I miss my real Mom. She is a shadow of herself, with no personality.
Everyday I pray and say to myself I'm going to have more patience and be loving and kinder and touch my mom more. But I stay the same like a robot and bring her meals dress her and mostly leave her by herself . The guilt is awful. She's hard of hearing so I have to talk loud. Which makes my chest hurt. I cannot reason with her. She's says the craziest things I've ever heard. Don't understand something she is looking straight at. It's so upsetting every day. I miss my cool beautiful Mother. She was everything I aspire to be. Now she walks around half clothed smelly and hardly talks unless it's asking for food or drink. And I stay with a chip on my shoulder as my dad would say all the time. Any suggestions would help and thank you.
I believe that we pre-mourn our loved ones with dementia - it is the opposite of seeing when a child grows up & reaches each milestone whereas with dementia it is the removal of those same milestones that we mourn - when they need depends, when they need help to dress, when they need help to eat .... all are reverse milestones & we mourn that loss with each one repeatedly
I found it good to look at old pix of her when she was vibrant not as she was towards the end of her life - the gleam in her eye when she was 21 or the smile when she finally graduated university at 47 are all the pix you want to be in your mind's eye not the sickly person who needed help 24/7 - you will adjust if you can go beyond her recent time to her 'best' time for her - good luck in the future & a hug for when you need it
my advice is to not focus on the loss of your mother but on remembering your time together. No illness can take that away.
LOVE and Be Well!
I pray for kindness, understanding and patience, but it still eludes me.
Mom is not the same person and I feel just like you do...that I am just going through the motions to take care of her immediate needs. I keep telling myself that even though she has gotten lost or trapped in her own mind, she NEEDS me to make sure she is ok until God decides to take her. It is a task and most times not a pleasant one, but our moms still NEED us and they know they can rely on us no matter how bad it gets. Looking at it from that standpoint helps me...maybe it will help you too.
She isn’t the same person and it’s okay to acknowledge that you miss who she was. I suppose the next step is acceptance. This is incredibly hard to do. How can it not be?
Others who have experienced your dilemma will understand your situation. My mom has Parkinson’s without dementia. I think dementia or ALZ has to be worse.
Again, I am truly sorry that you are suffering. I imagine that this is an ongoing struggle that doesn’t get any better because there is no cure. Watching the cognitive decline of someone special to us is tragic.
I did see my godmother decline with ALZ and it was hard but that isn’t anywhere near as hard as you have it.
You have to step away. Leave it to the pros, save yourself as best you can. Or if she is agreeable, make the hard choice of a NH or ALF.
Your cool mom is still with you, and always will be. The mind is dead or being eaten away now, the body will be eventually, but you will always have your cool mom in your heart. If there is a blessing in dementia, they really, further into the illness, have no real realizations of who they used to be.
And if you are still dead set on putting your 99% in daily, binge watch Teepa Snow Videos on youtube!!
However, one factor which I have not seen in these answers is that my wife does not have a good relationship with her mother. She never did. She cannot reflect on the "good years" and how her "sweet mom" is now disabled. In fact, her mom's anger and acting like a petulant child ("I need you to come over here and help me place this order NOW") just ignites all sorts of bad memories. She has no good times to fall back on. She tells me: "I realize my mom has been like this since I was a child and I was just a naive child trying to do good by her even though it was abusive. Now that she has dementia it is even worse." So, for my wife, taking care of her mom is like bringing back a flood of bad memories and sometimes she thinks it is karma coming back.
I am caught between because it is not my mom and I do not have that history with her. I think she's difficult but my wife says I don't understand because it is not my buttons being pushed. So what do you say to someone who never had that "cool beautiful Mother" to begin with but is now faced with the decision to care for her or else put her into a home against her will where she will probably die - possibly kill herself as she says she is hoarding pills from us for the occasion? You would think doctors, social workers, or even lawyers would help but so far they really haven't. It's all up to us unless she becomes a ward of the state.
Don't try to reason with her if you don't think you can. Just try to ignore it unless she makes a big deal of it. Try to change the subject. I too, miss my mom so much. She didn't want dementia just like we would never want it. She doesn't want you to suffer. If she ever could realize what was going on I'm sure she wouldn't want you to be suffering. Try to take one day at a time and don't think about the next day. Things can change very fast and if anything did happen, you would want to feel you did what you could to help your mom who i'm sure loves you very much. Try to see if you can get any help at all with govermental assistance. The one I have only needs to know what my mom gets from social security. If you can get any help at all, try to take it so you can have a little time for yourself. My mom has gotten worse lately and there have been previous times when she would want me to just sit with her and watch tv but I would mostly have something else to do. Now while I have the time, I'm trying to sit with her and watch tv a little. There are other things you can do together like make a puzzle with the big pieces. Amazon has some things you can order for people with dementia for them to get involved with. I'm trying to be able to look at the site. Guilt is bad, I have had it. But how much more would it be to have piece of mind and know you did your very best? This is not going to last forever for you or for me. Remember to take a day at a time and do your best. Remember the beautiful mother you had. She is still there. She is still beautiful but in a different way. She is suffering herself and she didn't want this!! At least she can still enjoy some food and drink. There may come a time soon when she won't want to eat. Remember your mom loves you. You are maybe beautiful to her. Don't try to reason with her as you can't reason with a child. Change the subject, offer her something to eat, something to do with you, send her a card or write one out and leave it at the table where she sits and remind her of your love for her. My mom loves cards I have given her and she keeps looking and looking at them. I usually throw it away as I can't stand to see her looking at it as it's the first time she's seeing it. They can't help it! They are sick. They are hurting too but in a different way. I'm going through much now and prayer is very important. Hold her hand at times if you can. Remember you will not change overnight but with a little effort I think thinks can get better. There are still times I wish things were not this way, I would guess every day!! But as things are not in my control, I can only do what I can control. My best to you and you Mom.
I do not blame you one bit for feeling resentful. And for not being able to muster up the patience to deal with her. Oh, the being hard of hearing is mind numbing too! It's, IMHO, very boring dealing with a person like this. You can not have a conversation and have to deal with all kinds of bizarre situations. Who signs up for something like this??
You MUST get some help and some respite care! You're burnt out and that's really bad for both of you.
Unless you can get enough help at home, I would look into having her placed somewhere. She is not your mom anymore. She is a sad and broken shell of the person she used to be. Part of what you're feeling is probably grief for what you have lost.
Since your mom is so far gone, I guess it to be quite unlikely that she realizes how hard this is on you, etc. So as long as you are providing for her basic needs, I do not think you need to indulge in feeling guilty. What you're doing is impossible!
Be kind to yourself.
Grieve for real mom, because she is nearly as gone as if her physical body had already died. Don't feel guilty about disliking dementia mom, but realize real mom didn't choose to become dementia mom. I cannot explain how exactly, but I was able to tolerate dementia dad into the mid to advanced transition stages on a daily basis by concentrating on the "he didn't choose this" and "he needs my help". Later in the advanced stage, the emotional cost was higher than I could bear and I only visited for a couple of hours once a week after he was placed in MC.
You may be able to establish a new relationship with dementia mom, at least for a while. Maybe looking at old photographs and while Mom tells you about the people and places in them. Sing-a-longs with hymns or other songs you enjoyed together during your childhood? Having her back scratched or lotions applied? Combing her hair?
Leaving mom alone in her room too much may actually make her more aggressive tendencies worse. Consider an adult day care or bringing her into the kitchen or living room while you read or watch television (older shows watched during their adult-hoods seem to work best). Often you do not need to interact with your LO all that much just share the space.
You also need to find some methods of reducing or relieving your stress - quick ones and some with longer timeframes. Drinking a cup of coffee while you enjoy the view or peace of a deck or porch. Taking a walk around the house/yard or the block. Deep breathing or a soaking bath. Time off duty during adult day care, in home care hours or a relative giving you a break, even a respite week at a local MC. When you are less stressed, it is easier to tolerate dementia mom.
BTW: When she says the craziest thing ever, "That's nice" and "Really?" are completely appropriate responses!
Just something for you to consider; even if you don't wind up getting her into Memory Care, just knowing the OPTION exists can sometimes help with resentment.
Best of luck
You lose your proper mother and you get this nutsoid mannequin instead, and she smells, and she constantly needs things from you, and every time she falls or she cries or she turns a peculiar colour it is ALL YOUR FAULT. You've got grief, loss, guilt, stress and resentment all rolled into one, and you didn't volunteer, and it isn't fair.
Two different perspectives to try:
1. If she weren't your mother, if she were some other equally helpless little old lady who you had to take responsibility for - never mind why - for, say, the next two years, how would you want to treat her?
2. If someone else were being you and taking care of your mother, how would you want that person to behave around her?
It was the falls risk that turned me into a screeching harridan. Mother had a call button. Every time you explained that she must press it before getting up from her chair, she would solemnly nod and agree and promise for next time. Then you'd turn your back and she'd be off on her travels, tottering along to the bathroom and bouncing off the walls. Cue self leaping up and down and tearing hair and shrieking "WHY - ?" and explaining all over again; and mother had one response "oh, I didn't want to bother you."
The penny half dropped when I realised that, no, she didn't want ME bothering HER.
And then fully dropped when I realised that she did not in fact use her call button because the mental process involved was beyond her. She didn't because she couldn't.
Anyway, that's quite enough from me - are you getting any respite at all? When did you last have a decent night's sleep and some time to yourself and an ordinary social conversation with a non-demented adult?
If there is any help available to you, take advantage of it, whether it’s help through her insurance, your church, your family, friends or community. Call your local Area Agency on Aging and ask about what’s offered to you. Good luck. I understand exactly how you feel.
Take comfort that you are not alone and vent away here...