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My mother is nearing (May 26th) her 100th birthday and lives in our home in an area my husband built especially for her and her belongings. She has been with us for 6 years and is diagnosed with dementia. She is very well spoken and manages to disguise any mental limitations in most casual situations. She walks carefully on her own (generally no assistance) takes her meds when offered and manages to have generally positive interactions at the "club" (our euphemism for our local senior day care). Her Doctor prescribed in home care who assigned a team for her limited care (Shower assistance 2 times each week, RN visits once a week and an assigned minister and social worker who call/visit about every 6 weeks).

Further to the many posts I have been following, she is typically needy in terms of attention wanting to be the center of every conversation (i.e. inserting her wants and needs in a very vocal manner at a recent funeral service for an inlaw and etc.) We know that she needs someone present 24/7 and now that our youngest is home from College for the summer he is very generous with his time as is our 17 year old Grandson. This is a great assistance for me as we operate our own excavating business + on-line Scottish import business and are registered wild life rehabbers with a farm and many wild/domestic animals under our care. We are currently trying to finish a bedroom to help accomodate some of the relatives who will be here for her birthday (not a small task to coordinate).

The problem is that mom is increasingly more hostile and aggressive towards every one close to her. She has thrown her food in my face (too many times to count) and in fact tried to claw (with her intentionally pointed fingernails) what ever she can grab as close to my eyes as possible- she commented to our son at my birthday party _ "it is hard to believe that I spawned that" - very publicly refused a beautiful entree at a restaurant where our son wanted to dine as a special occassion - threw a bathroom shower hand rail at our grandson - anyway you get the picture and I know that too many of you have "been there" too many times. At this stage we try to carry on and accept that this is a result of living to 100 and as sooooo many people tell us we should consider ourselves "lucky" to still have her (another subject for another day).

Apparently mother is not gettting as much attention as she demands so now she has taken a different method to command our undivided attention, The problem is that beyond the tragedy of having our children and grandchild (and the rest of us for that matter) being not only the target of these assaults the CNA informed me that as she was giving mother a shower mom pointed out a bruise (a noted side effect of 5 of the medications she is taking is bruising and she has always been subject to bruises of unknown origin) . She asked the CNA where the bruise came from, mother followed up with "I don't know where it came from but I need to find someone to blame it on" The CNA responded that she hoped she wouldn't be blamed to which mother responded "oh no not you, I'm going to blame someone else". The CNA was very concerned that we be aware of this statement. Mother is at the state in her mental dementia that she typically cannot remember a conversation from 5 minutes earlier but when confronted with this information nearly 3 hours later her quick reply was "that woman who takes care of me knew that was a joke" - mother not only remembered but had a ready and clear excuse. Obviously this comment was very calculated and now I am very concerned regarding the intentional nature of this threat. I cannot feel secure leaving one person home with her as she may in her typical me/me/me attitude accuse that care giver of intentionally hurting her. She told our son (when he was attempting to get her to eat and explaining that she needed to take her meds/food because if she did not she might die) in her nasty & caustic manner "and you would certainly be sorry to see that happen wouldn't you" he was volunteering his time and effort to be sure that she was well taken care of and her comment truly shocked and hurt him..

Now what do we do? Be sure that at least two people are here in order to ensure that no one is falsely accused? We don't have the manpower to do that and I am not willing at this point to live in fear of an intentional attention getting accusation which would jeopardise my family or my home.

PS She has only SS income and the rest of my siblings live 100's of miles away and are not able to assist either with time or money so there is no solution there

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I totally agree with Eyerishlass. Keep notes, tape record, videotape anything you think might lead to accusations. Don't think just because your mother is 100 with dementia that you are out of the woods. Even if she is "blaming it on someone" you will still have to go through the ordeal. It's unfortunate your mom has enough wits about her to be so hateful. My heart goes out to you. I got threatened all the time by my mom also. It hurts.
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Wow. I empathize with you and you know this won't get better and only worsen over time. Sounds like you have a lot on your plate and bless you for all that you have done and continue to do for her. I'm grateful to you even if she can't be at this time...

I have similar issue with my mom (90) and she accuses everyone of multiple things including myself who is the only family she has contact with (she's driven everyone else away). I've been accused of stealing, "telling the bank she was dead", coercing doctors, and she has accused my brother of stealing (now tells everyone he is "convicted felon"), former friends and police of "being terrorist threat" to her, neighbors tapping into her phone line, husband of "something awful - that she can't tell me about???"....so be very careful is my point. This is common scenario and I have documented all such comments, conversations, etc. including dates that they were said in a word document that I keep updated. I even sent to her doctor so these untruths are on record. You may need this written record to demonstrate the accusations over time -- hopefully you never will. I don't think this would hold up in a court of law and you probably could gather enough testimony showing they are unfounded; but do you really want to have to defend yourself legally? Keep good records.

It sounds like she is taking a lot of time and effort these days and maybe its time to consider other options for her -- is there a group home or other AL facilities in the area that are affordable options for her? Ask your doctor and senior center for referrals; visit them on your own first and if something is workable, ask the senior center director, doctor, nurse, social worker, etc. for help in discussions with her to "sell the idea" and get her placed. Then you and your family can concentrate on "quality time" with her and just be the daughter, grandson, etc. and do fun things like having dinner/lunch together, quality visits, etc. She will get the interaction and attention she needs in a safe environment.

I admire you for wanting 2-deep persons every time you deal with her for protection; but I'm not sure that will help if both of you are family for witnessing -- in the unlikely event she were to report abuse to authorities. I think you'd win, but it will be a costly legal matter to defend yourself when you shouldn't have to.

Good luck, and don't forget to take a deep breath and take care of yourself. I'm not a full time caregiver to my mom (I live long distance and work full time) so I'm exposed to these humiliations less frequently and not on a full time basis; but I can relate and have learned thru this site that I don't ever want to take on the responsibility of full time care or having her live with me -- especially as I have witnessed the rapid deterioration of her mental status over the last 2 years.
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I would document each and every accusation and incident just to be on the safe side. What happened, when it happened, with whom did she discuss something with, what was said, etc. IF... and that's a very big if....IF your mom were to try to get you in trouble for some bruise she has somewhere anyone talking to her for any period of time will be able to determine that she has dementia. Her mental status would have to be evaluated and if she can't remember a conversation she had 5 min. after she had it I don't think you have much to worry about. Social skills remain intact for a long time and as you said, anyone talking to your mom on a very basic, social level may not see the dementia but scratch the surface and it will be obvious. And if she lodges some kind of complaint against you she will certainly be evaluated once you bring up the fact that she has dementia.
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