OK, my mom calls, says she took a tumble. She does not want to go to the doctor and check her arm, where she hit it against the fridge. She wants me to go get her cigarettes. I go there, look at her arm (a bit swollen in the forearm, but she can move her fingers and wrists, albeit it's a bit sore). Again, is she sure she wouldn't want to see her doctor, which is up the road and they can do an x-ray there? No. Only cigarettes. So I go get her cigarettes and try again about the doctor. It's tense because I'm angry because she's been in her narcissistic mood swings. Just a week ago I received a letter from her telling me not to call her anymore (one of many) and now of course she can't roll her cigarettes so her sucker/child is needed to get them for her. I left and told her to enjoy the smokes and to call me when she wanted to go to the doctor or really wanted to get help for her health problems.
But, can I force her to see her doctor in cases like this? In a sensible world it's not unreasonable to want to get an xray to make sure there's no break. But in her world money is only for spending on cigarettes -- not on anything (hearing aid, gerontologist, neurologist) that might actually make her later years a bit better.
Recently (3 nights ago) my DH fell and hit his head, was bleeding and I had to call neighbors in to assist me in getting him up. The bleeding had already stopped and no cuts could be found. He refused to go to the ER as, in his words, "there is no cure for being 95.
I agreed as he was still in his right mind and not bleeding from the head wound. Instead I watched him carefully for signs of concussion which would have necessitated calling 911.
He fell again the next day in the bathroom, causing skin-tears on both arms. This time I was the one that knew the ER couldn't bandage him as well as I could, I've been doing it for 32 years. BUT, I took him to the doctor on Monday! They checked him over and he was ok.
I'm telling you this because as long as a person is in their right mind, I do believe they also have the right to make their own decisions. Had the need arisen, I would have overruled him and called for an ambulance.
By purchasing her cigarettes, you became an enabler - I believe it's called "co-dependent" and that I won't personally do. I was never able to get my mother to go to the doctor and told her all I could do was try and she wouldn't ever make me feel guilt. So when she called me, haughty as all get-out, telling me she had cancelled the doctor's appointment and not to come pick her up, I said I thought you would and told her to have a nice day.
Will this help you? I don't know. But at some point in life, children must grow up and not be afraid of their parents anymore. Respect is earned, not a birthright.
If your mother doesn't want to go to a physician, let her know that *whatever* it is her choice and go on with your day. It is what I did and I have no regrets. After her passing, I assisted my Dad for 7 years and he too had to learn to trust my judgement but that I would honor his decisions. I had no problems with him after that.
I'm going to go and have some coffee. Morning everyone!
The only thing is, she's told you, now, about her legs (would have been better if she hadn't, given that she then refuses to do anything about it, but there it is - she has). And you've put it on the forum. And we know, and you know, that - assuming it is true that her legs are really badly swollen, and she doesn't just mean her ankles are a bit puffy after a hard day's ironing - this is a major symptom. Which means that doing nothing, while still an option, might be something you later regret.
The thing is, if it were me and not you, I'd be free to think "well, okay, you don't want to see a doctor, it's your life, I'm calling your bluff" - it wouldn't turn round and kick me in the b.t.m. if anything were to happen to her.
I don't know why I'm whittering on at you. Hope the doctor can get something moving and that, either way, your mother gets whatever medical attention she does want. I expect the truth is she has very mixed feelings about carrying on, sometimes - after all, don't we all, at least a bit?
All I can say is I'm very angry and frustrated about the whole situation with my mom. I was in therapy a few years back and stopped when my husband was laid off and we lost our good insurance but I'm going to see how much it costs out-of-pocket. If I can swing it or find something affordable, I'm going to try and go again. This whole situation is making me too angry and bitter and that's not going to help anyone.
One of her friends just died on Sunday and another friend is getting a big flower arrangement to send to the family and all my mom can do is rant about her $15 cut. She is convinced this is a racket. Well, don't send the money then. Easy as that. She still has to go on. Finally I change the subject and ask again if she is willing to see the doctor about the legs swelling. No. But she assures me she's going to die very soon and I need to call her once a week so she doesn't just rot there. Never mind that I've spoken to her every other day for the last few weeks! So she wants attention but I'm frustrated because I'm trying to work and am too dumb to just cut the call short. She assures me this time she really is going to die soon. I don't know anymore. She's been dying from something for 30 years. It's crying wolf. She always gets "sick" or "near death" when she wants attention. One day she'll die and it'll be like the wolf finally came.
Is it cruel of me to say sometimes I wish she would die? If it was someone who wasn't bitter about $15 for a funeral flower arrangement or who had made-up ailments half the time or who accuses me of being mental or having my period every time I'm too quiet (or I'm too like my dad, who's been dead for 25 years) or a little too firm on the phone it'd be one thing, but this version ... I don't like her very much!
He used to take the taxi because he refused to drive after he almost got into an accidents twice while driving. He would complain about the cost of the taxi ($10).
With regards to grocery, can you just buy your mom the essentials? Just automatically buy what she eats the most - that is not junk food. Then it's up to her to eat it or not. Keep all receipts, photocopy it if it's one of those cheap receipts that fade in time.
Your life will be destroyed.
Mom, though, has been through the gamut. I was feeling a bit more kindly to her, post arm break, because I wouldn't want my dominant hand in a cast, either! Sympathy is waning fast, though. After trotting around to get her pills, groceries, etc., we stop in Sunday and I notice her cast is gone. I ask, what happened? She slid it off. She put a string through it and had it hanging on the closet door, and has been hanging it on her apartment door for neighbors to see, because she thought it was funny.
Well, I called her doctor, and let them know. Told them this is just a report for the medical file. I am doing no more about it, but they should know, so if it doesn't heal well, there's a reason. (Doc wanted it on for 6 weeks, too, and my mom wore it for 12 days!)
On top of that, mom is now getting hostile again. She was going on about medical bills and I looked at a stack on the table, and then stacked them more tidily. Today she says I had a fit and threw them up in the air and made a mess. I did no such thing but I'm going to drop off some denture glue she needed and a couple whoppers (which is all she wants lately) and give her some space again. She can't help it but I'm not going to go through this garbage again. I'll give her her space since she assures she knows everything better and focus on my new job.
It's correct that no one can be forced to get unwanted medical treatment or care.
They will stand it for just so long, and then they might cave in and beg for help....usually, they cave most if it's breathing problems--there's pretty much nothing scarier than limited breathing.
Then you can get them care.
BUT...
If she is threatening suicide, that MIGHT be grounds for calling a Social worker to report it, and calling 911 to report it to instigate them doing a "well-check"---or even a 72-hour hold to evaluate her mental health..
Advice from instructors and officials I've spoken with:
IF someone threatens suicide, they MUST be taken seriously.
Of course, they will try to say they were just kidding, or just messing with you, etc....but still, they should be taken seriously.
After that hold, if they seem OK, they will be released.
OR, they might be released conditionally.
Consequences:
She will likely get VERY angry.
She might act out in any number of ways--including seeking someone else to be her POA, or not communicating with you at all--doing things to cut you out of her life---which may or not last long.
She will likely try to retaliate somehow, then she will feel bad about acting out or retaliating and beg to get back into good graces. Or not.
YOU stick by your limit-setting! It is unrealistic to allow her or anyone to keep jerking you around like that....that is otherwise known as "co-dependent" behavior.
IF you are a caregiver OUTside her home,
you will not likely be held accountable for her getting harm.
Especially if you make called for help when appropriate--like with suicide attempts.
If Social workers are called to come to her home, and find her unable to cope with living at home, she might be admitted to an Assisted Living or other facility.
Officials will TRY to strongly encourage family to take her in--you do NOT have to do that....no matter how hard officials try to push you to do it.
IF you are caregiving under the same roof with her...
IF you are living under the same roof caregiving:
Officials might try to point fingers at a live-in caretaker--
----they would send APS to the house and create files on you, which could become an ugly bit of business.
But if you are as broken by your elder's behaviors as we got, one can reach a break-point at which it almost seems a relief to get accused--even falsely---just to get the elder OUT of our house.
But it is far better that you systematically:
==== Call 911 to instigate well-checks on your elder.
====Keep a calendar with dates/times of her comments/behaviors, and your responses and actions, on it. Make sure you list all Doc appt;s or other activities you assisted the elder getting to, shopping trips, EVERYTHING, DAILY, Over Time-----this is a log or diary-----it is admissible in court as evidence, and could help protect you....it is just about one of the only things live-in caregivers, or even live-out caregivers, have to protect themselves from false accusations.
OTHER ways to protect yourself: calling 911 each time there's any incident--immediately--911 calls MUST be recorded--that is an official record---i.e.: she falls, call them--let her tell THEM she refuses medical help--not you!
====Contact the County's Area Agency on Aging to ask about Social workers coming to do an in-home evaluation of her ability to actually safely be on her own in her home. Ask to counsel with a free lawyer about issues you have questions about.
====Keep records of EVERYthing you do with or for your elder....it's a nuisance, we aren't used to it, it feels weird having to do that--but it's NECESSARY these days.
====If your elder is abusive of you, you call 911 to report it.
If they hit or injure you, make sure you see a Doc immediately and get that recorded--pictures of bruises, anything--medical records are official, and could protect you by showing that abuse to officials. If it's emotional/mental abuse--your Counseling session records could help you in court.
Make sure that you also encourage your elder to come for counseling to help you----when they refuse, it's part of that record, and it does not reflect well for them for refusing to help you process your stress.
====IF she threatened suicide, call police to report her threats--they might have her admitted for 72-hour psych safety observation...and evaluated for ability to live alone or not.
====If you can, record her behaviors and/or verbals. Some have installed web cams at home, which are sound or motion activated--"nanny-cams". These could be invaluable tools to help evaluate elders who are not always normal, might not be easy to evaluate otherwise.
IT's VERY hard to think of our parents causing us grief....even when they've been dysfunctional all their lives, we don't necessarily expect them to start hitting us, or doing weird things---so often, we try to ignore that, or think it'll only happen once, or otherwise try to make it like it never happened.
But elders only get worse--that's the nature of the issue.
They can't help it.
It takes discipline of ourselves, when we aren't used to it, and might be sick ourselves and having hard times coping.
It's really important to ask--and keep asking, for help.
Keep posting and keeping us up to date on how things are going, on this site.
We're all here because we've been going through renditions of this.
Good group, lots of advice and support here!
In some ways it's more difficult when I see my in-laws. My MIL is in good mind and she'll get knee surgery so she can walk around, etc. My FIL got a hearing aid and had a hip replacement so he can hear and walk around.
It hurts when a loved one tells you, indirectly, that they don't care anymore. Though I guess I'm doing the same thing in my ways by trying to build distance.
Wouldn't that be awesome if they came up with a cure for Alzheimer's and dementia? Please let it happen in this lifetime! Next week, preferably!