Follow
Share

Hello,
My elderly mother is in independent living, with (until yesterday) a CSA visiting once/week to help her with small things. My mother is cognitively clear most of the time, can dress herself, can get around on a walker. She is not yet at the point where she needs a higher care level.



However, she is so demanding and bullying (and always has been to some extent) that we've gone through seven or eight caregivers. The agencies we've worked with seem incapable of finding anyone who can deal with a cranky old person; they send young women who call me: "You're mom is upset with me today..."



My mother complains about being lonely even though I call her 2-3 a week, her housekeeper (who is a family friend) visits her once/week to clean her room even though the asst living provider has a housekeeper, and, until yesterday, a caregiver who took her to get her hair done etc. even though the provider has transportation AND a hair stylist. My mother can make it over to the dining room, but she complains about the food and has her housekeeper bring her fast food. The activities director reached out to her, but she refuses to participate in anything involving a group. She basically wants everything provided for her, including conversation that her fed-up and introverted son can't provide because he's sick of her constant complaints and demands.



I'm really sick of this. The whole idea of having her in the residential home was for them to look after her, but they have no volunteers available to speak with her and will charge us for anything else. Question: Should I simply refuse to hire any more caregivers, in effect forcing her to rely on the res home for food, transport, etc? Suggestions welcome. As you can tell, I'm quite burned out on all of this. Thanks.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Is mom in independent or assisted living?? You reference both in your post, making it unclear. If she's not in AL, she needs to be. Stop jumping thru fiery hoops to make a miserable woman happy....its not going to happen. Once you accept that reality, things get easier. Don't hire anymore staff to keep her amused, it's not working. Leave mom be to use the on site services she's paying dearly for! Unless she's skin and bones, she's eating the horrible food they're serving too! Much like my mother who managed to maintain her 190 lb figure on the "tiny portions of horrible food" she was served in AL too. Snicker. Leave her alone to carve out a life for herself or to sequester herself alone in her room all day, HER CHOICE. She's a grown woman who doesn't need to be treated like a toddler even though she's acting like one.

Good luck.
Helpful Answer (19)
Report
anonymous1732518 Aug 1, 2023
You do know in some of the places most of the food is not that healthy?

Where I'm at most is out of a can with not much being fresh.

Can't blame OPs mom in that regard, though fast food isn't better.
(1)
Report
Grandma1954 August 1, 2023 3:00 pm (maybe I should have left this off...)

STOP the insanity.
She has help where she lives.
If she needs more help than is PROVIDED and PAID FOR in "Independent Living" maybe it is time to transition to Assisted Living.
Since mom is cognizant she is aware of what she is doing and understands consequences.
So sit mom down and have a conversation something like this.
"Mom we have had several caregivers and for one reason or another they have quit. You can get the help you need from the staff here so we are not going to have any more caregivers come in."

Don't back down.
She will do just fine, she may not like it but thus is life.
Helpful Answer (14)
Report

You've already answered your own question in your last paragraph. Yes you should stop hiring caregivers for your mothers every whim. As long as continue to be her answer for everything(by providing the caregivers)she will NEVER take advantage of what her facility has to offer.
So in all reality you my dear are enabling this demanding and bad behavior from your mother, and if you want it to stop then you're going to have to stop enabling her.
She'll adjust don't worry, or she'll just have to go hungry and be lonely. And that will be on her not you.
So please get off this crazy hamster wheel you've been on for far too long and start taking your life back, and accept that more than likely your mother will never be happy and that again is on her not you. Some people just like being miserable, but that doesn't mean that you have you be miserable along with her.
Helpful Answer (11)
Report

Here are the lyrics for caregivers and patients alike!
No, you can't always get what you want
You can't always get what you want
You can't always get what you want
But if you try sometime you'll find
You get what you need
Helpful Answer (11)
Report
DrBenshir Aug 10, 2023
Bravo! I hear that in my head a lot.
(1)
Report
See 1 more reply
Stop hiring help and stop showing up for a couple of weeks.

Call the facility and tell them that you will answer THEIR calls in a true emergency but that you are going "no contact" with your mom so that she can adjust.

Do not tell mom; she'll just bully you more and wear you down.
Helpful Answer (10)
Report

You've got what I call a senior brat on your hands and here's how you handle one.

A senior brat benefits most greatly from tough love. So you don't hire another caregiver. You don't tolerate one more moment of complaint or nonsense from her. You tell her plainly that you will not listen to her complain and if she continues in her bullying and demanding behavior she will get kicked out of AL and the next stop will be a nursing home. A person can demand and bully all they want there because the staff isn't going to jump through hoops to appease and coddle some senior brat wants to act up.

I was an in-home caregiver (mostly to the elderly) for 25 years and noe operate my own homecare business. I've had countless seniors like your mother who were demanding bullies. How I handled them was I give it right back to them. I give it as good as they can and better.
Tell the caregiver you give her permission to put your mother in her place when she acts up. You'll see a big change when she knows no one will take ger crap anymore.
Helpful Answer (10)
Report
Tiredout123 Aug 1, 2023
Thanks. Agreed about the tough love. However, here in CA nursing homes are 10K a month or more, way above our means.
(0)
Report
See 1 more reply
I agree with the responses. Stop hiring caregivers and let those in her IL/AL facility provide her care. My 94 yr old mother has been thru 2 beautiful AL facilities, “had it all” in both, yet she constantly complained about anything and everything. My sister and I took/take the brunt of her complaining, of course. After they couldn’t accommodate her at the 2nd AL place, after having numerous falls required 24 hr assistance, we moved her to a much smaller home. But she didn’t go without complaining, kicking and screaming.
Since being there for 8 months she has run staff off to other jobs, been to the owner/principals “office” twice for rudeness, behavior etc. We’ve read the house rules to her several times and told her if she doesn’t treat people with courtesy and respect she will have to leave to a place she really won’t like.
She is on calming meds now which sometimes help. She has her favorite caregivers and not others, because some give it right back to her. I’ve heard her say things that I wouldn’t ever dream come out of this woman’s mouth. So in reality, we’ve lost the mom we knew. She is in the best place for her and the caregivers take good care of her. She just doesn’t realize/believe how good she has it, and likely never will.
My sister and I are each others’ rock. We take our vacations and try to live our lives knowing mom is taken care of. I maybe talk to mom 1x week now, see her less. Many calls go to my VM.
Please let the AL caregivers do their job. Don’t hire any more extra care unless medically needed. Take care of YOU and live your life. And don’t stress or worry about her. It’s taken me 4 years to get to this point, and sometimes you just have to let go as hard as it is. Best wishes to you!
Helpful Answer (10)
Report

I agree with everyone, don't hire any new people. Let her figure out how to get her hair done. At the worst she will finally start using the services available to her. If she complains to you about needing help getting this done remind her that she drove the helpers away so she has to live with the consequences of her actions. Drop your calls to once or twice a week for awhile so she has to adjust to her surroundings.
Helpful Answer (9)
Report
BurntCaregiver Aug 1, 2023
Excellent advice, Ikdrymom.
(0)
Report
If your mom is not in need of a NH and is "Independent" then she shouldn't need any help from her adult children.

Leave her be.

Has she ever been evaluated by a Geriatric Psychiatrist for depression?
Helpful Answer (8)
Report

What many are saying is difficult to accept but is the truth - your dementia love one can be kept safe and healthy but not happy, since that is up to the person. Brain changes in dementia often cause depression, and no one will be happy about what has happened to them - lost their home, their friends, their activities, and so on, and are now in a place full of strangers. However, this is not the fault of the family or the caregivers. I agree with what someone said about learning to accept all of this, and not try to fix anything, other than monitoring her condition (which you apparently are doing) and make sure she is safe. "Happy" is not something we can fix.
Helpful Answer (8)
Report

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