Follow
Share

From Indiana

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
I’m sorry you’re in this situation. Mother’s Day has been a painful day for me since losing my mom. I essentially lost her twice, the first time when a huge stroke took away every ability, putting her in a NH, and the second when she passed away. Make the best of a sad time by visiting your mom and taking her something she’d enjoy, flowers, lotion, a nice picture, candy, whatever. And when you leave go do something nice for yourself. Many of us learn to rely on the memories of the mom we had before. I wish you peace
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

Just go there to her Memory Care and have a nice visit. Bring her a gift or two and make it as enjoyable as you would make any other Mother's Day visit you'd have with her wherever she was living. Tell her you love her, give her a hug, present her with the gifts, and smile. She's still alive, just suffering from dementia.........so make it a memorable day for both of you!

Good luck!
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
cherokeewaha May 2021
My mom passed before Covid set in so, I did get to see her at least once a week and had special occasion dinners with her including Mothers Day. I took her a double dip of her favorite ice cream, a small bottle of the buttermilk she loved and some soft, chocolate she said she didn't need but really loved. One brother brought her a new blouse and the other one a bag of her favorite hard candies and a bouquet of flowers. Just simple things that she enjoyed and loved but were not available at her MC unit. She enjoyed them more than expensive gifts.
(0)
Report
Certain holidays, mother's day, father's day, Christmas are especially tough, moreso for the caregiver than the patient. I think flowers would be nice and something she could enjoy, and let her smell them to engage her senses. And how about spending some time reminiscing? Bring some photos. Recall fun times. Ask her what she remembers about her life. Happy Mother's Day.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Honestly, I don’t even know if I am going to visit on Mother’s Day.

Visits to my Mom make her angry. I am the local sibling. Seeing me makes her remember that she is not seeing the sibling that she WANTS to see. (The one who doesn’t contact her, of course.) That sibling is out of state.

Visits make my mother word-vomit all of her complaints and negativity. She never was a positive person to begin with. Dementia has caused her to lose her filter even more.

I am committed to visiting once a week, at least, because I want to check on her, physically, and to let the caregivers (who are actually WONDERFUL) know that someone is keeping an eye over Mom.

But, visits leave me sad and disheartened. When I see her face fall, when she figures out who is ACTUALLY visiting, it punches me in the heart.

I want to enjoy Mother’s Day with my daughters and grandson. I don’t want to spend the day recovering from another punishing visit to my mother. I’ll visit another day.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Definitely visit her with some special gifts - pictures, a special treat. But before buying/sending flowers check with her facility. During COVID my mother's campus wasn't allowing flowers to be brought in - not sure of the reason. I agree - reminisce on happy times. Encourage her to tell stories of her past; later you may want to write them down so you have those memories preserved.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Imho, if you are allowed to visit in person, keep it as simple as possible. You don't want to make it difficult as your mother has dementia.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Mother’s Day is different in more than one country relevant to me, so I find it hard to take seriously. Mothering Sunday in the UK, Mother’s Day in Oz and then in the USA. I view it as retailers’ day number 3, after Christmas Day, Easter, then on the retail list just before Valentine’s Day, Father’s Day, and the rest of them. It used to be retailers’ big white goods sale day, when mothers got all the new things like microwaves and automatic washing machines. Now everyone has as much as the bench will hold, it’s a problem about what to give - overpriced flowers or chocolates?

My own mother helped in this attitude, as the classic Mother's Day flowers here are white chrysanthemums, and mother disliked them as 'funeral flowers'. No thanks from her for those!

My feeling would be to forget about it (mother with dementia will anyway), and give mother what you think she would enjoy, any time you think of something. A card so that the aides know she is appreciated. Another option is to collect really nice artificial flowers, and re-arrange them for every time that’s appropriate!
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

She will remember how you make her feel-give her love , a card to set out, a piece of chocolate or a scoop of ice cream, your time, a big fat hug!!! She is very much alive with emotional needs.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

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