After my mom began to go blind and I began to try to manage her care through my absentee POA brother, the sickening knot in my stomach will not go away. Does anyone else feel that caregiving is making them physically ill? I went to see Mama Mia 2 with my daughters last night and, at the end of the movie, was shocked to find that the sick feeling in my stomach had disappeared for the first time in months. Of course, by the time we got home, to more drama with the family, it had returned. Any ideas about maintaining physical health and peace through all of this?
When my dad went into a nursing home I had that sickening knot. The upside is that the knot prevented me from eating much and I lost 20 lbs. But I lost that weight because I was so anxious and upset and stressed that I couldn't eat. People would remark, "You've lost weight! You look great!" but I was a mess on the inside and that weight loss was indicative of my desperation to try and make my dad happy, healthy, peaceful, satisfied, etc. If I could just be a perfect daughter, if I could just be a perfect caregiver, if I could just ensure that I was able to take my dad to the hospital 3 times a week to have fluid drained (which was an 8 hour ordeal each time). I took it upon myself to take full control over my dad and his health and it practically wrecked my own health.
I hope you are able to get out more now that you understand how caregiving affects your health. Sickening knot = bad. Mama Mia 2 = good. Getting away from the caregiving isn't a luxury, it's a necessity.
What about keeping a de-stress box for the both of you. An MP3 player with favorite music grouped into playlists. A favorite book for the both of you. photo cube or album. materials for a hobby or game. My sister would want a puzzle. I'd want an audible book or painting materials or scrabble game. Mom would want a video of the ocean in all weather and seasons and a piece of pizza.
What would you put in the de-stress box for you the caregiver? For your loved one you're caring for?
Families can definitely be a trial. The only answer I've come up with is to expect EVERYONE to be responsible according to their skills, age, health, etc. Everyone in the family need to be aware that none of us were born knowing how to deal with whatever we're dealing with at any given moment, But we all have the responsibility to deal with life's bowl of lemons or chocolates in a loving way.
The alternative is looming feelings of regret after it is too late to do anything about it. Who feels there is anything left to teach the younger healthy family members to step up? If they have never had the responsibility to step up in the past, they probably feel very inadequate to do so now. If they WANT to help but feel they son't know how, then get a few links to send them of videos that will teach them, or find a workshop and sign everyone up, say at hospice . . .