Tag: anger

welcome to girlfriends with aging parents

should Dad be driving?

This is a huge problem! My step-dad is 92yo & lives independently with my mom, who is 82yo. My step-sister has had serious concerns recently about her dad driving & believes that we should do an intervention. Since I am two hours away by plane, I did little but ask what I could do from afar. The answer was to get my mom “on board” with the idea of taking away Richard’s car keys. I called my brother (who lives 30minutes drive from them) and convinced him to call our mom to start the conversation. Well, that went over like a lead balloon! Her response was, “Richard is a fine driver!”

My mom left the house that morning, slamming the door & yelling as she left, “your children are on their way here to take away your car keys!” As you can imagine, that really set Richard off. An hour later, he met both of his children at the front door of their house, arms crossed over his chest and declared, “NOT GOING TO HAPPEN”.

I clearly understand my step-sister and step-brother’s concerns. They raise the chilling question of, “it is bad enough if my dad gets in a car accident & dies but what if he kills an innocent family????” This is a scary thought & she raises a legitimate question.

To date this has not been resolved & I do not have a solution, only more questions. Does anyone else have any ideas or experiences with this?

Submitted by Susan in Florida

 

 

 

 

 

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my once independent mom … gone

I’m just beginning this journey of caring for my elderly mom, my stepfather passed in August. My once independent, I-can-do-anything mom has been reduced to an emotional wreck, unable to make rational decisions for herself. She is making choices for herself that put her health and well-being at risk, and gets VERY upset with me when I try to point out these risks.

My family has moved into mom’s house so I can care for her, and that has been a huge and difficult transition for everyone. Mom now argues with my 8 year old daughter, as if they are BOTH children. And my daughter asks me why grandma is acting so “crazy.” I have very little patience for mom these days, and feel guilty about that. This is only the beginning, and I resent everything about it!!! PLEASE tell me I am NOT THE ONLY ONE feeling this way!  What is anybody else doing?

 

 

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tears of frustration

I am crying tears of frustration! I’m exhausted, angry and ashamed of the way I am feeling. My husband gave me a stern lecture yesterday, saying that he felt we weren’t connecting and that he was no longer my prime concern.

For over a year now, I have been caring for my parents. They are in a retirement facility and both their physical and mental health has taken a rapid slide downhill. Little things send them into a tizzy: running out of Metamucil, a new toilet that has a flush that is too noisy, another buffet dinner in the dining room…

Yesterday my father complained of an urgent health problem, so I called his doctor and set up an appointment. The clinic is a 5 minute drive away from where they live. I am a half hour away and work full time, so was unable to come and take them. I suggested a taxi and checked with the clinic to make sure they would call a taxi for my parents to take them home afterwards. They reassured me that it would be taken care of. Turns out they wouldn’t and didn’t. After waiting an hour to see the doctor, when they were done, the receptionist told them they would have to call a taxi themselves and directed them to a phone. With no idea of the phone number for a yellow cab, they wandered around, finally asking the clinic’s parking lot attendant if he could get a cab for them. An hour later, they were still stranded, confused and panicked. Someone finally took pity on them and helped. Thank goodness my mother accompanied my Dad, as his memory is fading, leaving him confused and teary. I hate to think of what would have happened if he were alone.

Am I alone in feeling like a failure on all fronts? So many women must be in the same boat!  How does anyone juggle it all, without feeling like you are ultimately letting everyone down?

 

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mom’s clothes go MIA

My mother, who is in her late 70’s and lives in an elder care facility, recently fell and broke her hip. After surgery, she was moved to a nursing home to recover, which appeared to be a lovely facility. As it had both a recovery unit and independent living quarters, I even thought that this might be a great place for her to live after she was fully mobile again.

When I went to visit her this weekend, I was beyond shocked when I entered her room and found her only clothed in a pair of Depends and a hospital gown. When I asked her why she didn’t have her clothing on, she kept insisting that she didn’t have any. I reminded her that I had just bought her some comfortable new jeans and tops which were right in the closet in the room. After arguing back and forth, I flung open the closet door only to find that it was empty!

It took me a few moments to regain my composure and start to consider where these garments could have disappeared to. When I confronted an employee, I couldn’t seem to get a straight answer. After much questioning, as I got more and more insistent, he said that her clothing was being laundered. ALL of it I asked? And what was she supposed to wear meanwhile? Oh, they would clothe her in a hospital gown, he replied. What about when she goes to the dining room to eat? He replied that they would put a second gown over the first, reversing it so her backside would also be covered. To say I was appalled and angry didn’t even begin to cover it. He suggested that I visit one of the social workers to see if her clothes could be tracked down and even tried to place the blame on my shoulders, saying that I should have marked each item of clothing with her name in a permanent marker – something that was never brought up to me by the staff.

While I had heard that personal items may “disappear” in some care facilities, I had never imagined anything like this. Now I will have to go out and purchase new clothing, and, of course, will insist that I will pick up and launder her clothes. Meanwhile, if these items never show up again, shouldn’t the facility have to reimburse us? Who takes responsibility? I work full time and my brothers live out-of-state, so I am the one handling all of this. While making arrangements for my mom after her fall have been very stressful, now I will have to police her possessions and run back and forth doing laundry. Finding a different facility would be difficult and moving her again would be traumatic for her. Has anyone put their parent into a retirement facility & had this happen? WHAT DID YOU DO?

 

 

 

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medications that don’t mix

medicationsOne of problems I have heard about lately, with my 84 year old Dad, is how poorly he feels (for no apparent reason). All of a sudden my dad has the jitters, feels miserable and cannot sleep. Because his complaints persisted without cause I decided to accompany him to his doctor’s appointment. This was a true education! I learned that my father has Diabetes and thyroid trouble. He is taking medication for both conditions. The physician seems to feel that the two meds are not compatible and are causing the side effects. All sorts of thoughts ran through m mind, like “why wouldn’t a physician know this?” or “who put my dad on these meds?” At any rate, I was glad to have been with my father, had an opportunity to talk with the doctor directly and problem solve to establish next steps. A word to the wise……get into those doctor appointments earlier!

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aging parent causes adult child angst

I get angry at my parents sometimes for not modeling how to age gracefully and with dignity. In their 90s, maybe they are doing the best they can. I can’t pretend to know what it’s like to live inside a body that fails a little more, day by day.

Mom once said her head tells her she’s 19. But her body is 92.

On the other hand, my mom is behaving badly. Once selfless, self-sufficient, and a patient listener, she now is totally self-absorbed. Mom does what she swore she’d never do, complain incessantly and talk only of her aches and pains—just as my grandmothers did in old age.

She rejects suggestions of activities to get her mind off herself.

She appears mildly interested in the doings of her grandchildren, then interrupts, “Will I ever get well?” Has her mind been on that all along?

Truthfully, my mom is wearing down her caregivers, ones more detached than I. They’re initiating discussions of “the next step,” a nursing home.

If she’s complaining with healthy, fresh food prepared on demand, her every need attended to within seconds—how will she do with institutional fare and waiting 30 minutes for an attendant to take her to the bathroom?

My mom still has my father, after nearly 70 years. All her children are living. Her grandchildren are healthy and smart. “Be grateful”, I say between gritted teeth.

But mostly, my irritation has to do with my own fears of aging. How will I behave? How will my daughters treat me?

I know how I’d like it to be: I’d like a sharp mind and a healthy body up to my last day on this earth. But if I’m not so fortunate, I want to be respected no matter the condition of my mind or body. If I’m forgetful, I hope I’ll be able to laugh at myself, and allow those around me to laugh as well.

Let me be at peace with what I am able to do, and what I’m no longer able to do. Speak to me like an adult—the same person you’ve always known. Somewhere within I will still be that person, even though I confuse my words, my dates and my stories.

Don’t whisper behind my back. If I’m behaving badly, or talking incessantly of ill health, call me on it.

But if I say it’s Wednesday, and you know it’s Thursday, don’t bother to correct me if it really doesn’t matter.

If you find I’m not joining in the family chatter, know that I’m happy just basking in the presence of my loved ones, of hearing the details of busy lives and growing grandchildren.

If you have to help me get out of the chair or assist me with toileting, let it be matter-of-fact for both of us. Let us get over any embarrassment. It’s just my body wearing down. That’s how life is.

In compensation I will have had a long life, many memories, years of joy and some of pain, perhaps some wisdom gained that can be passed on to the next generations.

I will be a little closer to eternity. Let me treasure long hours for prayer. Let me love and take comfort in being loved.

Knowing how I want to navigate old age, I struggle daily to practice respect for my own parents!

They’re never satisfied. They wear me out. I can never do enough. For sanity’s sake I keep repeating to myself, “I am not responsible for their happiness.”

How can two people be so much more demanding—emotionally and physically—than a toddler?

The Golden Rule is much more difficult than I’d thought. I have a lot to work to do.

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communication & dialogue evolved

Throughout my entire life, I have struggled with the fact that my father was not an ideal parent.  He suffers from alcoholism and Peter Pan syndrome, and I have carried a bitter chip on my shoulder because of it.

I have lived 3,000 miles away from him for nearly 24 years now, and see him about 2 days out of every three years. In the most recent years, I lost my grandmother- Dad’s mother. A door opened for us, and he gave me a peek of a very human vulnerable side that I had never witnessed. I decided at long last to forgive him for who he is…and accept his very human self.

This has changed everything for us, and we are actually communicating and sharing stories that I have never heard from him.  I send him emails, and he actually calls me on the phone!

The truth in all of this is that he is not healthy.  His lifestyle is rapidly catching up and he is not going to slow down for it.  He will not change. The gift in it is that I have now formed a relationship with him, a true father daughter bond, that gives me peace and comfort. It happened in time, and I am officially a Daddy’s girl at 44 years old.

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