My mother is in the hospital since Friday with an infected toe. She is on IV antibiotics. She asks for my help changing her depends in the bathroom and then snaps at me and tells me to shut up. Well I changed her and got her in bed and told her I was leaving now and then left. She is sweet as pie to the doctors and nurses and treats me like sh*t. She is of sound mind. The doctor that saw her said she is as sharp as a tack. I need to get her into assisted living because I know when she gets home she will not let me help her with the wound. She is also a hoarder. Now she can’t even find the remote to the tv a week ago. Should I tell the doctor and nurses? She is of sound mind but she won’t change her clothes or bathe. Her toe got that way because she won’t soak it and won’t let me help her. She got her toenails clipped 2 weeks ago by a podiatrist and they didn’t look like that then. But since she has had the same socks on for 2 weeks she didn’t know what her toe looked like. It was nasty. All gross and infected. It got that way because she let it go and didn’t let me help her!! She just blames it on the podiatrist. Then she was complaining to me yesterday that the nurses gave her a water pill to take. It is her prescribed medication. But it makes her urinate. She’s mad at the nurse for giving her the water pill and takes it out on me. I can’t take it anymore. I know if by some miracle she goes to assisted living she will never speak to me again. I am so torn right now.
Elaine, read the above article when you get a chance.
We ( the daughters) have had many more opportunities in out lives. We are better educated, have had careers, are often financially independent. Our moms got sold the post WWII hooey about staying home and having a perfect family. I think there is some jealousy going on!
That being said, most people who feel that they are being made to feel small have a problem inside their own heads. They lack the "me-ness", the sense of self worth that most of us acquire through a fortunate combination of okay parenting, good supportive mentoring relationships and a worthwhile endeavor like a job, whether paid or volunteer. Our self image does not shift with the immediate approval or actions or others.
I believe that you've said that your mother has previously diagnosed mental illness? Does she have Borderline Personality Disorder?
Why do you put up with her BS, Elaine? Why are you afraid of her? Channel that doctor the next time she acts out.
If social services says she's fine enough to manage her own affairs, then leave her to do so
Glad her toe is fine. You probably saved her from sepsis. Get on with living YOUR life and leave her to hers.
Yeah, the holidays bring out mixed emotions. Do what is right for you.
When I would point out how she hurt me, every time she would say one of these things, “You misunderstood me, or That’s not how I meant it, or You shouldn’t feel that way.” Always!
I got so tired of telling her, “Mom, there isn’t any other way to interpret it but if you want to add something to clarify it, I am willing to listen.”
She didn’t add anything. She knew fully well how she meant it. She just didn’t like being confronted. Know what I mean?
What would set me over the edge was, she would call my brothers and complain! Totally inaccurate version! Grrrrr.
I said to her, “Why do you feel the need to tattle on me like elementary school children.” Her answer was, “Well, they need to know what is going on.” WHAT??? I was stunned.
I told her that I never called them to tattle on her. Wasn’t my style to do that. Not that they would have been interested in what I had to say but you know what I mean.
I always hated that I never had privacy or intimacy with mom. I was never able to confide in her about anything because it was like telling a newspaper reporter.
Grandma wasn’t like that. I could talk to her. My aunt wasn’t like that either. Nor was my MIL. But she was.
It’s painful watching them walk, huh? Very slow. Snail’s pace. With my mom the Parkinson’s disease started really altering her every move. Just being old though, when their bodies just can’t go anymore is tough to see.
It always amazes me to hear about some elderly people who are in great shape. They swim, walk, run marathons, skydive, drive. It’s like they refuse to get old! Hahaha It’s adorable.
Thanks for that explanation. My grandma always took the fluid pills at the correct dosage and it helped greatly for her. People shy away from meds sometimes. I don’t believe in over medicating but feel some meds are necessary to be at our best.
They don't work on a sliding scale, where the pee results would go: nothing, a little bit, a bit more, a lot, gush...
The amount in your system needs to reach a critical level, so the pee goes: nothing, nothing, nothing, whoosh - !
(There is an unofficial formula for this: age + BUN = Lasix dose, which shouldn't work but does.)
Anyway. The important thing is that despite the discomfort and inconvenience of needing to pee urgently several times and going A LOT, what your mother is peeing out is the vast amount of excess water currently stored in the tissues throughout her body, and diluting her bloodstream. She NEEDS to get rid of it! - and get her to trust you, that she will feel a heck of a lot better once this is back under control.
If she won't listen to you, and if she won't comply with instructions unless the doctors and nurses are standing over her, then I think it really would be better for both HER and you if you took a break. Do not feel guilty! - this genuinely would be in her best interests, both short and long term. Is that something you could consider?
It's not worth fighting your mother if she doesn't want to be helped. Folks like this are their own worst enemy. If the hospital isn't seeing her as too far gone to care for herself, then it's not your job to foist your care upon her.
I know that this is hard. (((((((((hugs)))))))))
After my accident they put on my PT discharge to continue exercise for the rest of my life. Hahaha. Guess what? I do it. Sometimes, I don’t feel like it. I made it a habit.
I feel your pain! I went through the toenail stuff with my mom. It drove me crazy! She got mad at me when I told the doctor about her big toe. I know it was a pain to get those compression stockings off and on but nails have to be cut.
It was a fungus. I had to fight her to cut her nails and I was so afraid she would get ingrown toenails.
My mom refused the fluid pills. She had severe edema but said she wouldn’t take it because it would make her pee more. Grrrrr.
Insurance companies can be a pain in the butt! How can they say your son is cured of autism? That doesn’t make sense. How can they say you don’t need therapy? Remember years ago insurance didn’t cover lots of things. It’s still a challenge to deal with.
I have had issues with them covering meds, my blood pressure meds! The pharmacy no longer carried the milligrams that I needed so they had to give me two tablets to make up the right amount and the insurance squawked at paying for two pills instead of one. I had to fight them saying the manufacturer was out of them. It gets crazy dealing with insurance, doesn’t it? I had to pay out of pocket until it was settled and then they reimbursed me for it.
If APS says sorry, there's nothing we can do, then back away from the whole situation, that's my advice. You cannot save her from herself, I'm afraid. You'll meet the ambulance at the hospital every time you're called but you can no longer devote your life to 'saving' someone who does not want to be saved. Consider that your mother will live, and die, on HER terms, and you have no control over it.
Sending you a big HUG.
Yes, you really need to say this to the hospital team. And you need to step away from helping her. I know you want to help her, but she won't let you.
You have at least one sibling, correct? Where is he or where are they? Do they know what you are dealing with?
Let the hospital social worker assigned to your mother deal with her discharge. Do not allow yourself to get roped into being her caregiver after discharge. Just be matter of fact about the way she treats you - verbal abuse, rejection of *your* help - and learn to say something like: "My mother is abusive toward me. I need the hospital to work out her discharge plans with her directly. Do not include me on her care team."
Your mother may be sharp as a tack and have mental illness; they are not mutually exclusive. That you are afraid your mother "will never speak to me again" demonstrates the power she has over you. If you don't take back the power, nothing will change. You certainly won't change her! You only can change yourself.
You have options. You matter. One step at a time.
When the hospital staff tell you she is "sharp as a tack" have them go in and really ask her questions about her living conditions etc and hopefully they will come to understand. If no one listens to you and she is discharged, you have to let her crash and burn and get APS in to do assessment. There is no reason for you to be abused but you have to stop allowing this for her good and for you as well.
You will always be in the wrong, because you don't have a white coat and "power".
We eventually told my mother things had to change ( due to health issues I have developed) and she had three choices, Assisted living, warden assisted flat, or change how things were currently arranged and happening living with us- so that she had far more care.
Needless to say she threw a right hissy fit, moved to Assisted living with the help of a "friend" (who created havoc in the annex she lived in, has taken goodness knows what away and also took her to change her will) and mother told everyone she came across how awful we were and had thrown her out.
Most the time she is what is deemed capable, but it is short term capability - she can make a decision but not give any reason for it, or understand the implications. So for instance she cashed £5K of government bonds but has no idea why or where the money went - but she is capable of making the decision.
She shut a bank account an opened a new one, without any idea of need to deal with monies going in and out - but she is capable of making the decision. (I could go on but won't)
Now four weeks later she is BEGINNING to settle in, we are slightly less terrible, she even said thank you for a couple of things last week.
From this experience - which is exactly what I would have expected (apart from the interference of the "friend", who has fortunately been in Australia for last three weeks), your mother may well be exceptionally negative about you if she goes into AL, but if you just ignore it and phone, call, email (if she uses it) as normal, once she settles she will come round.
If not the choice to be familyless is hers.
We can only do what we feel is best for everyone concerned, most the time we are right, sometimes we are wrong, same with bringing up children. Do what you feel you have to do, you cannot do any more, and don't allow anyone to guilt trip you on how she is, you are not in anyway responsible for that.
We have to accept that getting old means parts wear out, physically and mentally - I am not sure this is obvious to the current elderly who possibly never saw their own parents reach this state. Friends and family die leaving us with fewer or no connections. We become self centred through having only us to think about. We fear the fact we cannot do what we used to.
None of that means we should manipulate people as seems to be prevalent with current old generation, to try and solve some of our problems. Nor guilt trip them, nor make scenes to get attention. As carers we have to decide when enough is enough and the old are damaging us and even the younger generation. Its time for a home with others in a similar position and if you are blamed then that is just a fact of life and right in their opinion, but most the time it settles down and becomes better when they become settled into a new life.
2. The minute mom says something nasty, get up and leave. "I'll come back when you're feeling better". No argument. Statement, then leave.
3. Seek out the discharge planning department and or the social work department. Explain your understanding of your mother's mental illness and the condition of her home. Explain that you don't live with her and that you are not permitted to help in meaningful ways. Ask their advice.
4. Try to get clarity on the fact that your mother's anger won't kill you. You can stand up to her, talk back to her or walk out on her. None of these actions will harm you. She has groomed you (look up Fear, Obligation and Guilt) to be controlled by her anger. If you need to seek out therapy to help you in this process, so be it.
5. Your mother has also groomed you to see "dirty looks" from folks like nurses. I'll tell you a secret. They are not giving you a moment's notice. My mother trained me to hear "tone of voice", raised eyebrows, etc., as meaning certain things. Hogwash. No one is thinking anything about you. They are far too busy.
NOW is the time to make those waves & hold on tight for the wild ride! And remember: you are doing this to HELP her because she's unable and unwilling to help herself. Many 'children' would have deserted their mother by now, given all these crazy things she does, but you've hung on! You're not giving up, you're doing everything you can to HELP her, and I applaud you!!!
She is gonna get MAD, but that's okay. Who cares? She's been mad lots of times before, what else is new? Remember to be strong and take charge of this situation which is now out of control!!!
You can do this g/f!!! Sending a big hug your way!!