Follow
Share

My mother is is assisted living. Mostly she is in her wheelchair. Today, I was dong some chores in her room and she was wheeling herself down the hall. I went out to look for her and she was inside a spare room which was full of the belongings of another resident. The room door was opened and she went right in. She was holding a small jewelry box and trying to open it. I told her she needed to put it back as someone could think she ws trying to steal something. She became furious and I literally had to wrest the box from her hands. At that point she called me a bit**. Took her back to her apartment. She was furious and told me she could do whatever she wanted. Would not listen to me at all when I tried to explain why this was inappropriate. She went on to say a number of rude things. eventually i just left.
Mother has always been a bit of a diva and had wicked tongue when she was thwarted, buyt this behavior just threw me for a loop. She is on mes for mild dementia and I think she is having TIAs quite often. Just at a loss as to how to deal with her. She refuses to cooperate with the attendants and I fear she will have to go to a nursing home soon. She absolutely will NOT listen to me or to any of mysiblings, doctors or anyone else. She seems determined to do what she wants and expects everyone to accept it. How to handle this w/o getting angry, sad, depressed, etc? I feel totally helpless.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Your mom sounds like she is beyond logic, so logic won't work. The TIAs and her dementia have her in a different world. It sounds like she could belong in a dementia unit and/or nursing home where people are used to dealing with this type of behavior.

I would see if her medications should be changed, or dosages adjusted. There may be something to calm her agression. But as you've found, arguing will get you nowhere. Her basic personality may make this worse, but some very sweet people get this way from dementia and/or strokes.

Again, I'd ask her doctor to revaluate her meds and start looking for a dementia unit, if the staff where she is isn't trained for this type of behavior. It isn't likely to go away, though medications may help.

Good luck,
Carol
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter