I work 40 hours overnights at a residential home for disabled individuals. I am also my mother's 40 hour a week paid caregiver during the days. I can take care of all of her physical problems and help with ADLs and all that is required to keep her physically healthy. She is wheelchair bound and has some dementia. She's 84 and lives with me. I'm single and its just the two of us and a cat. When I get out of my overnight shift, I'm tired and need sleep. She has been lonesome all night long and wants to chat my ear off. If I do go to bed, she yells at me a lot to keep conversation. I am able to do both jobs well, and while I'm working overnights, I have a relative who's "on call" for mom, if there's a problem, so that's okay. But the issue I'm talking about right now is this: I am a quiet type of person who has my own hobbies and interests, which I like to engage in when I have any spare time. They alleviate the anxiety I have from working with mom. Mom only plays solitaire and does crossword puzzles, which are her only interests at all, unless she can get me to play games with her, which I really don't like to do. I don't like to watch much tv either, which she wants me to do with her for hours on end. We don't share any common interests. I feel guilty and end up playing the same games with her over and over and watching shows that don't interest me. If I spend time doing what interests me, she keeps asking me if I ever plan on coming out to the living room to be with her. I don't go out much with friends, because she wants me around all the time. She gets bored frequently and depends on me to keep her "entertained." I get tired and depressed a lot and don't feel like doing much more than what's expected of me, at times. I simply feel like without me, she is bored to death, and I even feel guilty for not wanting to play with the cat! Am I doing wrong? I try to encourage her to find things to do, but she only wants to do things with me. Help.
She spent the last three years of her life in a NH with wonderful staff and activities all day every day but she refused to participate, hiding in her room, moaning and whining, plotting her escape to some 5 star resort with servants, meals cooked to order and room service and screaming down the phone at me every day until, on the verge of a nervous breakdown, I changed my phone number and made it unlisted. There are so many interests and activities but you can't force someone to participate.
My gut feeling is that she's got you just where she wants you so why should she be bothered with anything or anyone else. If you can, you must try to change the situation now as, with the progression of dementia, it will only get worse over time.
I am so very glad to hear that you are getting paid for some of the hours you care for your mom. Many people ask if that is possible. It is good to know it is in Maine. Is this part of an Elderly Waiver program, funded by Medicaid?
I do understand your need to work that other job. We all have to eat! I'm sure you do it well, and you have covered the possibility that Mom will need help. You are a highly responsible person. My main concern with that would be your 3 hours of sleep those days. All mothers of young children get by on 3 hours of sleep once in a while. All caregivers of persons with dementia get by on 3 hours of sleep once in a while. We all mostly survive it! But to have this recur on a continuous basis is taking its toll. Remember that sleep deprivation is a torture device. Lack of good sleep is especially hard on persons with depression. (I know these things from personal experience and from seeing a psychiatrist and sleep specialist.) You do need your job. I understand that. You need your sleep, too. Can cousin cover a few hours on those days? I don't know what to suggest, but if you do get some volunteer help, perhaps you can arrange it for days when you need a few hours to sleep.
A couple of us suggested day care programs. I had a wonderful experience with that for my husband. The program had a wide variety of participants. They also had a separate program for persons with dementia (my husband didn't need that yet.) The nurse read a chapter from a book every Monday, and that was my husband's favorite thing there. Also they put together slide shows of people's vacations. He enjoyed that, and was very proud when his pictures were featured. He did not like the crafts, unless they were making something nice he could give me, so he sat in the quiet room and read during those sessions. He enjoyed the outings -- to a restaurant, a ballgame, a zoo, etc. So when we suggest this option we are not suggesting a pre-school setting. If you do not have any adult day programs in your area that treat the participants as adults, that is too bad. It might not hurt to double-check. Perhaps there are some in addition to those you know about for your other clients.
I am thrilled to hear you are on a list for counseling -- not that you have to wait, that isn't such good news -- but that you are addressing this need. Good for you! You deserve all the support you can get!
When I said that your mom is being short-changed, I did not mean that as a criticism of you. Persons with dementia often do best when they do have a "social director" for part of their days, but that doesn't mean that you personally have to take on that role.
I had a volunteer visit my husband for a couple hours twice a week. Sometimes I slept those hours, and sometimes I went out. She was his social director for those days! The spent a lot of time looking through scrapbooks and my husband telling her stories from his life that I'd heard a million times! I certainly hope the economy improves in your area and volunteers once again become available to you.
Is mom being followed by a doctor who knows a lot about dementia? There is no cure, of course, but sometimes symptoms can be improved.
I wish you and your mom well. Keep in touch here and let us know how things progress.
Both you and your mother deserve a good quality of life; when I took the course on caregiving here at the local Alzheimer's Society, all the advice for caregivers to look after themselves really resonated; most of us have a capacity for giving that can easily and unintentionally become unbalanced. For example, I can plan to curl up with a good book for an hour, but if either of my parents (who both have dementia) requires something from me, then my cherished "me time" is the first thing to fly out the window.
I had a mini melt-down last weekend because the one day I had planned for myself was usurped by the fact that my sister's husband landed himself in the hospital; she couldn't do the weekend shift and... well, we all know the sacrifices involved! But I took the opportunity to think about solutions, and that solution might be finding a person in the area who can take over from time to time. I don't even know if this is possible, but I'm going to look into it. Baby steps.
In any case, I often feel the same guilt as you are describing; I sense that my parents are not stimulated enough. My mother demands all of my attention, and I worry that my father is not getting more (he's the quieter of the two). I resent having to "entertain" her at times, because - like you - I'm very self-sufficient and never bored with my own company. I keep thinking, why can't she be more like me? But she's not perfect, and I'm not perfect, and nobody's perfect and we're all just trying our best.
It sounds like you're an amazing woman with a great deal of strength, who is just worn out. It's OK to be worn out. A few days off might be just the cure, if you can find someone to help out. It feels hopeless at times, as I've discovered in the last year. Now I manage my time carefully to ensure quality breaks, and this has made a huge difference. Once my batteries are recharged, it's like I'm a new person. I sincerely hope you can find a way to give yourself a break now, and come up with a plan for the future. Perception is everything!
To all of you that say daycare, LT care, let me just say yes it's lovely in theory but go ahead and try it with some of these elders and you'll lose the last remaining nerve in your body.
Hang it there, caregiving is tough but sometimes it's even tougher because there's no give at all, just take. Bet you can't walk away because there's no one else. Don't beat yourself up thinking your falling short, your not. Wish there was a clear answer but if there is, I haven't found it. I could place my mother in a LT care facility but she'd consume my last bit of sanity with her misery there. I like you don't have the heart to do that, I could never walk away and I just remind myself that someday I'll get my life back. What that life will be, at what age and at what expense is questionable. Please know that there are so many of us out there dealing with different but difficult issues, beating ourselves up, running on fumes, putting our life on hold and sacrificing so much. For those of you that say there are options, sure there are but with moms that will make it worse and dole out the gift of guilty in boundless supply. I started seeing a counselor and I would suggest the same for you. It helps for someone to tell you that you have nothing to feel guilty about. You're an angel with a very big heart. Hang in there xoxox
I've moved beyond being my mom's caregiver in my home (10 years) and have had her settled for the past 16 months in a very satisfactory assisted living facility. Life improved for me considerably and though she would deny it, her life is as best a 94 year old woman with dementia could ask for.
But my life still revolves around her endless demands and needs. I manage her financial affairs and drive her to medical appointments. I bring her to my home for dinner every couple weeks. I call her every evening I am not at her side.
I visit her 3 times a week for at least two hours each time. (30 minute drive each way). I shop for and deliver snacks and new clothing. Do her nails. She wails each time I arrive how she has been waiting all day and begs me not to leave. I frankly am tired to death of being her personal slave.
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