Dealing with Moving an Aging Parent to Senior Housing

6 Comments

 Print

Email Email

 

There are professional movers who specialize in elder moves. They can help take some of the emotional pain out of the practical part of packing up and moving. But first you have to decide where Mom should live.

I took my mother to several assisted living facilities. We explored and discussed where she would put the things she could keep. You know, to make the transition easier. I tried to keep her thoughts on the future more than the past. This is not an easy task, especially when we ourselves have some emotions to overcome. But talking a great deal about creating a new, comfortable living space that accommodates her needs, while it incorporating as many of her old favorites as possible, generally helps. If your Mom likes new things, this is the time to talk about a new couch that will fit into a special nook in the new place. The whole thing is about the present and the future, while respecting the past.

I'm not saying that it's easy. A move from a home one has lived in for decades is often as hard as a funeral. It's a bit easier for someone who has done it in steps as my parents did. I didn't have to talk Mom into a move from an actual home that meant a great deal, because she and Dad had downsized earlier, but many people do have this challenge. However, even with Mom there were many items that had been in the family for decades, or even generations, that would never fit in even the nicest assisted living apartment.

The decision factor finally proved too much. She strung it out and then cancelled, at the last possible moment, the place she had chosen. Mom stayed where she was, with me running the route several times a day and during night emergencies, until she had no choice but a nursing home. And truthfully, that may have been the best answer in her case, as the time for a nursing home came sooner than we'd expected and Dad was already there.

To complicate all of this "what is best for Mom" business is the nagging feeling many of us adult children have that we should see if Mom would be better off living with us. While actually making that happen is a highly individual decision that should be carefully considered, taking in the needs of all affected parties, it is one that occurs to many of us as maybe the "right" option, leading to a certain amount of guilt over even thinking about the option of assisted living or a nursing home.

Where to go? What is the best decision for Mom? What is the best decision for the long term? How do you bring moving up at all? How do you overcome the fact that she always said she never wanted to "end up in a nursing home?"

These questions are all there staring you in the face when Mom's home is no longer, for her, a safe shelter from the storms of life. There's no way around the fact that making a move to any type of senior housing is an open declaration that our parent is aging. They must accept it and so must we. The move is physical proof, and that hurts.

But what must be done eventually gets done. We bring up the possibility of a move when Mom is having a tough day where she lives. We address the amount of help we will be able to give. We stress that we are still there for her, but there will be more people in the new place who can help. We take her to as many places as possible and let her have as much say in the move as we can. We adjust. She (generally) adjusts. Many people are happier after they have settled in. But the process is hard.

There's just no way to slide around this process. This is where another old saying applies. The only way out is through. Moving from a person's own home to a care facility of any kind is emotional. Concentrating on the new place, while accepting that making such a move involves mourning the past, helps some. Acknowledge her pain as well as your own. If you and your elder are struggling too much, get third party help. Often a close friend, a pastor, priest or Rabbi – or even a paid counselor – can help you both through this minefield by offering support and fresh ideas to help you both look to the future as you mourn the past.


Elder care author, columnist and speaker Carol Bradley Bursack is an AgingCare.com contributing editor and moderator of the AgingCare.com community forum. Read her full biography

 
 
 

Comments

 
  •  Comments 1 to 6 of 6 
 
 

reikibev

Give a Hug

Dec 23, 2009

I kept my mom in her own home until she reached late stage dementia. I have had to place her in a nursing home with a dementia unit over the past 2 weeks. It has been gut-wrenching for both of us. But she finally reached the point in her decline, where she did not recognize the home as her own, and tried to run away to where she lived as a child. Now, she is in a safe place, and adjusting. She likes being fed and cared for. She is on appropriate medication for her condition, but she really doesn't know where she is or what is happening. I'm not sorry that I kept her in her own home until the last minute. I am grateful that nothing happened to her, (although I had lots of agency support to keep her there). But for anyone making this decision to put their parent in a nursing home, my heart goes out. We're all still trying to have a merry Christmas, but it's hard.

Reikibev

 
 

emmonte1

Give a Hug

Dec 28, 2009

We kept my mother in her home until she had a stroke. Not sorry either.

 
 

pamela6148

Give a Hug

Dec 29, 2009

I feel for you. I live alone however my sister, her husband, and their two TEENAGE children have lived my my mom for some 20 years. They have torn her house down from top to bottom and on October 26th 2009, my mom had a stroke. She just turned 90 years old December 26th 2009. When my mom had the stroke I wasn't working so I stayed there 24/7 taking care of my mom. I finally asked my sister, (right after they told me on November 17th 2009 that they were going to Morongo for her Birthday) that whe had no plans to stop working. That meant ME. I enlisted some help and got someone to come in 2 days whom my mom has grown very dependent upon (which I dislike). I'm 53, my sister is 9 yrs younger than me, and I had literally abandoned my apartment to be with my mom and just got burned out.

I am not a professional however I'm trying to enlist another care giver as this one we have totally talks too much and butts into our business entirely too much. My mom cannot do anything for herself. She's got very bad arthritis and to top it off she's 90. Whe's got her witts about her but I do think a little dimensia is setting in.

All I know is that I cannot do it alone because it is overwhelming. I don't have answers and will look here for responses but it does take a lot of prayer. If my sister cannot help out more I will have to put my mom somewhere because I just can't do it. I don't feel bad though because I've done so so much however they become argumentative and nothing is ever enough.

My mom has a big savings, and I applied for medical for her but if it doesn't go through I will use every dime on her to keep her as best as I can. I have 2 sons. One's going into the Navy and the other (21) still needs moms help so I've got to help him to get on his feet. It's a lot taking care of a parent and I just often wonder what it is they are thinking when they look deep into our eyes, and still have a spacey look on their faces. We love our parents, but it will overcome you and eat you inside out.

 
 

marthaclark

Give a Hug

Jan 6, 2011

Interesting article. Both my parents decided early on to settle in a retirement community. I guess I'm lucky for not going through the trouble of moving my elderly parents. It also helped that they're within two hours driving distance away from where we live, from NY to Alden Place in Lebanon Pa.

 
 

My Dad was so ill and Mom could not care for him and we had to put him into a nursing home. After paying most of their savings, Dad died from neglect..... his waste from his diaper, they did not like changing, leaked into his huge bedsore on his back. We are not people who sue, therefore we did nothing. I promised Mom I would do everything I could to keep her home and out of a disgusting home. Now she is in need of care and I cannot do it alone. I will run out of money after 6 months for outside help and I will have no choice but to look at nursing homes for which she will qualify for medicaid. I know the care is no different for medicaid patients or those paying as we did for Dad. I am so tormented that I will not forfill my promise and it is making me sick.

 
 

cmagnum

Give a Hug

May 6, 2011

It sounds like you have fulfilled your promise to do everything you could to keep her home. I hope that you do feel good about that. You have done that and when you have done all you can do then you have done it all. Not all nursing homes are bad. So, I hope you can find a good one for her that takes medicaid.

 
  •  Comments 1 to 6 of 6 

Add Your Comment

Find Senior Housing And Care That Fits You Needs

I am looking for:
Search location:











Housing


Care


Stay Connected

Sign up for our newsletter and receive practical tips and support for caregivers

 

Like AgingCare.com on Facebook