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Tall to a social worker, minister, nurse, friend to get ideas what you can
Do to make your life more liveable. You are in big trouble if you seek help.
TRy the librarian at your local library. They are very knowlegable.
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I have had my Mom living with me for years. Left my job to retire early and thought I could give her the best care. She is now 91 and I am 66. If I could have given myself advice years ago I would have said to follow my career and let professionals take care of Mom. This disease Dimensia gets worse and worse. Eventually she may not know you and will argue with you and may treat you as though you are a stranger in her life. If I could have advised myself ten years ago I would have done things very differently. But I like you thought I loved my Mom and she needed me. And gave up everything. Today she has no idea who I am. Poops and pees herself several times a day and thinks I am annoying for making her wash. Keep you career, find the best place you can for Mom and have FaceTime chats with her as often as you can. I wish you all the best. Let go of the guilt and live your life.
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CarylorJean Nov 2021
My life Charlie, in a nutshell. On the other hand..... my view is she looked after me, fed me, bathed me. It's payback time.... what can I say. I love her even though she is no longer the strong, intelligent, independent woman she used to be. It breaks my heart to see her this way but I feel obligated to care for her. She is vulnerable and needs protection. It's been a while since she last truly knew who I was. That's okay. She would never expect me to put my entire life on hold but hey it's just something I gotta do. Frustration, disappointment and resentment are part of every day but I will still hold her hand until the day she departs however hard it may be.
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Whatever decision you make, remember that you are not locked into that situation. If you place your mom in a facility, it could turn out to be the best place for her. If not, there are other options you can explore. Please don't be hard on yourself. These are not easy decisions, and there is never one perfect solution. Hash out your potential plans with a friend or therapist, and don't hesitate to use this forum. Lots of guidance and resources here, and plenty of people rooting for you. :)
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I know exactly how your feeling. Doctors are telling me that my Mom has dementia too and I had to leave my job, but what I do is pray pray and pray and ask God to guidance through this. I'm praying for you and others like us that are going through the same thing.
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Letting go of most of my career opportunities for many years in order to care for my mom was not such a difficult choice for me because I was in my 60's when she began to need care. Still, at 73 now, and her passing, I'm looking at starting all over in some respects. I have no regrets, but you have really wonderful responses here on this forum that urge you to go on with your life. I just want to say that your mom will be fine if you choose a really good memory care place for her, make sure she is vaccinated, and I especially like the suggestion to find an organization that will send volunteer (or paid) visitors to your mom. She'll have a different relationship with you then. She'll brag about her daughter, show photos to everyone, and be really happy to have phone calls, zoom visits, and letters from you. In a while she won't remember whether you visited her recently or not. And she may not ever forget you. My mom always remembered me. Just be sure to check in with her in some way at least 3 times a week, wherever you are.
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Use whatever resources available to you to put your mom In custodial nursing care. Your mom WILL get the care she needs. Then, you can focus on your own issues.

She cannot depend on YOU if you’re falling apart.
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Your mother is not the reason that's holding you back from having the life you're claiming to have had three short years ago. Depression and fear are the more likely culprits that are holding you back. You are also probably having a mid-life crisis too because you're around the time in your life when the having kids window starts to close. You talk about not having the same earning potential as before. Now is around the time where some professions and jobs start 'aging out' with people in your age group. They want younger. None of this is your fault or your mother's.
Based on the age you say, I'm about ten years older than you. Maybe a little less. I never had any biological kids, but I am a mother. I also have financial insecurity. I wish I had known when I was your age and younger to sacrifice for myself first for my own sake and future instead of for my family who I get nothing from.
You know how when you get on a plane they say in an emergency to put your own oxygen mask on first before the kids? It's because you won't be able to do for the kids unless you do for yourself first.
Let me tell you something. Whatever relationship or love you have for your mom will be gone if you continue on as you are. What will take its place is resentment, anger, regret and even hatred. You will go from helping and caring for her to being a slave and dementia is a cruel master. I would know my friend because I've been 12 Years A Slave so far on this elder care plantation.
Get out while you still can. There are other options available for your mother besides a nursing home. There is homecare options (both hourly or live-in). There are assisted living communities. There are memory care facilities. Many of them are very nice places. Check some out for her.
Then get yourself into some therapy for your own sake. Good luck to you.
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Cappuccino, what country are you living in? I'm not aware of restrictions that apply to home care. How does that work?

In another post, you talk about how lonely and withdrawn your mother is becoming, and how important her friends were to her before she developed memory issues.

In a good facility, there will be people for her to interact with all the time - not just one tired daughter who's also stressed by work commitments. There will also be people who can help her have phone or facetime conversations with you and explain, if need be, why you're unable to come to see her in person.

It sounds as if you're feeling overwhelmed by the different challenges presented by any of the choices that are available, and it is difficult to think these things through especially when there are so many uncertainties. How far have you got with researching what the actual, practical options are?
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Whatever choice you choose, you have to be willing to live with the outcome - both will be hard, but which one will you regret the most? I know you think this professional opportunity will never come again, but that's not necessarily true as there will be other opportunities that come even decades later. However, your mother has a definitive amount of time left, and that can't wait. I know how you feel because I am in a similar position with my dad, I too feel like my life isn't mine anymore. But the conclusion I came to was, I won't always have my dad. I have the rest of my life to figure out MY life - decades upon decades of time. I dont have that time with my dad. He is on a much shorter timeline. So I chose my dad. Because personally, I couldn't live with the regret, it would probably kill me later on from sheer guilt. The price I'm having to pay for now, putting my life on hold...I think when I'm 50 or 60 years old I'll look back on it and know personally for me, I made the right choice.

Then again, I dont want kids. And I dont have a job overseas. So ultimately, you know what is best for you. Maybe you dont need to make the decision immediately. Maybe time and the universe will make it for you if you allow things to happen more naturally.
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MargaretMcKen Nov 2021
And which one will you regret for longest?
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Cappicuccino42...why do you feel your mother's life is so much more important than yours? She got to live her life but you have been unable to live yours because you have been forced to care for her. This could go on for years, and when she passes what will you have to show for it? Parents want their children to thrive and live their lives, not wither in place as someone above said. Maybe the person she has become would like that but not the person your mom was.

Covid will not last forever. There are zoom meetings. The last two times I saw my father alive were through zoom. The second time he was barely conscious so an in-person visit would have been for nothing as he wouldn't have known I was there.

Look into other options if you are afraid of AL. There is no law saying you have to be the solution to everything.
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Well it's perfectly fine to choose NOT to place Mom in a facility, during these Covid times, continue as you are & stay full-time caregiver.

But you mentioned a work deadline? Is this to return or quit? So there are big consequences to that decision.

Covid, vax & travel rules will change I expect, although the future is never certain.. (another 'delta' could be around the corner).

What would you regret MORE in 3 years time? Seeing Mom infrequently & on video calls only or losing your job?

Is your career something you could pick up easily again or not? Are there many jobs? Have you the finances if left unemployed for longer than planned?

Could you compromise with a local part-time job (at something else) & hire in-home aides to create some balance? For say 6 months then re-visit?
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rovana Nov 2021
Unfortunately, VERY FEW people have the kind of finances we are looking at. Quitting paying job and hoping that something will turn up when elder is dead, no earning record for you, no SS. Nothing coming in.
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A few more thoughts:

Is your overseas work placement likely to be stable? If so, would the money work out for you to take your mother with you and place her in a care facility close to you while you work overseas? Sometimes care facilities are a lot cheaper in other countries, or you may have the option to sell assets (a car? a house?) to fund her care if there is no pension income.

Covid regulations are not likely to last forever. If you are both vaccinated, would mother cope in a local care facility for two or three years (perhaps less) while things settle down? She may not be happy about it, but then very few people are.

If she goes into a local facility and you ask around (Church, for example), you may find someone who would be willing (for payment) to visit her once a week, deal on the spot with the issues that come up, and keep in touch with you about her situation. A care manager would take it on, but you may find a friendly retiree who could get on well with mother, and be a ‘new friend’. They could help mother set up zoom with you, too. It sounds like quite a nice little job for an older person with time on their hands,

Keep thinking outside the square. It isn’t limited to just you and mother continuing just the way you are (except getting worse). Good luck and best wishes, Margaret
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Stop looking ahead years into the future and predicting what Covid rules will dictate, that your mum will "die" without your company and visits and all the rest of it! There is no guarantee of TOMORROW for any of us, never mind next year or beyond. And most elders THRIVE in managed care, you'd be shocked to know we're not as important to their well being as WE think we are! Zoom and FaceTime is perfectly fine, and so are teams of carers looking after them, and other elders to socialize with.

Stop looking for reasons why this won't work, realize it WILL, then agree to move on with YOUR life and be happy. Resentment anger and burn out isn't helping you OR your mother, in reality. My mother has been in managed care since 2014 and I certainly haven't "dumped her off" there either! That's not a reasonable or healthy way to look at the reality of the situation at all. Unless in home care is working out well for BOTH of you, without anger and resentment, then in truth, it's working for NEITHER of you.

Wishing you the best of luck moving forward with your own life now.
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Sophiahd Nov 2021
Great point about most elders thriving in well-managed care. I think there is the stereotype of being dropped off to rot, but the reality is a time of trained people are what many elders, especially those with special needs require.

@Cappuccino42, I think you need to start putting yourself first. It sounds like your own health is suffering. That’s not a good sign. You can’t look after someone else’s health if you can’t look after your own.

Finally, resentment is a normal part of elder care. Don’t be too hard on yourself.
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Can someone else live your life for you? No. You are the only one who can & unless you win lotto, the only one who can earn income for you too.

Are there are other options to provide 24/7 care for Mom besides you?

Basically if you had 6 siblings, all living local, you could do one day a week: co-care & still have a life. But you don't. (Who does..? anyone..? I sure don't).

So if a complete battle of martyr vs common sense - I choose the common sense option - which is Mom needs more help that you alone can provide. Find it. Make peace with it. It's not perfect. But just how it has to be.
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Cappuccino42 Nov 2021
Even if it means I’m only allowed to enter the care home once a year during my holidays due to covid restrictions for overseas travel? I’m not sure how my Mum will cope with no one visiting her :( I feel like it’s a death sentence to her. She’s used to going out shopping, coffees, movies with me. But I won’t even be able to pick her up to do these on my days off as I’ll be banned from entering any aged care facility for my profession of travelling.
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Self preservation is key, once resentment sets in hate follows.

time to put your mum in a nursing home where she can be looked after by others and you can get a little quality time back by just visiting your mum.

Im a mum and would not want my 30 year old daughter putting her life on hold for my care. It would not be fair.

you have done enough, you have been a wonderful daughter who obviously loves her mother.

Get your life back.
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Cappuccino42 Nov 2021
thats the thing though,.. I won’t be allowed to visit her if I stay in my profession. So if I do place her, I’m literally cutting ties with her as due to regulations I won’t be allowed to see her if I’ve been overseas. I’ll be able to see her only once a year during my actual holidays as that’s the only time I would have ever NOT been overseas in the last 14 days. I know it will kill Mum as there will be no one else to visit her, just me once a year. My only hope is that the law / regulations change and people that have been overseas can visit aged care. With everything else I agree with, thank you for your advise :)
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Would your poor mother want you to not have a family, not be financially stable, be unwell, burnt out and unhappy, in order to be a hands-on caregiver to her in her demented state? I think most loving parents would NOT want this for their child.
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Cappuccino42 Nov 2021
The current Mum has no regard for my wellbeing,.. treats me more like a personal slave to be honest. She’s not able to comprehend the situation and thinks me catering to her 24-7 while working another full time job is completely normal and stock standard the same as a mother looking after a baby. If I try push back or say I need help, she becomes a pain. But if I think of the Mum she used to be and ask myself what she would say back then, I think she would say to not let her be in my way. Personality wise she really is not the mother she was. She is in my mums shell with shared memories but different opinions and choices.
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Place mom, go on with your career, see her on Zoom or another face to face device as often as you want. Go forward and don't wither in place.
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Beatty Nov 2021
'wither in place' 😔 Excellently put.
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