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Mom has had three bouts of not talking.


The first time I thought she was being bratty and I got annoyed. The second time her home health care nurse was here and she not only wasn’t speaking, but also her eyes wouldn’t track or blink much. We called 911 and the moron ER doctor (wouldn’t listen, prescripted the wrong meds for something different, etc) told me it was a seizure (she never had one before) and gave her seizure meds.


This morning she is doing it again and I lost it!!! Yelled at her, started shaking the bed screaming TALK TO ME!!!!! She is blinking and will nod her head to yes or no questions, but won’t speak and I swear I am having a nervous breakdown and my heart hurts.


I don’t know what the hell is going on! I feel emotionally and physically sick right now.


Anyone else have this happen?

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I am sorry that you feel that we do not care about you or your Mom or your situation.  We care a great deal!!  Sometimes we need to ask questions so that we can understand a situation better and to be able to offer appropriate suggestions, These questions are being asked to clarify your situation and not because we think that your actions are wrong.  We have all been frustrated and upset and angry sometime or another.  That is part of being a caregiver.

You have mentioned that you feel burned out.  I am wondering if you are experiencing "Compassion Fatigue".

According to the website:
http://www.compassionfatigue.org/

"Caring too much can hurt. When caregivers focus on others without practicing self-care, destructive behaviors can surface. Apathy, isolation, bottled up emotions and substance abuse head a long list of symptoms associated with the secondary traumatic stress disorder now labeled (as): Compassion Fatigue."

"Day in, day out, workers (either professional or family caregivers) struggle to function in care giving environments that constantly present heart wrenching, emotional challenges." 

"Accepting the presence of compassion fatigue in your life only serves to validate the fact that you are a deeply caring individual."

According to:
 https://dailycaring.com/how-to-cope-with-compassion-fatigue-8-tips-for-caregivers/

"Caregiving is an all-consuming responsibility, whether you’re doing hands-on personal care or managing care from a distance...That puts you at risk for compassion fatigue. Compassion fatigue can be a side effect of caring for someone in need. It causes physical and emotional exhaustion and reduces the ability to empathize."

I think that you are a VERY, VERY empathic and loving person who cares deeply about your Mom and wants only the best for her.  Part of giving your best to your Mom, is being able to take care of yourself.  Please research "Compassion Fatigue" on the internet as I think that might be what you are experiencing.

We love you and care about you very much.  {{{HUGS}}} and Prayers 🙏
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Did you miss the part where I said I'd been there done that? - I know fear and burnout and seemingly incompetent medical doctors, I also know that when you've reached the point where you react the way you described you are so sucked into the everyday crises that you are reacting emotionally instead of logically and you need more support and a time out, not as a punishment but as a very necessary pressure release.

This forum is a wonderful place for support and information, I can truly say that I would have never been able to make it without AgingCare.
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You are seriously burnt out if you are shaking the bed and screaming, I get that you're stressed but what you describe makes it sound like you are blaming her for doing this on purpose. (I may be guilty of melting down myself but that doesn't mean I can't recognize that this is not acceptable and call you out on it, yeah, BTDT and will live with the shame until I die)
Other than an absence seizure my thought is that it could be a TIA - did no one recommend continuing to follow this up? Has she had a CAT scan or MRI? You need to know exactly what you are dealing with so you can understand and plan appropriately.
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anonymous885003 Mar 2019
Did not touch my mom I shook the bed rails trying to get a response. She had a cat scan and mri. Neuro called I was changing mom and asked her to call back in 20 minutes and they never did. Er just said neuro would contact me. I have no way of calling back.
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Gettingharder, You are taking everything completely wrong.

You shake a bed and the person on it gets shook, you can't deny that. You used the term screaming, TALK TO ME!

Everyone is trying to help you and you are just angry, you need to calm down. Of course you are stressed and scared. Who wouldn't be. But cussing all of us because we are trying to help shows that you are on burnout and something has to give.

I was there myself when I first came here, answers were not the support I was looking for, but when I calmed down and reread them, some of them made total sense and helped me to see some things from a different perspective. Try to do that, for your sake as well as your mom, this is a marathon not a sprint.
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shad250 Mar 2019
Maybe she is/was scared.
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I think what everyone whose answered your post is trying to get you to see is that your reaction was out of control.

When the neuro called you should have taken the call. In that moment it was more important for you to talk with the neuro than to continue changing your mother.

You sound beyond overwhelmed. I urge you to find respite care for your mother while you figure out how to move forward.
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anonymous885003 Mar 2019
As I was in the middle of changing a diaherra blow out I couldn’t quite stop what I was doing.

Thanks everyone but as I apparently wrote it wrong for you to understand or I am oversensitive to how you all are basically telling me I suck.

I will refrain from this forum. I take incredible care of my mom and I don’t need stress from a place that I thought would be helpful.
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Can we go back to the beginning and start again?

Your mother had her first attack of this kind when?
The second time, with the nurse and the trip to ER, when?

Is anyone coming in to help you today?
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Thanks so much for the clarifications!

I really hope that you dont leave the forum. I understand why you think the doc was a moron!

So, you need to get back in touch with the neurologist. Can you call the ER and talk to one of the nurses and get the number of the doc who called you?

We care!!!!
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Anonymous885003, I am sending you a hug and positive vibes. This caregiving thing is overwhelming and exhausting alot of the time. It’s incredibly scary to see your loved one in declining health and not know what is going on.

There is no perfection in any of this. None. So, do not beat yourself up. You reacted the way you did. That’s in the past now. Breathe and know that it will all turn out fine.
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I'm so sorry if I sounded like I was attacking you! I didn't mean that at all.

I certainly hope that you come back and let us know what is happening. ((((Hugs))))))
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Don't go away. This stuff is so difficult to deal with and there are people here who really do understand the frustration.
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