Mom is in nursing home care and I'm very happy with the care she is receiving. The problem is she won't come out of her room, but just sits in there with the door closed, waiting for me to come. I'm working full time and my only brother is on the opposite side of the country. Mum has a phone in her room and regularly hears from my brother and her sisters. However, I am starting to feel as if I am under siege in my own home, due to phone call after phone call. There are tears, "when are you coming in?", "I'm frightened" (I don't know why); "I haven't got any clothes" (she does); "I haven't got any money" - she does and knows that I take care of it for her which she is very happy about. I have got to the stage where I have pulled my own phone from the wall. Someone told me that I didn't have to answer it, but I just felt so guilty letting it ring and ring. 31 times in one afternoon is the current record. I would love to take the phone from her, but then she would never get calls from others. My brother sympathizes a lot, but never comes for a visit and I had an email from him yesterday asking why he couldn't contact me by phone as he wanted to know how Mum was? I snapped a bit and told him to ring her and find out. When I do see Mom I would describe her as needy with a capital N. (She always has been.) She wants no one around her but me and/or my brother and keeps wistfully asking when I think he might visit again. Can anyone help with ideas, please?
By the way, not all women that gave birth were moms, nor did they offer any comfort. If i cried my mommy dearest would tell me to STFUP or I'll give you a reason to cry. Should I tell her that when she calls me upset and crying? Just curious.
Is she permitted to have a fish bowl? A betta fish is calming, and might get her to focus on caring for something else.
Unfortunately, it’s a choice for our elders to stay in their rooms and not interact. My dad has activities in his apartment building and complex almost every day, yet he sits in front of the tv every day alone. I’ve offered to go with him, but he declines. He declines help from anyone but me, and it’s very hard. But it’s his choice...
On a practical point, you can deal more effectively with her access to the phone. Have the phone taken out of her room and instead leave a cellphone for her with the care team. They can take it to her when she receives incoming calls and take it away again afterwards. If it's a pay-as-you-go type and you don't put any credit on it there's no big risk of its going missing or being misused.
So that should put paid to the multiple calls per day coming through to you. You then establish your own routine for checking in with her.
But it's not just the phone calls, is it. Your mother's situation is heart-breaking. She has moderate dementia: she *is* frightened, she does feel lost and alone, and the (very nice, I don't doubt) people around her are strangers. It is not reasonable to expect her to cope better with this; but it's all landing on you and that is extremely hard to take.
What country is your brother on the other side of? Where are your aunts? You say you're very happy with the care your mother's receiving in the nursing home: are the staff trained and equipped to manage dementia specifically?
What I did was to set up a Google voice number which I then programmed into the speed dial on her phone. I set up Google voice do integrate with Google hangouts in such a way that the phone does not ring when she calls, but I do get a notification on my phone, and a transcript of her message. So much better. I can still see that she called, and I can quickly read her message to see if there is any urgent concern.
As primary for both my parents I get regular updates from the nurses which helps a great deal although it's interesting that I can receive a call that what of them has taken a tumble and when I speak to my parents not a word is said. Conversely thru most of December my Dad kept telling me they were both very sick and yet the nurses were not aware there were any problems. I've opted not to tell my parents that I get regular medical updates as they are both notoriously private and recent that anyone (including me) 'knows their business'.
Once you get going she should ease into it - was she always withdrawn? if so then it will be harder -
Find a way to block her calls from certain hours to get some peace
Your mom obviously needs activities and to fill her time with something, since she doesn’t she sits and worries and time stretches out for her. Do they give her anything to calm her anxiety during the day? That might help.
I know how very frustrating this is but set a workable boundary for you. And since this is the new year...have a talk with brother and set up a visiting schedule with him. Level with him! Sons/brothers can be so lazy!
My parents are in their 90's and while Mom is further along on the slippery slope that is dementia, she doesn't seem to have the same acute fears that Dad has anymore. In Sept when they both arrived at the NH my dad was convinced that he was only there to pacify my mom and that if she passed first he would be able to leave the nursing home and return to his 'normal' life. Fast forward to October and I remember vividly the day that we were discussing my mom and he ruefully said 'wait until I start to forget too'. It was shortly after that I noticed he was becoming fearful.
I suspect when you strip away the day to day duties that are generally required to exist in the world (cooking, cleaning, checking the mail, paying the bills etc) there's a great deal of extra time for elderly minds to fret about what the future holds. Couple that with the childlike qualities both my parents have adopted and it's important for me to remember that they are regressing and I need to care for them as if they are young children.
Like your mother, my parents are inclined to stay in their room all day, not venture out to socialize and it concerns me a great deal particularly given that I live 500 miles away and neither of my brothers will be visiting (or calling) very frequently. They were never social people, content to be each other's best friend so I understand the solitude. I also understand that who they are today versus the vibrant people they once were is worlds apart. I think that in a way they're reluctant to socialize because they are not proud of these versions of themselves...the forgetful, hunched, frightened versions.
I'm also reminded that they entered this new stage of their lives with very few of the physical trappings of what they identified as signs of success. Street address, furnishings, cars etc. all just a memory. Imagine losing everything and having to meet new people all at the same time while baring the indignity of someone else bathing you for the first time in 80 plus years. No one wonder they're afraid.
One of the things that I try to instill in one of my brothers is that if you want a true picture of how Mom and Dad are, don't ask them. It's not an accurate depiction. I have the luxury of speaking to the nursing staff regularly coupled with daily conversations with my parents on the phone but what they tell me is vastly different from what the staff are able to share.
Susan317, my heart goes out to you (and the rest of us); what we are experiencing is tough. Heartbreaking. I keep reminding myself that I have a limited amount of time left with them so I try to make each conversation count. When necessary, I'm stern. Where possible I take the role of caring parental figure attempting to ease their fears and when my brothers show any interest whatsoever I attempt to draw them in as much as possible so that when Mom and Dad are gone there will be a minimum of hard feelings and a semblance of family ties.
I know this response is light of suggestions but hopefully something in my words will resonate and give you confort. Happy New Year and best wishes.
Sometimes just being honest is the best solution. Tell her that you are busy and you give her 4 visits and will talk to her, 1, 2, 3xs daily whatever works for you. That her calling multiple times makes it harder for you to do your business. Repeat as needed.
I would try to visit when you can join in activities with her, she might meet a friend or two that will encourage her to join in. Speak with the activity Director and see if they have any ideas how to motivate her to participate.
It is okay to set boundaries and enforce them. That is the only way you will have any peace from her Neediness.
If you can afford to pay someone to visit your mom in your place for an hour a few days a week, then you may want to try that. Take that person with you to see your mother and introduce her/him as a relative. Have that person call your mom or take her calls for you a couple of times a day. If this works, it will be money well spent.
Then once or twice a day, I'd call to check on her to make sure everything is ok. With her dementia, she won't remember that she has called 20 times already that day so chances are she won't ask you about not answering her calls. If she can still remember and bring it up, you can say you were busy and couldn't answer the phone.
YOU have the CONTROL of this situation. She won't change her habit of calling if you keep picking up the phone.
Best of luck!!!
I have one question: why does your mother need nursing home care?
My Mom was pretty out of it by the time she was placed in an AL and later a NH. She never had a phone, actually she forgot how to use one. The one time she called was at the desk. I lived right up the street, so I did visit almost every day.
This is an ongoing problem with our member so u will get responses.