Not sure what I'm looking for here... maybe to know I'm not the only one? I need to get over the resentment I feel for having to leave my job to care for my Dad. I'm still feeling angry at the passing of my Mom a little over a month ago. I promised her I'd care for my Dad who has mild dementia. After reading what many of you are going through, other than having to live in his house, leaving my career, away from my husband, the care isn't that difficult. (Paying bills, getting groceries, cleaning the house). However, his lack of logic, reasoning, common sense and need to talk non-stop is driving me crazy. He doesn't care what I have to say, and is very selfish. Because of that and the resentment of having to be here, I feel I'm not often very loving. (I call him out on ridiculous remarks). I do that mostly because he was critical of Mom as she was dying - - I'm trying not to feel the need to get him back for it, but dang it, if it doesn't happen in moments of frustration. I then of course, lose sleep from the guilt and vow to do better tomorrow. But then he does it again... and so do I.
Being a caregiver is the hardest job there is. That is why children should talk to their parents about money and the future.
Of coarse it is and as time passes memory will fade and disappear hence We can not expect Them to zone into Our wave length so We must step into Their World and engage in conversation with Them. Remember No Person should ever Care for any Patient against Their Will, only do it because You want to. It is a very tough Journey and We need to be in the right frame of mind from the beginning. Im no Doctor or expert and what ever I learned when I Cared for My Mom with alzheimer's was from AgingCare.Com, how ever I did discover on Our Journey Together NO ANGER, just PEACE
CALM, LOTS OF LOVE, = JOY.
There are many more things that were going on, but he fell while I was grocery shopping, and ended up in rehab. He went from rehab, to assisted living, because he felt he could not clean himself well enough after toileting, and I refused to do it. He had another fall after 3 months at assisted living, and I took him to the hospital, where he went septic and died. It’s been 11 months, and I am tortured by things I said when the frustration grew too much for me to handle. I failed to fulfill his wishes to stay at home, and it haunts me. I see things on the news and think I should talk to Dad about this…because we discussed the news every day. Be careful. Don’t let the resentments consume you.
For instance, my siblings and I always agreed that we would never place mom in a nursing home and told her so. However, we never expected that mom’s health would deteriorate to where she could not even take care of herself. She refuses home health, but her condition is not medically necessary for Medicare to pay. She just doesn’t walk well, feed herself well, bathe and is non-compliant with her meds. She recently had a hospital admission because she fell 3 times in 2 weeks and they got her into rehab and I was certain this event would be the catalyst to get her placed long term. But her admission diagnosis only provided for 15 days of facility rehab and she is getting ready to be discharged. I was shocked they would send her home in the shape she’s in. She can no longer live in her own so she will have to live with me and my husband until she can get approved with Medicaid for long-term care. Hopefully.
We never know what’s going to happen with our parents. It is not a disrespect of your promise to your mother if you find some other way to have your father taken care of. You’ve done your best. There is no shame in being angry, resentful and just plain tired of dealing with it. I’m in the same boat because I get no relief ... and I have two brothers who can’t even come to help me take care of my mom’s property. All they can say is “thanks for doing everything”.
And give him a hug because it seems to me that he's remembering different things long ago and a lot of people will cut down their wife when they're not in their right mind and it also sounds like in order when you go, have somebody from hospice come in and give you a break so then you can go be with your husband, and you know that there is different types of hospice not all of them help the person to pass on, and if he gets to the point to where he really getting
to not knowing who you are that's the time that you need to find a care center for Alzheimer's.
when my husband her brother n I went up to visit her at her house it blew her husband away that when her brother walked in the door and she knew exactly who he was I walked in the door and she didn't really know who I was and after a while she started to know who I was which was very surprising cuz, neither one of us had seen her for a while.
after a while she got worse so her husband had to put her in a care center, she died about a couple months later. Now I'm a massage therapist but I think maybe you might also need to go and have some energy work done on you or just a nice relaxing massage somewhere. I don't know where you are but I'm in Utah
Look for the Area on Aging office nearby, if you can, or an organization like "A Place for Mom" to find a place for your Dad. I do hope that you can work these things out, and, believe me, I need to take some of my own advice. I am taking care of my mom, who is 94, but she is in assisted living -- and, even then, we go there almost every day. But, then again, I do have the POA and Health Care Rep -- and we were able to get mom benefits from the VA.
Good luck to you, and may the Light of Love guide you in difficult times.
We don’t live in her house any more, but we are nearby. We borrowed from our retirement to do it. I still feel an enormous amount of bitterness and grief over what we’ve lost, but I’m not running at full boil any more.
I’m trying to be very honest, not mean. My journey is over after living in the same room with Mom for 7 years.
After a year, I’m beginning to find out who I am again and without her at 60, but I still try to call my Mom every day to tell her about something that happens. Post-caregiving is not easy either. My life is still in storage. I’m living with relatives. Who knows when I’ll be able to live on my own again.
I hope this honesty will help you decide what is best for you AND for your dad. Like I said, personally, I would do it all again for my Mom ~ but not for anyone else!