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Wonderful comments...Thank You!! Also it is so freeing to know I'm not the only one and I'm sure we all feel that way...so I'm grateful I found this place in cyber space.

Shaking...yes you are very fortunate that she was able to check herself in...I wish my mom knew something was wrong or should I say that she would have gone to the Dr as we had suggested when we first saw the signs...back then she would have done the same.

In fact...I'm grateful that about 7 years ago...right before this started or right at the start of her dementia's she made me swear that I would never take her in and care for her should she ever have anything like this happen...she wanted to go to a nursing home even if it was kicking and screaming.

That being said...now she is terrified we will put her into a home and of course she does not remember that she had the conversation not just with myself but my brother.

I'm glad now that she told me that because I actually don't have any guilt surrounding actually placing her in a home...where the issues lie are more in the fact that she is going to be very angry with me for a while and the idea of the emergency room it's the abandonment trigger in me.

I can be objective and I understand that the emotions I'm having are based on the past, but man they are so deep and so hurtful that I'm not always able to override them...sigh.

At any rate...mom does not think rationally at all...as an example she has become incontinent at night mostly, so we have to insist she change her depends in the morning and if they leaked at night and she slept in it I make her take a bath and she simply does not understand why I think she needs one or that there is anything wrong with wearing her depends for the rest of the day leaking all over.

She often tells me that she is shocked at how horribly I turned out and how I've been misled in my understanding of the situation and so controlling. This of course is her dementia...but it gives you an idea about how she thinks now...there is no rational thought as we know it...she does not remember that it's important to be clean or brush our teeth or wash our hands and face and that it's perfectly fine not to wash our cloths or bedding after having an accident. (she can not smell any longer so she does not smell it either).

Sharyn...you are right of course...but I think my trama trigger is stronger at the moment then my objective mind...so I will avoid this situation if possible. I'm just glad that I figured out what I was having a reaction too...maybe it will help me deal with it better.

Also, no I would not abandon her in this manner...care giving continues, if only part time when she goes to a home...I think I might actually find some joy in it when I've had a good rest.

Emjo...thank you thank you...you spoke to my heart and I feel now more then ever that my idea to work with others like me in my area is a good idea.

Coming here I have found so many people like myself dealing with similar situations and having trouble finding advise that is appropriate.

It is hard to explain to someone that reading some of the articles surrounding Alzheimer's care, and knowing it does not work for our parents, or even being able to relate to the idea of a loving parent prier to dementia is almost like putting salt on a wound.

Not that I don't understand that the majority of folks are in that situation rather then our situation, and I'm very very grateful for how much information is out there...my experience is different though and discovering there are quite a few that have this issue as well has been helpful.

But also it has made me aware that we need to help one another out, not just here but in person and so the group would work well to help...and maybe more later on, once my emotions are not being tampered with 24/7 ...maybe we can do some workshops or something...I don't know...but I feel it will work out just perfectly as it's meant to when it does happen.

This disease is so horrible, in fact having lost my father to cancer and being at his bedside for two months prier and having been with my best friend when her father died of cancer as well as a dear friend who also did...I can honestly say that now it feels like a cake walk going through that compared to this...and it was super horrible doing the caregiving for my father when he was there.

I will be calling on Monday to speak with SS. I will be firm and unbending in my resolve...mom needs to be in a home...and she does.

(((((((((((Hugs))))))))))))) all the way around!!
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((((((Shannon)))))) I understand the difficulty of caring for a parent who was abusive in your childhood and still is. The psychologist, Pauline Boss, wrote that in cases like ours it is important to be humane to your parent, but also to cause yourself no further harm. She recommends that people who were abused do not do hands-on caregiving for their abuser, but rather help at arm's length.
My mother is in geriatric psychiatric hospital now awaiting placement in a facility with a mental health mandate. She became too mentally ill to stay in her ALF. I had some painful feelings about cooperating with the psychiatrists in bringing this about, but knew it was the best option. I would never take her into my home as she would ruin my life and health from the stress. She has Borderline Personality Disorder and narcissism (all her life) and in recent years has developed vascular dementia and paranoia, which have made her life unmanageable.
I understand the difficulty of making these decisions for your parent. It does open old emotional wounds and only those who have experienced it understand. I think you are very wise to consider a different group from the regular Alz group.
Dropping your mum off at the ER, or whatever you have to do to get her into a home is not abuse nor abandonment. It is a means to getting your mum the care that she needs, while protecting yourself and your family. My view is that your should act on the advice of the neurologist and do it quickly. I agree with your husband and think that your own feelings of abandonment from being kicked out when you were young are being triggered by this. You have a very young child who will be affected by your mother's illness. If nothing else, and there is more, you owe it to your child to provide them a safe secure environment. You cannot do that with your mother in your home.

shaking - you are fortunate indeed if your mother's behaviour is changing. I think that is rare, and hope it continues for both your sakes. My mother, I believe is not capable of changing due to her illnesses. Shannon's mother has Alz and frontal lobe dementia which affects the control of behaviour and emotions. Those are two serious conditions. I doubt her mum is capable of making much change for long, if at all. I notice from your profile your mum does not have any such condition, which may explain why she has been able to make changes. Good luck to you both

Shannon, come back and let us know what is happening. I really believe that the neurologist knows what he is talking about. ((((((hugs)))) Do something good for you today.
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Getting tough with the SW yes....you say your mother also has dementia...she is not able to rationalize you getting tough with her, in fact, she wont remember. It may make her worse until she does forget about it. Adult Day Care is an option to give you a break throughout the day until you are ready to have her placed. You are only abandoning her if you have her placed and no longer see her or no longer advocate for her.
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Ok. Doc is right about mom needing alternative living.

It sounds though Ike you have tried to negotiate Medicaid on your own. You may not have to to the ER granny dumping thing if you can get a good social worker to help you. If the neurologist does not know how to access one for you, maybe contact the Area Agency on Aging, see if there is a geriatric eval service who has somebody, even consider an eldercare attorney office or less expensively, an assisted living locator who can help. The devil is in the details with finances and eligibity requirements and all. You really do need to do something, but if you don't feel right about doing it via the ER, a very short time of trying to go through channels may help you feel best about the whole thing in the long run. And if you need to take her to the ER after all, you could do that and not just leave but be firm about being unable to a for her due to the wandering and bring up any observations of truly psychotic behavior you are seeing, or a geropsychiatric facility that will take a direct admission.

This should be easier, it isn't though, and my heart goes out to you.
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So to continue.

He looked at me (the Dr) and said I was doing a fantastic job, but I had to consider what it was doing to me and my family and that if they are not responding at social services (I know they call it something else now...like human services or something) that it is the only course of action and that my mom is ready to go into a home.

He also said she would be fine and adjust very quickly and in fact would be better off...which I agree...I know it would be better for her all the way around...she does not like living with me much.

He saw that I was having a real emotional reaction to doing this, so suggested that I call my worker up and threaten to do it...and get really firm with them about the situation and that would kick them into gear as well.

So for the past three weeks I've been sitting with this information...and it has caused me a whole bunch of emotional heartache...and I couldn't figure out why until last night when I was practicing what I would say to them to get them to come out and do the assessment and get her into a home.

Then it hit me.

Taking my mom to the emergency room and walking away would be the ultimate in abandonment from my point of view. While as my husband points out that taking to the home would be really the same thing...it actually is different in that I'd be taking her to her new home.

For those that have not read some of my previous posts...my mom is a sociopath narcissistic personality and was my child hood abuser.

I love my mom...very much and don't want to abuse her because of her treatment of me...what is the biggest thing though is her abandonment of my brother and I ...leaving us on our own most of our childhood to fend for ourselves. She kicked me out of the house right after my 15th birthday and would not speak to me for 2 years after that and this effected me greatly over the years.

To take my mom to the emergency room and just dropping her off and walking away would be me doing this to her...and just the idea is traumatizing to me...I just don't think I could do it unless she really got aggressive.

But...I feel I am forced to use this potential option as a threat in order to get things on the roll...but even threatening it is so outside my personality...yet I'm left with truly no other options.

I think it speaks volumes and I really need to pay attention when one of the nations top Neurologist says it's time and i need to get her in a home now.

He also told me that as far as the group goes that he really liked the idea and that I should not do it until after mom is in a home and I get a break so I can think clearer about it.

I agree on that point...although I have to admit I'm kinda excited about doing something positive to help not just myself but others in similar situations.

...There now I got that out. :) Thank you all for your support and I hope that in some way sharing this may help others cope.
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