Follow
Share
Read More
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Thank you...all the angels on here have helped me in those dark moments of uncertainty...we all need each other, because this is so hard. God bless.
Helpful Answer (11)
Report
Wolfpack Feb 2023
You were correct above when you said your mom is grieving. When they are in the last place they most likely will live, it's a reality check--- for her and you. The final stage is here, and from her perspective, life flew by in a flash. And here she is. It takes awhile for someone to go from grieving to acceptance. By all means, take care of yourself emotionally first. But, please be patient with her processing time frame on this. It took my Mom 18 months to find joy after moving from her 3200 sqft home, living independently and driving to a 1,000 ft home and no car. In hindsight, she was truly in mourning.
(1)
Report
What on earth is the difference "the type" of dementia your mom suffers from? You should feel "guilty" bc nobody put a label on the type or cause of her dementia, as if most of these doctors know what they're talking about in the first place? The majority of the time they're stabbing around in the dark, flat out guessing when it comes to the human brain.

Surely you're not "guilty" over the fact your mom has had the amazing good fortune to live to see 92, or that she has health issues you did not cause, can't control and cannot cure?

Your mother needs AL because "she requires help with the physical aspects of dressing, showering and toileting and meds due to severe shoulder pain and weakness and ongoing confusion." Plus she failed a Neuro psych test and seems incompetent to professionals. The dementia is just ANOTHER reason she requires AL. Surely you see that and the fact she needs ALL THIS HELP does not qualify her for INDEPENDENT LIVING, that's the truth. If ever there was a candidate for AL, its your mother. And big deal to downsizing one room. A shrunken world makes dementia easier for her to manage.

Whether or not she agrees with or accepts her dx is irrelevant too. My mother's huge ego stood in the way of her believing she had ANY health or dementia issues. Her denial or anosogosia isn't MY problem. My only goal was to keep her safe and well cared for. Not to hang around waiting for a moment of lucidity so I could beat myself up for making the wrong call, when cognition exam results don't lie. My mother lived in Memory Care Assisted Living for 3 years before she passed, insisting everyone ELSE was a "stupid idiot" and only she was a lucid and fully functional adult who looked GREAT for her age. 🙄

Put aside the need to flog yourself for making the right decision here. Just tell mom it's DOCTORS ORDERS she's living there, period. It's hard to understand the level of exhaustion involved with anosogosia and dementia, with the ongoing insistence they "don't belong there" and all of it. Stay away from this chaos for awhile and let her adjust. Then come up with a visitation schedule and List of Pat Answers to repeat as needed.

Your mother has taken enough from you now. She's 92 and well placed. Stop running yourself ragged now and HIRE HELP on mom's dime for whatever remains. What will become of mom if you get hospitalized or die (God forbid) while she's busy carrying on about everything? Who knows, but she will still be alive and cared for by a team of people. Consider the math on that statement next time you decide it MUST be known what type of dementia mom has. We never knew my mom's type either, just that she died after 6 years, getting progressively worse, well cared for by wonderful people who truly cared about her. I have no guilt at all and would place her again in a N.Y. minute if the opportunity arose.

Let your super tone deaf brother's calls go directly to vm, then delete the message w/o listening to it. I've found that little technique to work a CHARM over the years for various family pests. You or Jim a big fat goose egg.

Let go of these matters which you have NO control over, and focus on YOURSELF now bc mom is not the only important person here. SO ARE YOU.
Helpful Answer (17)
Report
tygrlly1 Feb 2023
Thanks for the reality check. You checked all the boxes for me, and I appreciate your candidness. I have always been the fixer in my family , and have always had to be strong ....She and I had the discussion today on how blessed she has been to be as independent as she has been for so long. I feel that she is grieving, and will eventually adjust too.,because she has to. She hated rehab, and spoke fondly of how nice they were to her, when she left there today. The fact that she has been able to stay within her senior community is a big plus. My next task is to secure continued funding , which I start next week, as she will run out of money within next 6 months. The facility has agreed to accept retroactive waiver funding once she is approved for Medicaid and/ or VA aide and attendance . She was one of their first residents, and they have been very accomodating and kind so I know she will be well cared for.
(12)
Report
See 1 more reply
Its hard but you can try and tune him out. Don't answer his calls. When he starts tell him he has no right to criticize because he chose to not be involved. Your job as POA was to do exactly what you did with Moms approval. It will take her time to adjust but she will.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

Though you are tired, I hope you have peace of mind knowing you have done the best you can for your mother's comfort and care. Sleep well. You did good.
Helpful Answer (8)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter