My mom is 85. She keeps pretending to be sicker than she is. She also pretends that she can't speak well. Some would ask, "How do I know." It's easy . She gets sick every Saturday, when home health doesn't come. She does this to frustrate me and make me stay home. My sister nearby is a drunk. The one downtown doesn't care too much. The one in Alabama just sends texts telling me what to do. I'm seeing a counselor . For a while I just prayed for death to come to me. I still don't enjoy living. I lost my best sister in January. My mom faked a heart attack to avoid the funeral. Does anyone have any suggestions ? I live with her but I need to move out but don't want a guilty conscious when she dies, if she precedes me in death. Any thoughts ?
a) She is not pretending - Lot of old people feel things which no one can medically second ... this happens to old people accept it ... what you can do is :-
1) give her something to eat or drink in 2 -3 hrs
2) give her multi vitamins or food supplements
3) music helps a lot play music she enjoys
4) let her exercise do not let her be couch potato take them out
sorry to say being care giver is a choice or forced on you it doesnot matter .. believe me you shall repent afterwards, if you are not there for her when something happens... YOU seem a person with lovely heart look at yourself and don't see what your siblings are not doing .. It is hard but love you have will pull you through ... be patient .. God be with you Lot of prayers coming your way
That doesn't make me a bad care-giver though - it makes me a realistic one in terms of my own well being (however this is only MY opinion of me - others may have a different view). To be there all the time in case something happens, is precisely what is used to try and stop me from going anywhere at all and it is not viable for my physical or mental well being.
Care-giving as a choice may not be something you wanted to do but have chosen (for whatever reason) to do. Being forced to care-give - from sibling pressure, financial pressure or any other pressure can give people a different set of feelings towards the one they care for.
I do love Mum for being my Mum for raising me for marrying my Dad; I don't like my Mum for knowing I was being abused and doing nothing to safeguard me, for wishing I was dead instead of the son she lost, for refusing to tell me who my natural parents were and for burning all my papers and a zillion other things.
I think people who care-give from choice do so in the full knowledge of who the person they care for is and was but not who they will become and when the time comes, if it comes, that they feel they can no longer care-give then that is the time to say OK I have done all I can it is time for someone else to take over - I have reached the limit of my capability. AND IT'S ALL RIGHT TO FEEL THAT WAY.
The art is in the serenity prayer - Grace to accept the things you can't change; strength to change the things you can and the wisdom to know the difference. So for all caregiver when you no longer have the grace to give care, have the wisdom to recognise this and the strength to do something to change it or your loved one and you will both suffer as a result.
+Nia, You've a tough situation. Sounds like you [as so many others] were raised to believe it's necessary to live with your elder in order to caregive, and, that you believe it when other's cause you to feel guilty? Many do--it's how we're raised!
We need compassion.
And, sometimes need goaded into being responsible and accountable. But it's hard to recognize that in all it's diversity, once we've been raised to accept it. It's almost like it's in our genes.
It seriously sounds like living together is Not healthy for you, and in the long run, it won't be in hers either. She knows how to manipulate you SO well, both of you have a hard time recognizing it.
IF she were in a facility being taken care of by strangers, those are least likely allow her to guilt-trip them into doing what she wants. And, she might still try to guilt you into doing her bidding. It happens most to those she's TRAINED to be her subjects....except some moved away, and you stayed.
Imho, you are right to get counseling, right to seek support from others who have been through similar things, and absolutely right to seek a peaceful rest of your life. And, only you can determine what your limits will be, on her use of you.
My Mom would claim to be half-deaf, yet hear, with amazing clarity, things spoken at average to quiet sound levels, from 2 rooms away. So, we had to be careful to keep conversations very circumspect....which we should all do anyway.
If I needed to rest because of feeling unwell, she'd escalate into amazing drama to show she was far sicker than I....it didn't matter with what. So, I avoided telling her any details of my health, because it helped prevent her hyperbolizing and owning it. I recognized her fears of losing her caregiver, but that didn't seem to mollify her much; it simply helped remove a little of her drama from the mix.
She feared blindness for many years, and is now losing it for real...we could only make sure she had her proper meds [if and when she'd take them]; she's played that up to other relatives on her pity-card; she's used that to manipulate others for so long, and it's not over yet. Not our problem anymore, at our house, as she no longer lives with us.
She feared I was listening in on her phone conversations, so she she got her own phone. She STILL feared we were somehow listening in...there was no fix for that, it was her own paranoia.
She also demanded a lock on her bedroom door, because she felt we, among others, were thieving things from her room....no fix for her paranoia. We stalled as long as we could. Then one brother suckered for it and finally put one on for her....big mistake; she'd already caused one stove fire, one melted cooking pot, and was fixated on using candles in her room...a locked bedroom door with her and her piles of hoarding, was NOT safe in any sense of the word.
But the others thought it was. Good thing she no longer lives with us!
She started, decades ago, going through episodes of being so depressed, repeatedly saying she was going to die soon. Now? She's in her late 80's and still chugging along, while wearing all our frazzles to frazzles---we'll all be lucky to die a bit after she does, if not before!
Yet she still guilt-trips all of us she can reach, as long as we allow her to keep doing it. Those of us trained longer into that by her, don't realize what she is doing until it's too late, and damage has been done. Imho, that's where one sister is at, right now, who took over her caretaking.
So...
Sounds like you already understand that your siblings are Unlikely to be able to help the situation; that means it's up to you to resolve.
Imho, you are stronger than you think. You have much on your side, to support your moving towards better...everything.
---DO keep up with counseling; learn better coping skills, learn how to identify those guilt-trains she keeps rolling at you, before they hit you. Learn evasive maneuvers!
---DO set realistic limits on your elder's use of you, your energy, or your resources. We teach realistic limits to toddlers; it's appropriate to set limits on others, too, as long as there are any rational brain cells in their bodies to understand.
---DO "call her" on her behaviors....IF.. she has enough mental abilities to understand: 1st identify her bad behaviors to her; 2nd, tell her how those cause you to feel; and 3rd, tell her that her described behaviors are Unacceptable in your home.....AND
---DO tell her you are willing to discuss her realistic concerns, but that you refuse to allow her to manipulate your life as she has.
---DO create your own place to live without your elder. Often, we can be better caregivers from a safe distance, instead of under the same roof. Having our own living space, is our sanctuary. We can retreat there and recuperate!
Please keep us posted how you are doing!
You are a valuable asset to yourself, to others, and even though your elder and siblings don't realize it, you are a valued human being to your family, too.
You also might have things to teach others here, on how you finally handle this.
My guess is that a sudden, miraculous recovery will ensue once your little actress realizes the price of crying wolf.