Recently put my mother in Skilled Nursing with the thought of eventually going to Asst. Living. Getting good care - she insists she is going home - wrong. I was her POA and trying to tend to everything long distance. Without telling me she has changed her POA to a friend of hers age 88. I feel sad yet relieved - she has been difficult with me all my life I am 55 - I just want to get on with my life - whatever I have left to live.
...as I accept that she prob.-does have this disease...I feel an overwhelming grief of having already lost(some of)her.....My Dad struggles with caring for her&only tells me bits&pieces of his daily life..soon she be put into a nursing home....It'll be best for all.
It IS a sad,drawn out way of losing your loved-ones....I'm takin' it,one moment/day at a time.
So I say all this to you to offer you sympathy that your mother removed you from the POA role and put her 88 year old friend into it. Please do not take this personally. I honestly believe many of these elders , once they start getting up in years, aren't responsible for many of the things they say and do, and we need to take it with a grain of salt, and not personally. Now you just need to deal with the practicalities of your situation. Like.....do you want to talk to your mother and talk all this out and perhaps convince her to re-instate you as her POA? ( Could a third party, like a clergy person, help to talk to her along with you?) What would work best for your mother going forward? You know in your heart that your mother is where she needs to be for her safety and security, so now how do you keep yourself strong to maintain this workable situation for her? I agree with another poster here who mentioned praying to God. Some of these problems that come up, caring for our elderly parents, push us to the point of near-helplessness, where we go to God for help, sometimes with a desperate plea. He will get you through it. He will clear some kind of path. My husband and I have encountered all sorts of "roadblocks" along the way, caring for my parents, and every time we've asked God to help us manage, He was faithful and eventually brought resolution to the problem. And then relative peace and equilibrium was restored... for a while. This is not to say that this type of caregiving is not hard, because it is so so hard, and I have had many tears and pillow-soaked nights. ( as many or all of us here have, I would guess.)
I just feel sad for you right now, because you have been faithful to your mother and cared for her from afar, and have managed her transition into skilled nursing. And now this is the thanks you get? ----That she replaces you with someone else as her POA? Don't be angry, just move forward and deal with this. MaryAnn, good job! You are doing the best you can, and you are doing great. Just before my mother died, she thanked me for having gotten her and Dad to move into assisted living. It was a nice gift to hear that before she passed. I'll bet your mother , deep down, feels the same way----grateful to you for your care. Sometimes anger will make people do strange things ( like her "taking away" your POA status). She has dwindling strength and power in her life at this point, and manipulating POA status is one thing she can yet do. Hang in there, MaryAnn. You will make it.
I moved my mom to assisted living last year and then a nursing home a few months ago. She still wishes to go home but I must tell her it's not safe anymore and her physical safety comes first. I am lucky that she found friends at the nursing home and is happier to have a roomate - something I never expected. I developed a sort of "mantra" - or positive affirmation - that I go through daily. I basically tell myself that i love her, respect her and want her safety and the best qualify of life possible for her. I remind myself that the Mom I had at age 20 wanted me to be educated, to travel to have a fulfilling life of my own. In my head I go through the things "wrong with her" that require she needs care all the time. Her physical limits are hearing and vision loss, she can't walk, has weak arms, no grip in hands, can't get on/off toilet alone or fix food for herself and her emotional needs (won't eat alone, won't take medications without prompting) really make it impossible for her to be home. This helps me feel less guilty about her not living in her own home. Each week I try to do things that support her quality of life - I send or deliver cookies and candy. I make sure she has a newspaper subscription, crossword puzzle books and plenty of pens. I often take coffee and pie from McDonalds and wheel her to a sunny location to share it with her. I try to get her to talk about things like her favorite childhood experiences, canning, baking - anything to help her relive good memories. I and my family also get her out when we can so that she has new experiences too.
I practice "compartmentalizing" my focus throughout the day. I push thoughts of her aside so that I can focus on my work or task at hand. It's not easy because, as women, we try to ensure everyone's tended to...it gets easier with time. ('ve also done a lot of reading about aging and realize that I am always waiting for the next "event" that signals a change or a decline. Keeping the list about mom's condition helps me to be rather clinical about her aging so that the next event is not a shock.
Sorry to blab on and on but this "letting go" is complex and our way of doing it depends on the individual and the situation. You'll be okay, just be aware that you must consider your own emotional needs and maintain the positive relationships that will survive your mom and help you heal after she's passed. Best of luck to you and her as well.
We grieve loss of companionship. We even grieve the struggles we had with our parents.
You take every day and do the best you can with it. You pray to God and give the problems to Him. Remember there really is no problem greater than God. You tell God that you cannot do anymore and ask for His help.
And most of all, you recognize that you are on the earth bc of your parents! And your responsibility as a human being is to be the best you can be. If that means that you need to rely on Skilled Nursing then so be it.
Pick up the pieces of your life and make your life something terrific. You will carry the memory of your parent and (if not already) you will someday realize that you are a better person bc of the caregiving journey.