My husband passed away a few years ago. I have my mother, who has dementia, part of the year while my sister has her the other part. Recently, my mother has decided she wants to sleep with me. I'm with her 24/7 and my bedroom is my only alone time. She plays on my emotions by crying and saying she is lonely. She's happy most of the time until bedtime. This is new, she has only started doing this the past few weeks but, I need to stop it some how. We've always gotten along well and we had a good routine with me tucking her in and then she plays games on her iPad a while and goes to sleep. My sister still has her husband so she doesn't do this with her, just me. HELP!
There are many excellent guided meditations available online for sleep, anxiety, loneliness etc. If your mother already uses the iPad you can download and create an icon for her favorite one and after she has finished playing her games she can simply tap the icon and listen to the meditation that will help her fall asleep. My 85 year old mother who lives with me was diagnosed a few years ago with dementia and suffers from depression and anxiety. I have found that soothing meditative type music or guided meditation helps during those times when no amount of consoling will help. I might also suggest a daily meditation practice for yourself for the much needed brief but valuable respite you deserve.
Bless you for what you are doing for your mother and I hope you find comfort in knowing you are not alone.
we went through a lot with her these last few years and we finally felt we got everything right and she was happy. And she is happy except with this.
Someone suggested music. Maybe I will put her music on in her room at bed time. She's happier when she is listing to it. Maybe it will distract her.
Someone mentioned a baby monitor, I have one that goes two ways and it used to be really helpful to be able to reassure her from wherever I was, unfortunately now she no longer can hear what I am saying.
She mostly retains memory in ten minute increments with a little lasting longer.
It's her short term memory, as I think it usually is with dementia. She remembers everything from her childhood and young adult life. And I agree that laying with her more than a few minutes may be a bad idea. I just don't want her to cry and I don't want to deprive her if something she needs. It can be a fine line. She will be going to my sister in October. Although my sister is great with her I think she gets more "one on one" with me because I have no husband and it's just me and her. I need to get a man in my bed!!! ;) (just kidding)
She grew up in poverty and slept in the same bed with her two sisters
I think she is just afraid to be alone - unless I needed to keep awake to help her she'd sleep in her own bed but I'd let her come in in the morning on the weekends
Now that she's in a facility she even asks her favorite caregivers to sleep with her because she's scared and I often lie down next to her (full size bed) in order to get her to fall asleep before I leave
Since a baby monitor is only one way - it didn't help - she couldn't hear me and she had no interest in cuddling a stuffed animal
Her last night at home ended with a fall in her room at 2:30 am - being old and demented is a tough situation for everyone
You have to have your alone time, and an attempt at good rest, especially at night time! I wish you well with this transition!
My sister and have been doing this for four years now. Before that, when she was just starting to show signs of dementia, we lived closer (within 20 min. Of each other and our mother) my sister and I use to tag team being with my mother (not sleeping at her house, just spending the days) every other day for two years. So it feels more like 6 years. Now my sister and I live 5 hours apart so when one of us needs a break, we can no longer call each other and have the other take her for a day to help each other out. It is ever changing.
Thank you Evermore99. I do think that my be one of the reasons why it's such a big problem for me. I am also an introvert and if I don't get time alone it drains me. During the time I have her, emotionally I always feel like I'm on "high alert" which is exhausting! When I don't have her I enjoy my alone time so much. She is very social by nature but since her dementia plus her other limits she's uncomfortable with other people so I can't get her to partucipate with anyone else.
I actually got her two stuffed dogs. The soft cuddly one to sleep with and one of those "breathing" ones. I'm trying to be more "hands on" affectionate so she has that closeness. I do think the crying is just playing on my emotions. She is controlling the situation that way.
I don't know enough about your situation to guess whether this is manipulation, neediness, or loneliness, so I'm just offering a kind of middle ground suggestion.
Perhaps you could also put on soothing bedtime music to help her fall asleep, if that's by any chance one of the issues.