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I totally agree with Lealonnie1's post.  I struggle with guilt DAILY about having to put my precious mother in a hospital hospice, despite her wishes NOT to die in a hospital?  My mom did not want to die in a hospital.  She couldn't be moved because she was in excruciating pain so my family had to put her in the hospital hospice...a decision I regret again, every single day since she passed away last Christmas day there.  I have asked myself what I could have done differently and I don't have an answer but this haunts me each and every day.  Her wish was to not die in a hospital and that's precisely what transpired.  I feel I let her down...especially in her time of need.  She suffered tremendously and had a very painful death which I watched first-hand.  It was inhumane what happened with her.  The promise to "keep her comfortable" by Hospice was not done...in fact, it couldn't have been farther from the truth.  Bless those people who have to make the decision to put their loved ones in a place where they can be looked after 24 hours a day.  It is a selfless act...not selfish act.
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notrydoyoda Dec 2019
I'm sorry for your loss and your ongoing battle with guilt. The first year after a persons death like an important event like Thanksgiving, Christmas or a birthday is particularly hard. May I kindly suggest finding a therapist to help you with your emotions. I wish you the best.
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Hello LeaLonnie1...
I have a single, compound word as my reply/comment to your above note:

* A-freakin'-MEN! *

Well stated, friend.
J.J (in the same boat)
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NeedHelpWithMom Dec 2019
Thanks! I completely agree! Lealonnie is a gem! I always stop to read what is on her mind.
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Exactly. What's love got to do with it? Safety is another thing. I needed to read this and will reread (especially when those busy wiping their own a$$es are clueless and offer only judgment).
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Never, ever let anyone put guilt trips on you. If you have tried to do the right thing and no matter what you do, it just won't get fixed or work, and if you are being negatively affected, then YOU have NO CHOICE but to end what is going on and make plans to move forward with your life. If that means to place someone, so be it. YOU do not deserve this bad treatment and you must think of yourself. If that means moving on, do it - now.
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I couldnt agree more.
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I was helping an elderly relative after her son and grandchildren would not step up and help her after a fall and back injury. Her health issues are numerous and the needs were many and constant. It became obvious she needed AL, but she REFUSED to go and insisted on living in her house, trying to manipulate me and one granddaughter into staying with her at night. We helped her tremendously during the day, but both refused to stay at night as it would have been a full-time job requiring us to give up our lives to enable her to do what she wanted. Also, when one stays with her at night, one gets no sleep at all due to her night owl activities which include watching TV late at a high volume, and getting into her kitchen and loudly making a snack at 2:00 a.m. EVERY NIGHT.

Her Sunday School teacher got my phone number and initially started calling me to "check on her." But soon it became obvious she was calling me to attempt to convince me to stay with my this relative at night "so she wouldn't fall." After the fourth call of this nature, I blocked this woman who, by the way, wasn't coming around and visiting this relative herself even though she could drive and get around very well.

I got very tired of having to defend my boundaries especially when I was looking after the needs of this relative every day. Eventually I won the passive-aggressive manipulation game and she now resides in AL. Her family and doctors all agree that she would likely not even be alive today if she had not moved there as they ensure she takes her meds daily and on time and she eats more healthy meals, gets far more exercise and has daily socialization. She has made new friends there.

My sisters and I have told our parents as long as they are somewhat mobile and have all their marbles, we will assist in keeping them in their homes or in our homes, but once one becomes an invalid or dementia, it is AL or SNF.
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NeedHelpWithMom Dec 2019
Isn’t that crazy? So Sunday school teacher was hinting at you being a ‘round the clock’ caregiver. Nuts! Glad that you blocked her number.
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Very good post - the answer isn't always having elders to live with one, or to take on their needs. If a good suitable facility is available who care for the LO, so that your visits can be good family time this IS a much better option, and putting guilt trips on people who opt for this is despicable, they are doing what is best for their family.
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Thank you, very well expressed
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If people making the accusations stopped to think about it, they would realize that care in a facility is expensive, and a greedy person wouldn't be willing to spend the money needed for placing a parent in one.

When my maternal grandmother was alive, she said that the people who know you well understand what you do and why you do it, but the other people who don't know you don't have any say anyway and their opinions don't matter.
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NeedHelpWithMom Dec 2019
Your grandma was very wise.
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Well said!!!
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Thank you for your honest words. I have suffered from attacks like that over placing my 85 year old mother in assisted living. My family tried to take care of her at home. We made a daily care schedule. Family members signed up for care time slots around the clock, as we had been doing for two months before Dad died of cancer. But, we had all used our sick time, flex time and vacation time up. We ignored our own homes and needs to be there. We simply became exhausted with caring for Mom. We all LOVE her. We all gave the maximum to ensure that she was fed, bathed, comforted and provided for in every way we possibly could do with the resources we had available. Yet, we could not do this for years. As you said, the "sheer necessity" made us choose assisted living. None of us wanted it or like it. We really do not deserve a guilt trip about it.
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I think it's emotions vs wisdom.
Some people feel guilt inside for placing parents.
But when you think about it, what's better? Sitting at home lonely and depressed, or being in a place with friends and activities?
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TekkieChikk Dec 2019
Well said. I'd choose friends and activities over a lonely apartment any day. Add in the additional benefits of having 24/7 staff available to manage your meds, assist with showering, prepare your meals, do your laundry, clean your room, provide social activities every day, and offer cookies and snacks at night and it's a perfect living situation.
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Thank you. I have regrets almost daily about helping mom to assisted living. But then I recall the mess in cleaning out her house and knowing she was not capable of keeping it clean, doing laundry, cooking nutritious meals, paying bills, etc. And she was constantly timing her meds to suit herself. She was home alone all day with most neighbors off to work or school.

Add in that the cost of maintenance exceeded her income! Needed repairs would have wiped out her small savings. I researched senior apartments but there were 5-7 year waits for a place near family. And she would still need to pay for housekeeping, home aids, and all her other expenses.

At age 92 it made sense to find an Assisted Living placement near my sibs and myself. She toured several and selected this one herself. We sold her house and contents and now she has a comfortable income that covers all her expenses. If she outlives the money the AL has Medicaid placement as well as a partnership with a memory care facility nearby.

We visit regularly, take her on outings and keep her involved. And now we get to enjoy this stage in our lives, just like she did, with travel, grandchildren, friends, and hobbies.
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OH MY GOSH! I almost can’t believe that I am reading this right now!! Minutes ago I was feeling so despondent about my situation. And although intellectually I know I can’t care for my mom in my home, emotionally I am having a very difficult time with it. Hearing hurtful and insensitive comments that place judgement is just making it worse. I just said a prayer asking for some kind of support. And low and behold this is what I stumbled on!!! THANK YOU. THANK YOU. THANK YOU. People really need to stop judging and realize that we all have limits. We all have responsibilities and it is old age and physical decline that places our loved ones in care environments.
I have been hurting and struggling for so long now I don’t even remember what it feels like to be truly happy about anything. There is always a dark cloud hanging over my life. That looming sense of dread and fear. I’m so tired of feeling this way. I look at others without parents to care for and wish I were them. I wonder what I did to deserve this fate. So when others try to judge and blame they should step back and realize the damage they are causing. And think maybe, just maybe everyone’s situation is unique.
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lealonnie1 Dec 2019
Well, God must have led me to post this because He knew YOU needed to read it!!! Glad the post & more importantly, all the great comments have helped you, dear woman. Wishing you all the best as you take steps to regain your life and place your mom in care. Don't feel despondent......and don't forget, you can visit as much as you'd like and bring her small gifts and lots of love!!
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I dunno...I feel that the forum is pretty quick to say “put them in a home where they belong, get a job, support yourself!”

It always makes me question if I’m doing the right thing, as if I don’t already question myself.

The thing for me is that my mom is mentally, not alert anymore but not demented either. It’s her body that’s failing her and that’s because she’s so afraid of falling she doesn’t exert herself anymore.

I question whether I’m doing right staying at home with her because she could use the social stimulation, she needs physical therapy that she would actually do, and she doesn’t trust me to lift her, saying that if I hurt myself then we’d be in a real pickle.

I question also how long she would have to be placed and will her funds run out before she passes. I question how she could survive in an environment where she’s the only lucid occupant.

I know that I have it real easy here. Even when she has the need for extra care she’s not too difficult(once we get back from her crying and not even trying to help herself.)

Face it, I don’t have anywhere else I’m supposed to be and my duties have more to do with the house which would disappear if she was in a home.

My mom has always been my staunchest support and my best friend, too. She never gave up on me and I don’t intend to abandon her until she has more needs than I can help her with.

She always thanks me for my help and as a matter-of-fact holds off asking me for help for reasons I can’t comprehend. She also makes out as if she’s fine but when we get a visitor, she’ll ask for all kinds of things. Or when she’s on the phone I hear a completely different version of her health status. I judge by how she’s moving which version is correct.

In my mind I foresee the possibility she may need nursing at home and I still see myself here helping with the house and being her advocate.

Unfortunately, my sister has medical poa and she is a lot less sentimental than I am. I’ve imagined that it would not be difficult to have an elder declared incompetent just by virtue of not communicating well because of hearing loss and poor eyesight.

My sister sometimes asks if I’m no longer able to care for mom or if I’ve come to the end of my rope. I always give her a flip answer but later on I wonder, “ What are the alternatives?”
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notrydoyoda Dec 2019
Sounds like you are pondering in the right direction, but that your very close emotional bond with your mother as your best friend is making that hard to find closure on. Evidently, your sister does not share such a bond and is able to be more objective. Your sister is concerned about you and ya'lls mom.

I'm sorry people view placing someone in a nursing home as abandoning them for there is still things to do, just not 24/7.
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Lealonnie1 thank you for such an eloquent way of describing what I personally am going through right now. My sister and I have been taking shifts living with my parents for almost a year now. Dad has Parkinson’s and mom has late stage dementia with aggression. It has not been a good mental or health situation for any of us. My sister and I have dissolving family and marital relationships. Our health has deteriorated. I’m on antidepressants and our hips and backs ache. We feel as if we are not daughters anymore, just caretakers and maids. We love our parents! That’s why we’re here! Dad started out healthier than mom but if we continue like we are he’s going to falter soon. I’m praying he listens to me about placing mom in a memory care facility as I will not last much longer. We’ve tried, we can’t take much more and if anyone tells me we’re wrong to place her, I’ll dissolve. There are so many different situations that no one has the right to judge. Thank you for sticking up for families that must find the best situation for themselves. 🙏🏻
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Frances73 Dec 2019
Have you looked into respite care? Medicare and most insurance covers a weeklong stay in a facility to give caregivers time for a vacation or just time away from the patient. It could act as a first step in getting your Mom placed and let you Dad see the type of care she would receive.
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My husband was 76 with Parkinson's and Lewy Body dementia. He could walk but with some difficulty. He would get into the refrigerator and I never knew what I would find when I got up. He once put 4 eggs into the microwave to cook, in their shell. It took me 2 days to decide how to clean it up. A friend had given me 4 qts. of blackberries. I had them in the refrigerator and I was protecting them from him. I laid down chair to make a barrier that I thought would keep him away. He climbed over them and was moving things around. I tried to get him to stay out of it and I had been up for over 16 hrs. with him. He started throwing things and tried to turn the kitchen table over. I redressed him and took him to the nearest ER. As I explained to the attending MD, I was at my wits end trying to take care of him. After a week in the hospital he was placed in a nursing home that excepted clients with his type of dementia. He stayed about 9 months. He was in a closed unit but he no longer could walk, although he tried many times and fell. He smelled of urine and stool all the time and was wearing his food, even though I had asked that they put a bib or gown on him. I was there a couple times of week and took grandchildren and children with me. After 9 months I brought him home and made up my mind to care for him myself. He still tried to walk and fell. My son lived with us and agreed to help me with his care. In doing so he was trying to get him to sit down and his hand slipped off of his shoulder and he broke his hand and had to have surgery on it. I couldn't get him up off the floor without his assistance(my son's). My husband was losing the ability to stand using pull bars, so that I could change his diaper and clean him up. We decided to put him in bed. He occassionaly tried to get up but couldn't go anywhere. That was this past Jan. In April at a doctor's appt. he was placed in hospice. I didn't have a ramp so it was difficult getting him down concrete steps to the car. In hospice we got a hospital bed and all his care would be done in our home. It was difficult at times changing him and trying to get him to take his meds. Medications helped with his agitation that people get with his condition. As he got more sedated I had to back off of meds so I could get him awake to take fluids and eat. He just died on Nov. 24th. I and our son was by his side. Hospice RN and my 3 daughters arrived about 5 mins later. I felt bad about putting him in the Nursing home. And although he wasn't as clean as I would have liked, he was treated with kindness and well fed there. I made the decision to bring him home and try again to care for him. I don't regret that decision one bit. I felt blessed to be at his side when he took his last breath. He had been doing poorly for about 5 days. Hospice was coming every day to check on him. He had turned around a little the day before he died. I had meds to help relax his breathing and help with the congestion. I could give him breathing treatments, that in the past had helped. I knew as 2:00 a.m. that things were not good, in that his breathing had changed. I tried calling hospice and my daughters. I gave the meds and a breathing treatment but it didn't turn things around. At 3:12 a.m. he took his last breath. His body had the smell of sweet rolls cooking in the oven. My oldest had been here earlier and she said she smelled that at that time. He didn't struggle hard. He just slowed down and his body gave out. I still look in the area of where his hospital bed was before I go to bed and when I get up in the morning. My son does too. I had planned a cremation for him and myself, when the time comes. When they came to pick him up the hospice nurse advised them that he was a veteran and turned the colorful cover for their gurney over to display a U.S. flag. I was very moved. Hospice will be providing me with assistance and moral support for the next 13 months
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lealonnie1 Dec 2019
I'm so sorry for you loss, Lady. Sending you a hug & many thanks for sharing your bittersweet story
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I totally agree with you lealonnie. No one ever said that to me but if they had I would have given them what for. It's never an easy decision when you realize that there is nothing more you can do by yourself for a loved one. When you've exhausted all other alternatives. The home health care visits, the lifeline button that your parent would probably forget to press when they needed to anyway. Yes, they say the fall will activate it but you still sit at home and worry and wonder. The countless visits to the E. R., and on and on it goes.

And even when you have them in a nursing home, you second guess and second guess yourself for having to do it. The staff at the nursing home. Are they taking good care of your loved one? You always wonder. And worry, and wonder.

No, it's not an easy decision. Never one made lightly. No one should criticize.
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I can answer this very simply. When the day comes that the burden of being a caretaker affects the caretaker in a negative way, mentally and physically, or if it is having a bad impact on the rest of the family and the overall living atmosphere of the rest of the family or caretaker, and the behavior and needs are causing a major toll on everyone, then that is WHEN YOU STOP BEING A CARETAKER. In most cases, it is the elderly who are being cared for by the younger members. The younger members have every right to live their lives - just as the older person did before all this happened. Under no circumstances, no matter who it is, or the relationship, no matter what, when the impacts are causing negative consequences, that is the end - the person must be removed and placed somewhere. End of story.
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azilmedia Dec 2019
Thank you for that message. My family (me, husband and two daughters) took care of my mother for almost 6 months after she fell a year ago October, went into hospital then rehab, then our home. Then she had a stroke in February 2019 which affected her cognitive part right frontal lobe (she already had stage 6 dementia or thereabouts). Went back to hospital for 5 days or so and was being discharged. It was recommended to send her to rehab but we took her on. Everyone in hospital said that it was a commendable gesture to take her home. Unfortunately, two and a half months later, she was mean to my younger daughter (21) by saying to her all you do is eat (my daughter was on a meal plan recovering from an eating disorder). I realize it doesn't sound like much, but for those families that have dealt with an eating disorder you know what that felt like to you the parent watching a recovery. I was so upset with my mother and although she didn't know what she was saying, I had to put my 21 year old first and place my mother in a facility. Your words mentioned above were said to me. She has lived her life (she is 87) and you need to think of your family first. Unfortunately for me, my rushed choice to place my mother came with many other types of stresses of neglect. I toyed with the idea of bringing her back with us, but i kept thinking of the unintentional damage that she would do to my daughter. I took the selfish way and am having her transferred to another facility and praying that it will be a different experience. I realize no one takes care of our LO like we do, but I am hopeful that this will be a better experience.
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lealonnie: Well said! I "almost" went off the rails caregiving out of state. Good grief - I even swallowed a hearing aide battery!
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SnoopyLove Dec 2019
Wha...? You swallowed a hearing aide battery?!! That's got to be a story!
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Lealonnie1....thank you, you know from where you speak. I always appreciate and look forward to seeing your comments. Hope you have a blessed holiday season....Liz
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Last year we approached our vet about an aged cat who had rapidly failing kidney problems, asking 'when is it time'. We were a little shocked when she said 'if you have to ask, then it means it is time.' We took our old friend home but it was only a matter of days before we realised she was right, so we sent our beloved moggie to the ''heaviside layer''.
Earlier this year a difficult set of family circumstances meant we had to place our mother into Respite care for a fortnight. The first night she was discovered continually wandering in search of the non-existent music; walking into walls and not knowing how to turn around; and looking for her mother who had died more than 40 years ago. Within just a few hours she was identified by RN as needing to be in a memory care unit. She had well and truly crossed from mild cognitive impairment into dementia, but had been hiding her symptoms very well - either that, or we were blinded by our promises to never place her in 'one of those dreadful places.' We thought her behaviour eccentric but what else does one expect from a 93 year old? And there was our always our ''promise''.
So we rocked up to her regular GP asking 'when is it time?" Would you believe his response was almost the same as the vet's regarding our cat? ''The fact that you are asking means that it is long past time!" He had been suggesting the idea of moving into assisted living to my mother for a number of years but she resisted - vehemently. "Family has to look after family" was her way of guilting us into compliance with her wishes. The GP said she was extremely lucky to have been looked after so well at home until then, that most people throw in the towel much earlier, unless they are gluttons for punishment or just plain naive. That ''love'' has nothing to do with it.
The GP's advice was grasp the opportunity to leave her at the aged care facility where they had a lovely room available in the memory care unit, otherwise it would be doubly difficult to both prise her out of my sister's home where she was then living, or to surrender our caring roles. In that instant we indeed surrendered our ''carer'' roles and became ''just family'' again.
How did mother take the news? We have never really told her. Like so many dementia patients, she hates it where she is and just wants to go home. But she has no concept of what home is. At times she is sufficiently ''with it'' to still try guilting us, that family should look after family, that we want her to die so we can have her money.....you name it, she has, and continues, to try to shame us into taking her home.
Not quite the final trip to the heaviside layer that we sent our beloved moggie along, but the relief for us has been incredible. Is it still stressful? Of course it is! But we can now walk away from the facility whenever we want, knowing that mother is well cared for. We recognise she will never be happy there, but her happiness has to be overridden by her safety and need for heavy nursing.
The more advanced her progressive dementia becomes, the more we realise we did do the right thing for our mother. It was, indeed ''time''.
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lealonnie1 Dec 2019
So poignantly written. I'm sorry about your dear Moggie, but glad your beloved pet is free of pain now. And glad for you that you placed mother where she can be properly looked after and where you can assume the role of daughter again.
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I surrendered when I was diagnosed with cancer after almost 10 yrs of caregiving. 8 yrs just for my mother. It ruined my health, and I was still hesitant to throw in the towel. But if I didn’t stop, I wouldn’t be here anyway. So I called it quits. Hospice stepped in for my mother and they have been a God-send. I have no problem handing her over to them. If she becomes bed-bound, she will go to the hospice center for the remainder of her time. I cannot take care of her when no one else is there. Hospice doesn’t do full time in the home. I am no longer a martyr. I have stage 3 cancer. I need to fight for myself.
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notrydoyoda Dec 2019
I pray that you win your fight! Thanks very much for sharing.
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I love your post! We’ve had those kind of comments before , not on here but in person or text. We say we’ll you can come caregive and have her in your home or love with her, then it’s silence from them. What you said is a situation we are going through right now. Very nicely put!
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As many of you know I have only 1 criteria for this...
SAFETY.
If for ANY reason you do not feel safe caring for your loved one..
and that can be a physical safety or emotional safety.
If for ANY reason you feel your loved one is not safe with you caring for them, and again that can be a physical safety or emotional safety.
The only possible 2 options are..
Placing your loved one in a facility where they will be cared for and you can then become the wife, husband, daughter, son, grandchild that you are and NOT a hands on caregiver. You are still a caregiver, an advocate but not a 24/7/365 hands on caregiver.
Having someone come in to the home and taking care of your loved one. BUT the house has to be set up so it is safe and works for the full range of care that will be needed. Since most homes are not set up that way and unfortunately builders are short sighted when it comes to aging into a home this often is not an option.
This also leaves the worst case where a decision has to be made due to a catastrophic event that occurs where either the caregiver or the care recipient is injured and no option is left.
Choosing to place your loved one is NOT a failure, it is NOT giving up it is making an educated informed, hopefully rational decision.
And in many cases the person that made you promise that you would NEVER put them in "a home" no longer exists. The well, rational person that made you promise that would most likely not have wanted you to give up your life, your family, your friends to care for them.
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lealonnie1 Dec 2019
Well put Grandma and very true. I cringe when I read how demented mother is fine staying home alone all day or ok to cook, etc. It's mind boggling to me how someone would wait for a catastrophic event to occur before seeing the danger for a demented elder living independently!
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We are dealing with placement of a father-in-law in assisted living. Family has done everything they can due and we are all tired and picking at each other for no reason other then the fact that we all have had enough. So we are looking at many places to pick one for him. He is going with us but not without a struggle, I get it he has called his house home for 60 plus years but it is unsafe for him to stay there by himself without 24 hour care. Sometimes you have to take care of you so you can deal with the many decisions that will come along.
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I think the decision is each family's to make. I do see people who don't want to care and it the facility is more of a "dumping ground" i.e. maybe their parent was placed before there was a real need, and other times not. Sometimes the placement is likely and doing it sooner is a better plan. And sometimes the move is a stressor and people do not last long after that happens. Sometimes the person may have a reason to live by taking care of their home or garden, or socialize with neighbors.
No one has a right to sit in judgement of others not knowing all the circumstances, and no one can really know all the circumstances and history, as you pointed out.
Also, each city, each area, that has a variety of facilities...the ratings do not always tell the whole story. So while it may look like there are good places, they may be a sham and not be. And the good ones...the very good ones...may come at a steep price no one can afford...so someone who loves their person may opt to hang tight and caregive at home rather than consider a home.
I think anyone who arrives at this page is doing the best they can, or wanting to regardless of the decisions they make. No one should be put down for whatever those choices are. Better the energies be directed to fighting for living wages with higher standards of care being provided by caregivers, and for paid family leave and continuation of social security benefits if someone leaves the workforce to care for family member. In the end the care people receive especially in NH or AL is dependent on the attitude and consequently wages of the caregivers at the bottom of the ladder.
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notrydoyoda Dec 2019
" continuation of social security benefits if someone leaves the workforce to care for family member"

This is unrealistic for you must work in order to contribute to social security in the future.
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First, thank you. I don't think I am there yet, but I can foresee the day. I posted a few weeks ago about relatives descending and I think the stress of Thanksgiving is the reason I havce a UTI right now. (I know lots of things play a cause them, but I do practice good hygiene, and my doctor says stress sometimes plays a role.)

The trouble is, Mom was in a "Rehabilitation Center" after a medical problem earlier this yesr, and it was a nightmare. Another resident would come into her room and remove the family photos I put on her dresser. Mom told me that one of the staff pinched her. And there was a fiasco with her hearing aid (she can not hear without it) where it was lost; I had to go to the Director of Nursing a raise a fuss. After that, the hearing aid was kept in a medicine box and not in her ear. Lots of good that did her.

Mom did the "I want to go home and the "This is not my house" while the siblings were here and my brother wanted her in AL right away. The trouble is, I think mom is too far gone for AL. I hear of residents being expelled when the money is gone or they get too hard to care for. And I can not find a decent nursing home near here and still worry about what happens when mom's finances run dry.

Sorry to ramble about my woes. I do thank you for the post as some do not understand what family members who are primary caregivers go through.
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Frances73 Dec 2019
Don’t listen to what "they" say. Do your own research, visit facilities and talk to staff and residents. Stop people in the hallway and ask them about the place. Ask to have a meal in the dining room. Make unscheduled visits. Call a Place for Mom for recommendations. Call Church Services, your doctor, social media for suggestions, even Yelp! Ask friends who have had experiences where they would or would not place a loved one.

Rumors are not true. I have spent a lot of time in the past 5 years doing all these things and consider the opinion of people actually involved in elder care much more reliable than "them."
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Not sure how these are answers to the question of WHEN to surrender?
My brother has many problems, not the least is his NOT using his walker, nor his sometime inability to guess WHERE the bathroom is actually located.
He is mostly sweet and agreeable with his care and he is never violent. Since the kidney doctor restricted fluids, he stays in bed until I turn on the TV in the morning ( I have a camera so I can check on him)

It would be good to be able to go shopping, be able to get out of town for the weekend sometimes ( My sister relieved me for a week off, but none of us are young and there is a 4 -5 hour trip each way for her to drive up). Our brother is confused after outings to the doctor, tests, treatments , and did not respond well when we attempted a trip just to a campground for a change of scenery).

I try not to to go anywhere that I cannot leave quickly to rush home for an emergency ( such as a bathroom accident or heaven forbid .. a fall) because I am the only one who is physically able to deal with those things.
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notrydoyoda Dec 2019
"It would be good to be able to go shopping, be able to get out of town for the weekend sometimes "

That sounds like time to surrender and find him other help so that you can have your life back.
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I moved my mother in with me and my husband 7 month's ago. She needs 24 hour supervision and willl not spend any time on her own. She constantly needs me to entertain her. I am one of 5 children 3 of which live out of state. The 1 sibling that lives nearby gives little help and when she does come here it is like she is the baby sitter and not mom's daughter. This has taken a toll on both me and my husband and I will be looking for long term care. I would like to go back to being my mother's daughter and not her full time care giver. We should never judge anyone. This journey is different for each family. We all need to make decisions that will bring peace to all of us. I do not want my children to take me in if the time comes that I am no longer able to care for myself and have already told them as much
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lealonnie1 Dec 2019
Amen.....good luck and all the best!
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