We feel every ache and pain, see to every infection, bout of pneumonia, nutrition needs, bathrooming needs, etc., with people who can, sometimes, only be described as extremely difficult to get along with. Every daily need is seen to in an effort to prolong lives that would have already been over without us. So we stretch out the years for them...years spent doing nothing, sometimes in some trance-like state.
I think this may be far too existential a forum for such a question but what is the value of all of this?
My mother was not hard to get along with and appreciated all that we did for her.
If you are not appreciated, why are you there?
I dont know the answer, I wish I know. I am not appreciated....and I am still there for her.
I have issues with a worldwide medical community that has given and continues to give so much time, money and research efforts to healing heart disease, cancer and other illnesses that we now have a growing population of people who are surviving multiple chronic illnesses only to be left with dementia for a decade or even two not even knowing who they are or who their family is. I doubt anyone in their right mind would consider this to be "quality of life" or would choose to live out their last years this way. If I were diagnosed with dementia, I would not engage in treatment or would stop all treatments for other chronic illnesses. The government funnels funds into research, maybe they can funnel more funds into helping healthy people survive caretaking!
forum?
Perhaps. I expect there are almost as many answers to the questions of why and to the inherent value of being a caregiver- as there are people who come here.
None of us want a parent to die but watching my Mom lose her mind and get frailer and frailer was awful. Yes, I think her decline was maybe faster once she was in an AL then a NH. But, I knew having her here longer was not going to bring back my Mom. She was well cared for and passed peacefully.
I believe that there are individuals that the lights are on but nobody is home and to prolong their lives takes resources that could be put to better use. Just my opinion.
I am not dragging them through what I have been and still am going through as a perpetual caregiver since 2003. In the meantime, without having that talk about mortality and what our relatives’ individual decisions are, our hands are tied. And as it has been pointed out, at the very least you won’t be guilt ridden after they have passed. You know, hospice discontinued my parents’ medications except for antibiotics and pain meds. The body is valiant in its struggle to survive.
So I, as her sole POA, didn’t “try so hard”, and we (her tenacious family) were all Blessed by a residential care center that DID appreciate US, just by the luck of the draw.
We chose her residence because we’d originally been forced to admit her there on a moment’s notice (thrown out of her hospital bed after she was “cured” a week after hip surgery), and found to our amazement that the rehab staff was able to get her to DO stuff. Then after living with me for 9 unsuccessful months, when she again had to be placed on literally a day’s notice, they had a bed for her and we took it.
I think I actually never expected, or looked, for “appreciation”. My mother was a tough cookie with a heart of gold, wracked by anxiety her whole life, and I was used to that when she was well, and continued to admire and cherish her foibles when she became dependent on me.
Although I too thought I’d die of exhaustion while we were living through the end of her life, I treasure the little joys that were hers through her family AND her care team.
She died at 95, and we still have contact with some of the staff members who were so good to her.
Medical science has made so many advances over the years but along with these advances now comes a whole new set of problems for seniors, the worst in my opinion, dementia. Right now my family is experiencing 4 of our loved ones with this horrible disease. My aunt (92) is not expected to live more than a few days now, my uncle (96) who we feel will shortly be following her, my father (94) and now my husband who is only 71 is also beginning this terrible journey with a vascular dementia diagnosis just recently.
Yes the 3 older family members have enjoyed a wonderful long life but I know had they been able to predict the end of life they are experiencing now they would rather have passed on years ago.
Many of us have been fortunate enough to secure our future financially but what good is that when our minds start to fail us? What kind of living arrangements do we have to look forward to? Our governments have not looked after our seniors in the past, present and I predict, the future.
I, for one, am very scared of what is to come.
we have choices ... both difficult/both "bad" ... so we need to look down the road and try to pick the one we hopefully will regret least in the future.
Sometimes we need to be caring and understanding and helpful and tho it may extend a life that doesnt seem like a good one at least we know we have made it better for another person.
So we do the best we can and come here where people understand and are supportive.
When, three days running, my Mom, who lived an hour from where I lived and worked, had an "emergency" that demanded my immediate presence, I sat her down and said "I can't do this anymore".
Can't do what? she wanted to know.
"Respond to your emergencies. Which are not really emergencies. I'm going to lose my job and your son (favorite child) is going to die of a heart attack responding to this stuff; we need to figure out how you're going to live somewhere so that you have people around who can respond to these things".
She was terribly upset, but we stuck to our guns and got her moved, first to AL then to a nice Independent Living place. Mom thrived there, although she was not a social person.
It also helped that she started being seen by a geriatric psychiatrist who got her anxiety under control.
life -
Yes i also wanted my dad back to where he had been - but that just wasn't going
to happen and this was the new normal in our lives. It only lasts for so long - and we grieve the person they were. There will come a time - I do know what you are feeling.
"I have issues with a worldwide medical community that has given and continues to give so much time, money and research efforts to healing heart disease, cancer and other illnesses that we now have a growing population of people who are surviving multiple chronic illnesses only to be left with dementia for a decade or even two not even knowing who they are or who their family is. I doubt anyone in their right mind would consider this to be "quality of life" or would choose to live out their last years this way. If I were diagnosed with dementia, I would not engage in treatment or would stop all treatments for other chronic illnesses. The government funnels funds into research, maybe they can funnel more funds into helping healthy people survive caretaking!"
The dilemma here is yes, medical intervention has helped to contain or cure many diseases and illnesses, but where would you draw the line ? Many who have been "cured", like yourself, can go on to enjoy MANY years, and not all end up with dementia. There are others who have had NO medical issues or interventions, yet are now on this path. We have no crystal ball to see who will or will not develop one of these horrible life-sucking conditions! Should we forgo all medical progress? While pursuing treatments and cures, they just might finally figure this one out and stop or prevent dementias.
Ones "quality of life" is all we can use to determine whether to continue treatments or switch to palliative care. Would the person choose to live out the remainder of their life, knowing they are being robbed of memory, even if they can still function on some level? Probably not, however they are not in a state to make that decision, so we have to make the choices. Although you indicate that you would opt out of treatments were you diagnosed with dementia, by the time you get this Dx, you might not be able to make that decision or may be in favor of whatever other treatments you do need/want! If that is what your wish, you need to document it legally, via medical directives. Despite documenting your wishes, family members can and probably will continue treatments decisions for you - this could be out of love, wanting to preserve what time one has left with the LO or considering that if they eliminate treatment, it would be like euthanasia, which many would not opt for.
Why do we do what we do? Everyone's reason is personal, just like every dementia case is unique (despite similarities, not every one follows the exact same path.) Our mother cannot function safely alone, but can still get around (with a walker now), feed, dress, toilet and bathe, still gets some enjoyment out of reading (although she is probably reading the same things over and over.) Her hearing is almost non-existent, and we are still getting treatments for macular degeneration to preserve her eyesight. Does she wish to die? No. Is she firmly rooted in the here and now? Sort of. She may not know what day it is or where she is, but she still has some enjoyment (they just the other day told me she kicked butt playing UNO!!!) She has forgotten the condo she lived in for 20+ years and is focused on their previous home. She is focused on her mother, wanting to call and/or visit, wondering what she is doing on the major holidays, etc. Her mother has been gone about 40 years, so we just fudge the answers for now. Would I stop her BP meds? No. If she were to have a major incident, her wishes were stated in medical directives, so we have a DNR in place. If she has infection or some treatable condition, we will treat it.
I do feel for those of you who are doing this in your home or the LOs. I could not do this. I knew it would be very difficult/impossible for me to physically care for her myself, brothers are clueless about what it really takes! Even worse are those who never had a real loving relationship, are accused of various deeds, are jeopardizing their health or own financial futures to provide this care
For those who have no medical issues other than dementia, there would be no medical treatments to stop or to forego. Yet you would still have the issue of the person needing care. So eliminating any medical treatment to prevent prolonging life would not apply... Skipping any major interventions for conditions that might pop up (cancer, heart failure, etc) would be on the decision table, but certainly I would not opt for any major surgery or chemo for mom (95) should anything pop up. She is actually the last holdout on both sides of the family, and did not really develop dementia until she was 90+.
Along with my other comments about whether we should provide interventions or not, my dad could have died when he was in his early 40s due to a bad heart valve and aneurysm on the aorta, both fixed at the same time. He lived to be 83, mostly declined due to bad back and dementia in the last few years. He had a second valve replacement, same valve, many years later, but he got a good 20 years out of the first, when they say more like 10. So, is medical intervention worth it? I vote yes for most situations. He had a very good outcome with this surgery and lived to enjoy MANY more years! Would I put mom, at 95 with dementia through that now? No way! If he needed another, in his sad condition near the end? No, but that would have been mom's decision (if she asked us our opinion, we could respond, but she was still competent and would have to make the final decision.)
So, this really is not a cut and dry situation. For mom, other than BP meds, she is relatively healthy, so the beat goes on....
These reasons we take on the care of our elders or simply loved ones in need are also the reasons we tend to take on too much and let it engulf our lives, that's the rub of course and the impossible balance to find sometimes. But I can say my mom has always been there for me, when I had surgery, when I couldn't get pout of bed with Lyme disease and no one here new how to treat and she threw a mattress in the back of her car, drove to VT and took me back to CT to see as many specialists as I needed to until I found one I was comfortable with. I can go on of course but she was there for me, dropped everything to care for and help me well after her responsibility for me as a child under 18 was done, why wouldn't I do the same for her? We do it because it's the right thing to do. Not that any of that makes it easy, in fact in many ways for me anyway it makes it harder because she is shrinking away in front of my eyes and I know that she isn't capable of caring for me the same way now.
I'm certainly not religious, did not have a mom quite like yours (she sounds like the dream mom we all wish we had!), but I do what I can to see that our mother is cared for and safe. The care-giving had to be handed off to MC as I could not do this physically and there's no way she would be able to get in/out of my house (full stairs everywhere), my younger brother is still working so would not be home to "watch her" and has two girls in college to pay for, and neither brother, although both said 'gee for the amount they are charging I will do it', haven't a clue as to what that care entails! Older brother could not even handle visiting her recently in MC - did not know what to do with her or how to relate!
I manage EVERYTHING else because they would probably mess things up (and older brother does not have POA, so many things he wouldn't be allowed to do.) I get nothing but a headache and lost time for it, but would rather see it done right than give it up...
Anyway, I read that statement in your post and said hey, there is someone like me out there!! I've always enjoyed helping others and for the most part my kids learned this from me. However there are people who take advantage of those of us who are "generous" too - the kids (and I did too, although not as bad) learned the hard way and I feel bad because they got this from me... But, so long as they learned from it and don't just toss that desire out completely, all should be good, just be wary of some people. A hand up is good, hand outs are not so good!
I do hope you have more good times with mom, although we know those times will diminish, cherish them while you can!
We were brought up in a world where most parents died young and any caring for their own parents had usually been short. Many diseases of ageing were fatal, and care options were not available. Families were larger, many were local, and anyone who moved away was usually ‘gone for ever’. It was more workable to arrange care at home, even though at least one carer usually bore the burden. My own grandmother was the last daughter who was left with the care of her parents until they died when she was aged 40, and then married just in time to get pregnant. It was a different world. In families where there was money, it was usually controlled by the parents who had real power to call the shots about inheritance, which was yet one more buttress to the idea that adult children were obliged to care.
The world of the Bible and the other books of religion was often comparable in morals, but very very different from today in the details of living. A recent post said that ‘there is nothing in the Bible to support putting your parents into a home’ – a startling reaction to the obvious fact that there weren’t any homes! Morals and the way of life can be difficult to disentangle. Jesus’ comments on divorce in the Sermon on the Mount were made at a time when a husband who divorced his wife usually condemned her to destitution or prostitution. You can more easily see the remainder of the Sermon as an unchanged basis for an ethical life.
Many of us on this site have strong ‘religious’ beliefs about how to act, irrespective of their actual religion. Perhaps it would help us to focus on the ‘love’ morals to work out the best thing for us to do. This includes the ability to use our own ‘talents’ for ourselves, our partners and children, and our wider lives. There is nothing in the Bible to support the idea that parents’ ‘wants’ come first, even if the Commandment to ‘honour’ suggests that we should try to meet their ‘needs’
#1 Because of love.
#2 Because we would go to the moon and back 100x over for our LO.
#3 Because we may be perfectionists.
#4 Because wouldn't we want the same for our aging selves?
So, given the relative tsunami of dementia we are currently dealing with (yes, modern science has contributed greatly to longer life spans, so that plays into this as well) I was curious to know if anyone was exploring this idea that perhaps life-long exposure to lower levels are contributing to this current tsunami.
Consider that before lead was banned from gas, paint, emissions from power/mfg plants, etc it was VERY prevalent in the environment (phase out began around 1970). Those emissions also end up deposited in the soil and water too, which can eventually end up in us! A great deal of lead inhaled, ingested, or due to other exposure is stored in the bones, but according to some studies, "...in times of higher bone turnover such as during pregnancy, lactation, and osteoporosis..." that lead gets into the bloodstream and can wreak havoc on multiple organs, including the brain!! Osteoporosis is generally age related...
From http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2013/12/bolstering-link-between-alzheimer-s-disease-and-lead-exposure:
"... Though neuroscientists say more work is needed to confirm the connection, the research suggests that people exposed to lead as children—as many in America used to be before it was eliminated from paint, car emissions, water, and soil—could have an increased risk of the common, late-onset form of Alzheimer’s disease." I consider mom a VERY late onset - she was over 90. None of her siblings showed signs of this - yes they died younger than her, from other conditions, but none were young and none showed signs of dementia.
Now, there is no proof as yet, and studying this is difficult because of the time spans involved, while also trying to rule out any other factors, including genetics, but it is interesting nonetheless. I am no conspiracy theorist, just looking into what others might be finding, if anything. We who are dealing with this tsunami are mostly in that age group of early exposure... It is bad enough having to take care of someone with these afflictions, but to also have to concern oneself with 'will I get this too?' is nerve-wracking! We cannot change what will be, but that fear is still there, lurking in the back of the mind....
Perhaps in the near future there will be much less of this going on, as we who were overexposed to lead pass on and those who were not as heavily impacted age....
When I visit the nursing home, I try to speak to all the residents, I asked Mary today how she was doing and she replied “Just existing”. It was so sad. I asked if I could pray for her and she said yes, so I did out loud, right then and there. Why do some people live to a great age, vibrant, and full of life, only to die after a short illness, and why do some painfully and interminably live out their lives with little quality?
So many people have given such wonderful, thought-provoking responses to the original poster. All so valid and true to their situations. I surely don’t know why we try so hard, but having been created in God’s image, it is very important that we do try, to the best of our abilities.
Treeartist had LLama had good words to say on the matter.
We never know the purpose of a person, we can only see through these human eyes. But everyone has a purpose and it is not for us to question what ones purpose may or may not be.
But now, O LORD, thou art our father; we are the clay, and thou our potter; and we all are the work of thy hand.
Isaiah 64:8
Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus?
Romans 9:20
I completely understand where you are coming from -- are we just prolonging the inevitable? I am sure we are. Is it for the better? I don't think so.
We have been married for 52 years. It was not always a bed of roses. There were bad and hard times. I cannot/will not have him go through this alone. I am not lonely as my DH has been checked out re decisions and conversations for several years and I am used to handling everything by myself. I have wonderful understanding friends. But I am sad and feel so bad for him -- I cry a lot, I find myself unable to make silly decisions (not the big ones - they must get done), I am angry at the way things are now.
The end is inevitable but how long and how much suffering until it comes.
Before my DH had his last incident and went into care, I asked a friend who's wife is in care if it was easier now. He said no. I thought that was odd. Now I know what he meant -- it is physically a bit easier and I can sleep all night but psychologically so much more difficult.
My new life goal is to get myself to a place where my kids don't have to do all this for me.. not sure how doable that will be but will try.
For now - I must concentrate on making my DH's life the best it can be under the circumstances .. whatever that means.
Thanks for your question and the posts that followed. This is very hard stuff.