting for her and for me.

Then I tried to put her air conditioner on to filter the air only to find it wasn't turning on. It was working just fine the last time it was used but of course today, when the air quality in NYC was the worst in recorded history, was the day that the circuit breaker gave up the ghost. Why do things break down at the worst possible time?

I am thankful that it is fixed but I'm still so stressed and upset about all of it. I wish I can calm down but I can't.
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Beatty Jun 2023
Wishing & hoping the air quality improves quickly - thinking of you. (((Hugs)))

I try breathing through a wet face cloth when there is bushfire smoke about.
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I feel very similar. My husband is relatively young, 74. He is hydrocephalic. His dementia comes and goes, along with some anger issues. I have been taking care of absolutely everything! Him, the house, the yard, the bills, the taxes, etc. etc. I have a very bad back, so some things become difficult for me. But, if he wants help, or sees a dirty dish, or is hungry, etc., he can't understand why I haven't taken care of it. This frustrates me to no end!!!
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My husband was diagnosed at 40 with young on-set Parkinson’s Disease. He passed at 64. We were married 39 years but the last 10 years were very hard. The final 5 years were extremely rough. I often felt that my life was only about pee and poop. He also had psychosis with delusions and hallucinations. I mourned the loss of my husband when he was still there. But it wasn’t him. I worked hard to meet his needs until the end.
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XenaJada Jun 2023
I’m so sorry. I think it must be doubly hard when it is a spouse.
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What bothers me the most, is that my life’s a mess right now. (I’m just venting; not looking for feedback). I helped my mom a lot. My work is chaos: I don’t know when it’ll be OK again. I really don’t like chaos. I’m one of these orderly, organized people.
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(Again just venting; not looking for feedback).

In a bad mood. Already feel better just having typed that. Ugh. It´s an "ugh day". It´s been a while since I had a good day. I wonder how many "ugh days" one can have in a row. I can tell you, I´m a pro.
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I can confirm it’s possible to have a long streak of “ugh days”.
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I can confirm that you have so many “ugh days” that you start trying to count the infrequent “good days”!
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I want to confirm that what Msblcb confirms is correct.

Another “ugh day” strikes again.
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Drum roll…!
Will tomorrow also be an “ugh day”? The suspense is killing me.
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JeanLouise Jul 2023
Yes. It probably will
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You’ll never believe me, but today is an “ugh day”, too.
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BeeSuz Jul 2023
Everyday is an ugh day
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Venting , I believe you . (((Hugs)))
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ventingisback Jul 2023
I know I know…I’m just kidding.
Unfortunately.
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You know what’s weird?
I’m at the mall right now. I see all these happy, laughing people. And I’m thinking, “Yeah…they don’t have elderly parents. No wonder they’re so cheerful. They have zero stress.”
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JeanLouise Jul 2023
Personally, I think it's worse with a husband. Seeing happy people living normal lives and I eat my heart out. my 24/7 burden is never ending.
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Venting ,

Ah yes, envying other’s lives. Some of my friends totally escaped any caregiving and are enjoying life . I also happen to be younger than most of my friends and they are retired . They have time to do whatever they want . I don’t have time to join them. Meanwhile DH and I work and have been caregiving on and off for many years . First my parents and now his .
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NeedHelpWithMom Jul 2023
And the thing is that my parents didn’t do any caregiving for their parents, so they didn’t understand how hard it was for me.
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Actually I didn’t mean any envy. I meant I understood how it’s possible they’re laughing, so cheerful. It’s only possible because they have no elderly parents they’re caregiving for. You see it clearly on their faces.
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Way2tired Jul 2023
Venting ,
Oh , yeah , you are right , it’s a realization that your world is different .

On another note ……, I remember I would take my Mom to the store , and I would get “ one of the looks ” from other shoppers .
1) the pity look
2) the why do you have that old lady out look
3) my favorite . When you would run into another daughter who was also with her Mom and you give each other the nod .
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“3) my favorite . When you would run into another daughter who was also with her Mom and you give each other the nod.”

:)
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Not being able to spontaneously do something.
Having someone in my house ALL the time.
No alone time.
Having to redo what she's done.
Repeating everything I say, multiple times throughout the day.
Cleaning $hit off the toilet and the floor.
Having no support from siblings
Oh... Just one... I have so many....
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imdone Aug 2023
Oh BeeSuz I hear Ya!!
I agree with everything you posted except about the siblings, I have none so I do the above alone.
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The one thing that bothers me the most is how I’m treated. Also, I want my life back. I want my life to be 100% mine.

It seems right now my life is CO-OWNED.
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NeedHelpWithMom Jul 2023
It is essentially co-owned!
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My parents didn’t do any caregiving for their parents so they truly didn’t understand how hard it was for me to do caregiving for them.

I wonder if most parents who did care for their parents, if they expect it from their children. I have told my girls that I never expect them to do caregiving for me.

My caregiver days are over but I felt like they would never end. It’s a hopeless feeling.
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Way2tired Jul 2023
Some elderly truly don’t realize how much work it is to care for them . They lose insight , or are in denial . They think they are independent . They are very focused on their small world .
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