I guess I'll go first with this one.
The thing that stands out the most for me about MIL with alzheimers.......
Everything is ALL ABOUT HER. I could cut my arm off and be bleeding on the floor right beside her and she would worry about who was going to bring her a cookie.
I am treated as" a nothing" in her world.
Then I feel guilty for thinking she's an old battleaxe.
Well that's my confession.
How about yours?
A tip: Ignore the insults and the "it's all about me attitude". Your loved ones are dealing with their own devils, such as giving up their independence. Don't take it personally. Every morning pray for strength to face each day. Find a care-giver support group in your area. I am especially concerned about bookluvr. Be strong. Never let another person make you feel less than your God-given worth! To gladimhere: have family members spend a whole day with mom, including overnight - just tell them you need a break! Let them see first hand what you put up with.
Many hugs to all of you that you will find the right answers and will find the time to live your own lives while caring for your loved ones.
I read it for the first time about eight years ago (and have re-read it several times since) and it changed my life! In addition to being severely co-dependent, I use the phrase "emotionally immature" to describe her. She can't cope with difficult situations or making hard decisions. But she has always been incredibly controlling, overbearing and manipulative. For most of my adult life, I responded to her tactics with hostility and defiance and I often used language that would make the raunchiest comedians and roughest sailors blush with shame! My sister (3yrs older than me and my only sibling) responded to mom in much the same way until I shared this book with her.
My relationship with my mom is far from perfect and I still struggle with the way she acts sometimes. But 'The MOM Factor' changed the way I respond to her actions and I no longer let my blood pressure spike to stroke level nor do I verbally eviscerate her to silence her as a defense mechanism. I call her on her b.s. when she starts on me, but I try to do it in the most constructive way possible for her. I loaned the book to her so she would know that I was committed to improving our relationship and how I planned to do it.
It may not be the magic pill for all 'mom' problems, but I sincerely believe you will get a lot of very useful, healthy information and be able to deal with your mom better than you currently can.
Also, the negativity. *EVERYTHING* with my mom is negative. I'm generally a pretty positive person. I've got PTSD and a panic disorder, but outside of that, I fight to find the positive in nearly every situation. If I can't find the positive, I find the stuff that is at least neutral about it. She's the kind that can turn the best things that happen to her, into the most difficult, negative and hurtful of situations, just because. She doesn't need a reason, she just cannot see the positive in anything or anyone. Does my head in, sometimes I'm surprised how I survived my childhood and teen years in that sort of toxic environment.
My sister and I took care of our other grandmother (dad’s mother) for the last five years of her life. She had crippling rheumatoid arthritis, severe and ‘late-stage’ COPD, and ultimately died from stomach cancer in February 2012 at the age of 86. It was a very different caregiving experience because I had a partner to help with her AND to provide emotional/psychological support for me (my sister), my grandmother was very appreciative for everything we did for her (she would often make me cry because it broke my heart that she thanked me so sincerely for taking her to the doctor or for going to the bank and grocery store for her) and I was always closer to her than to the grandmother I take care of now.
This time around, my sister has a very demanding job and a husband and teenage son who need her time and attention when she isn’t at work. We also live about 35 miles away from her, so it’s just not possible for her to help during the week. She is great about giving me a break for at least 8 hours almost every weekend at some point. My other grandmother wasn’t just my grandma, she was my best friend. But I’ve never had the same type of relationship with my mom’s mother (the one I live with now). To be honest, my mom has never had a great relationship with her despite being her only child. My mom eloped with my dad three weeks before her 16th birthday just to get away from her! She is a devout Pentecostal, which I totally respect, but her strict beliefs made my mother’s childhood very difficult. My sister and I didn’t like spending much time with her when we were kids because some of her beliefs didn’t make any sense to us or they contradicted what we believe. For example, she would never play a game that involved rolling dice or playing cards because it was gambling which is sinful!?!? Playing Monopoly or “Go-Fish” is sinful? I’m quite certain Jesus would be cool with it!
The proverbial “icing on the cake” (more like “straw that broke the camel’s back”) is that she is NOT appreciative of anything that I or anyone else does for her! She constantly complains that we stay on her all the time about something and (apparently) we enjoy having that power and control over her now that she’s old and frail. She COMPLAINS about everything constantly and repeatedly. If she complains about something within my control, I try to fix it hoping it will make her a little more comfortable….but it never seems to work out that way. Sometimes when she is berating me for the daily laundry list of things I do wrong, I look at her and say, “Thank You once in a while would be so nice to hear….” Maybe I’m a bad person for doing this, but sometimes when it gets really bad and I’m nearing my breaking point, I ask her “What do you think Jesus would do if he heard how you were talking to me right now?” or something similar.
As I said above, I respect her beliefs even though I don’t share or agree with some of those beliefs. My sister and my mom and step-dad also don’t share her beliefs, but they have the utmost respect for her right to believe and worship any way she chooses. She doesn’t extend the same respect or courtesy to any of us. Because we don’t believe exactly the way her church does, we’re all going to burn! She hasn’t verbalized it directly to me since I moved in with her because I told her I’d leave forever if she did! But she alludes to it when she says a prayer or blessing at meal time and other friends or family are present. She really can be a nasty, hateful little old woman at times…..
It makes me miss my grandmother that died in February 2012 even more….I miss my nice grandma! Being her caregiver was a pleasure and an honor….but I can’t say the same about my present situation.
Bloody drama
Now he's living with us and he's a nightmare. Every day preaching and yapping on about the end of the world and sin. He's also obsessed with going to confession. Every week.
Janis Joplin's "Me and Bobby McGee" is the song I think you're thinking about ...
Freedom's just another word for nothin' left to lose, And nothin' ain't worth nothin' but it's free,
Feelin' good was easy, Lord, when Bobby sang the blues,
And buddy, that was good enough for me,
Good enough for me and my Bobby McGee.
Yikes ... great now my head is going to be singing that for the rest of the day ;)
The times I cry the most are when I look at him and think of what he was. He was my husband but I don't know who he is now. He was a strong, tough, ready to fight 'if someone looked at me wrong' guy, several tours in Viet Nam retired Sailor....and it's so hard to watch him deteriorate.
To answer the question, NO THING. & I do mean No thing.,
As much as they frustrate us sometimes, we have to keep remembering that they need us - sometimes we are the only thing keeping them alive and in this world. That's an extremely important role, and we can't take it lightly.
People who think being a full-time caregiver isn't a "real job" make me madder than he11 and I let them know it!
Have a great weekend.
So…. I do understand the selfishness, but remember, that was the way my client was before her Alzheimer's and now that she has it, she is very incredibly selfish, and everything has to be her way, but you know what, after about 2 days of being angry over that, I thought to myself "how selfish am I, I am normal, I have not terminal illness or disease, and I am angry because I am working 8 hours a day with a very selfish person." To me, after I looked in the mirror and stated that, it really was about me, and if I did not like the taxing, hard hard, incredibly hard work that it takes, then I needed to find another position.
Please note: I am not stating that all cases are textbook, they are all incredibly different, but remember you anger comes from the selfishness or stubbornness of someone else, but that someone else, now has an incurable disease. I am not stating you are right, or what ever, all I am saying, is that these people really want us people without the disease to try to understand that all of their character flaws are not because of them, they do now have a disease, regardless of what they were like before. They will more than likely die before their natural time because of Alzheimer's so, I guess with words of wisdom, I would say, stop, smell the roses, remember the good qualities of your MIL, focus on those, but also, remember that when an Alzheimer's person becomes combative and violent possibly it is time to move them to a more structured environment so that you are not emotionally bruising, and it is not acceptable for anyone to be violent, with or without a disease, however with a disease, they will just put them in a place that is a memory care, or such. It is a hard place to be, that I know. My mother has it, my mother in law had it and my father in law had it. I have been through three live in's and I am now a paid care giver specifically for Alzheimer's and Dementia, because I really feel that with the extra education that I took, that I can offer this world some respite, one person at a time. Be good to yourself!!!
No, it isn't. My husband and I don't want kids, ever, and this is not practice. When I tell them that, they tell me caring for my grandmother isn't the same cos there generations are the wrong way around. I'm sorry, I didn't know bathing her, changing her diapers, feeding her, paying for everything, dealing with tantrums, not allowing her off the toilet till she's had a pee, and stopping her from hurting the dogs was totally different from having a toddler just cos she's 85 instead of 3.