I had a painful and extremely vivid "fake" dream last night - in that - it never happened but it's still a nightmare. In that dream, my mom left her walker and then fell once she found me and I got so angry with her.
1. Thank God it was just a dream.
2. I never yelled at her in real life. Maybe I fussed but never yelled like I did in my dream.
3. In this dream, for whatever reason (I think I went to a public bathroom), I had to leave her alone for a few minutes and next thing I knew she tried to find me without her walker and then she fell when she found me.
I was so angry with her in my dream! Then, I was angry that she waited to fall right in front of me and (hate to say it) left me to sort it out.
Long story short, it was just a dream. If it had been real/true, she would've been in a wheelchair. I never would've taken her somewhere, no matter how pretty, if it required her to walk long or far. Still, it's odd.
It's odd because sometimes I can't even remember what I ate yesterday and yet this dream of her falling and me yelling at her was so vivid, when none of it happened. I'm usually crazy but in a fun way. This was not fun at all. I canceled attending an event today because I'd have these morbid thoughts and knew I wouldn't be fun at all. Oi. Thanks for listening.
Hello, HM - Dreams. Please don't be so hard on yourself. I have been out of work and on Disability since late 1990's and it's only within the last 2 years that I've been able to let go and quit beating myself up about not working/contributing to society, etc., etc.- and that was with the help of a really great and patient therapist. But you know what....I STILL have nightmares from time to time about being back at my old job (which I absolutely loved but which was quite stressful) and getting lost at the office among endless cubicles and offices, lunchrooms, elevators, or screwing up an important assignment (I was quite good at my job, btw), etc., etc., and many times I awaken with a start, in a panic.
My point is, IMHO I believe that there are situations in our lives that impact us in many ways and on many levels and it takes our brains (psyches too?) an awful long time to sort through them and all the layers we were impacted on. I really think it's quite normal, natural, and although uncomfortable at times, very healthy.
Hang in there! ;)
Same issue with thinking the telephone is ringing.... or thinking someone is calling out my name.... or even a shotgun blast [which doesn't make any sense at all]. The most terrifying one was not that long ago where I thought I was actually having a seizure, after which I woke up in a cold sweat, checked to make sure I didn't have a stroke [holding one's arm out in front to see if one arm would fall], I was scared to go back to sleep.
I rather be awaken by Hugh Grant, or Erik Estrada back when he starred in CHiPs :)
All the symptoms: forgetfulness, lack of concentration, anxiety, lack of control (both emotionally and circumstantial), dread, aches & pains, sleep disorders, and the list goes on forever.
I suspect this is why the narcissists and automatons have gained so much authority in our society. They are killing off those of us who exhibit love, care and compassion.
Pray much, trust God to have mercy and deliver us from this torment.
I lost both my parents that I took care of within just over a year of each other, had no help, and am going to a counselor. In addition to a bereavement support group. It does help.
I am going to add a comment and I started a thread on this. I now get comments from people who are CLUELESS and think you're just supposed to go out and get an office job, that your parents are gone so go get a job.
Well I don't have to do that thankfully, although I am going to look at working in some type of caregiving job, but they don't get you have suffered great losses, you HAD A JOB, a very important one, that didn't end at 5 pm, or had weekends off.
I am amazed at people who seem resentful of me, where was there resentment when I took care of two elderly parents????
But, yes PTSD is very real.
It doesn't matter if one lives long distant or a few houses away, the telephone ring is still starting.... my parents live literally around the corner from me.... being both are in their mid-90's and in good health for their age, you never know what might happen. I think it is part of the *what if* syndrome.
I am obsessed about my parents, like you are about your Dad. I don't think our parent understands the stress this is causing us.... how I wished my parents would have moved into a retirement community where they can CALL on others to help them. Thus, if Dad falls, Mom could buzz security and they can come running.... leave me out of the loop as Dad usually doesn't get hurt when he falls.
Turns out after sig other went into therapy that I realized why he acted that way toward me [he denies any of this happened, of course, he doesn't want to be looked upon as the bad guy].... he had seen too much cancer from immediate family members plus his late wife who all died that he thought that was going to happen with me.... thus the reason why he was lashing out at me. Unfair? You bet ya. That was 5 years ago and to this day I still resent how he acted toward me.
As Dr. Phil would say, "women have very long memories".
Hubs is FINE with paying people to do a lot of things, so if I have to hire a housekeeper, so be it. Probably he'll be out of town and I will heal up better if he's just not here. (Sorry for hijacking this post!)
I honestly think some men don't know how to care for others, they tend to stand around with their hands in their pockets acting totally baffled. I blame their Mom for spoiling them.
Add mental issues, or physical illness issues, and the stress rates skyrocket.
Learn what the signs and symptoms are for PTSD.
There are many online resources for free.
Counselors understand that PTSD can happen even when things APPEAR 'calm' on the surface....it needs addressed and needs helped.....PTSD from caregiving is hand-in-hand with caregiver-burnout.
This list is a treasure---I don't know what might have happened to me, had I not found this list, to share posts on. It's literally helped me grab back some sanity and equilibrium, after we finally got Mom moved out of our place, and helped me make choices I never would have thought of, before, to help maintain the healing I needed. There are many other resources one can use, online, for free, to help decrease stress--thank God, and the folks who created them, for those sites!
A recent one found, is a YouTube video, that does about a half-hour guided meditation. It's not religious at all. Just very relaxing/restorative.
youtube/watch?v=XN1ngkASEbY
Pleasant, easy. There are many other sites, if following along with Liam is not your cup of tea. If you fall asleep while trying it, it becomes a "sleeping meditation"--meaning, you needed sleep!
It's helped reduce pain, helped sleep, helped decrease stress--all good.
I hope you can quickly find what you need to help restore calm and bring better dreams!
Back when I was working full-time I had stress-related dreams all the time. I'd dream about whatever was bothering me at work. Again, like your dream, I would dream about whatever it was I FEARED would happen at work - which almost never came to pass.
So while you may need to figure out ways to alleviate some of the stress you are under caring for your parents, this does NOT sound like PTSD, it just sounds like unrelieved stress.
And you said "She's been dead a number of years now, so you'd think I'd have learned how to manage by now..." well, you'd think that, but, you'd be wrong. I have not had a mom, dad, or mom and dad nightmare for several weeks now, and that's good...but its going on four years and the healing process continues. It's not so much "managing" anything but a drawn out process of debriefing, realizing certain things when yoru heart is ready to, redefining what you believe in and why, and letting joy and human connection seep back into your life as much as you can.
I have heard WAY too many adults say things like, "Oh, I will never put my mother in a nursing home." Most are visualizing the "granny flat" attached to their own home with an independent granny who plays bridge with her friends 2x a week.
But they do not understand the reality of having a confused, sometimes combative, incontinent elder who cannot be left unattended for a second, living under the same roof with you - even if they are in the granny suite. My older brother the attorney, who was TOTALLY useless when dad needed help, still harbors some kind of fantasy that dad could have remained in his own home with just household help. He just did not "get it" at all. In fact, unless a person has been the caregiver, they never seem to "get it."
Yes, sometimes we do end up with PTSD....or at a least a bucketload of resentment. I am still resentful that my parents did not plan better for their own senescence. They were financially okay, but did not seem to "get it" that some day they would be old and not able to function independently. I kept begging them to move into one of those senior communities with the different levels or care, even offering to help orchestrate the move for them. But they kept refusing....which meant that dementia finally forced the issue and I had to make the choice for them. Why do so many parents place their adult children in that position? I keep seeing this over and over again on this forum.