I am saddened that my 93 year old mother insists I continue taking care of her because of all the years she sacrificed for me. I didn't ask to be born and that should have no bearing on me taking care of her now and doing so for the last 10 years. She inflicts guilt on me with these insensitive comments. At times, I don't want even want to do anything for her. I will never ask my son to care for me now that I see firsthand what a guilt trip parents can lay on their children. Everyone should be entitled to live their own lives and not feel guilty for the decisions they felt were right for themselves. My mother has Dementia but she's been saying this to me for years before Dementia set in. My only source of freedom is having caregivers for 4 hours 2 days a week. One of these caregivers is very good but she tells my mother I should be doing more for her like taking her out 2 or 3 times a week. This puts extra stress on me because I have a back injury due to a fall. When I do go out, I dread having to return home to more complaints. Any advice? Thank you for letting me vent.
By the way, if you get to that point at which your mother goes into a nursing home there will most likely be a feeling of euphoria. Don't feel to bad about this. It is natural. It does not make you a bad person. The euphoria will pass and you can begin to pick up the pieces.
Good luck.
By the way, Assisted Living is not covered by Medicare, and possibly not Medicaid.
Do you remember Jesus' parable of the good Samaritan who passed a man on the road from Jerusalem to Jericho who'd been beaten and robbed? Previous travelers had done nothing to help the victim.....
Luke 10:33-37 But a Samaritan while traveling came near him; and when he saw him, he was moved with pity. 34 He went to him and bandaged his wounds, having poured oil and wine on them. Then he put him on his own animal, brought him to an inn, and took care of him. 35 The next day he took out two denarii, gave them to the innkeeper, and said, ‘Take care of him; and when I come back, I will repay you whatever more you spend.’ 36 Which of these three, do you think, was a neighbor to the man who fell into the hands of the robbers?” 37 He said, “The one who showed him mercy.” Jesus said to him, “Go and do likewise.”
The Samaritan bound up the beaten man's wounds and paid an innkeeper to provide further care. The Samaritan was deemed "good and merciful" whether he administered all the care himself or saw to it that someone else did.
That’s wild! Like you had control over your own birth! Wow!
Why do women throw the labor issue up in their kid’s faces? Geeez, I don’t throw anything up in my kid’s face. It’s just a guilt trip, a big awful guilt trip. I am so sorry your mom told you this. Hugs!
The only thing I can add is this: parents who ask their children to sacrifice their lives for them (the parents) so they can live on are no parents at all but bonafide life-sucking vampires. That should be the reply to any parent when he/she pulls the "I raised you, you owe me" crap.
The only people we should sacrifice our lives for are our children, and they their children, and so on.
All you can do is your best, whatever that is, it will be enough. Maybe you could look at her saying you owe her as her really saying "I am afraid, please don't leave me." Try telling her that you will always make sure she is taken care of. Even if that means in a AL.
You are very generous to give care for ten years.
Do what makes you happiest in the next ten.
Hopefully we do a good job as parents and raise our children to be independent. So why would we ask them to hinder their own future by caring for us as parents if it would jeopardize their financial security?
How will they be able to plan for their own senior years? See how complicated this gets.
Those who know me know I have cared for my mom for 14 years and counting in my home. It takes a toll on the caregiver, emotionally, physically, financially, etc.
Some parents don’t want their children burdened with that responsibility. Some children are not able to care for a parent.
I don’t think I would want my children to care for me after knowing the first hand responsibility that it is.
Most of what I have to say has been posted in response to others, but I thought it best to bring it all home here:
1) You do NOT owe your mother anything.
2) You do NOT have to accept any guilt she dishes out.
3) You should consider bringing in more help or finding her a safe place to live.
4) See below for the caregiver issue.
As for those who post that we DO owe our parents (they are on other threads too), take that with a grain of salt! This is just heaping MORE guilt on you that you do not need. While they think they are making well-meaning comments, those kind of comments really don't help at all.
While some people can care for a parent or parents (or other LO) easily, with no issues and feel we can ALL benefit from their advice, I say phooey. Some people are easy to care for. Some are not suffering from dementia. Some are, but are also not combative and/or abusive. Some, even those without dementia, can be extremely difficult to care for! Some had a great relationship prior to care-giving and still have that. Others, not so much. You and many of us fit in that last camp.
Many of the rosy-sky types also do not consider what our ages might be, or our own physical condition/capability. Those are important considerations as well.
If/when your mother lashes out or lays guilt on you, what you have to learn to do is NOT accept it internally (it will take time and often MANY iterations before it becomes second nature! Even then we can slip back into that mode in weak moments!). Do NOT dwell on it. Do NOT respond to it. The best thing you can do is just smile and walk away. Will it still sting? Yes, but each time it should hurt less, so long as you continue to be strong and repel the nastiness.
Whether she meant any of it or not before or now, it doesn't matter what she thinks/feels/says about you. You are doing a wonderful thing for her and whatever the cause behind her words and behavior, it has NO bearing on what you do or don't do. She should consider herself blessed that you do this for her, but clearly she doesn't and likely won't. You wouldn't have been able to change her behavior before dementia, and you certainly can't now, so it is time to grin and let it go!
Caregiver issue: you said "she tells my mother I should be doing more for her like taking her out 2 or 3 times a week." Have you actually witnessed this, or is your mother telling you this? If not witnessed, I would have a calm private discussion with the caregiver and just ask if she has said this. If the answer is yes, you can nicely instruct her to NOT do this. If she continues (the only way to be absolutely sure is nanny cam of some kind, as once planted, that seed can continue in mom's head), then she gets a second warning, then third strike she's out. If she says she didn't say these things, then it is mom's dementia either making it up or distorting something they talked about. It does happen. Since you think she is good, I would give her a chance. Good caregivers are hard to find!
Final thoughts - consider either bringing in more help or checking out AL/MC facilities. Getting more help will help your physical issues AND give you more time away from mom's toxic behavior. Spend that time away from mom, doing things you enjoy and being with people you like. You need to care-give yourself too!
If money is an issue, Medicare will provide a limited number of hours if mom needs physical help, such as with bathing and toileting. Medicaid, depending on mom's financial status, can also cover some in-home care. There might be other avenues (was dad a veteran?) If mom has plenty of assets, use them to hire more people. Other than finances, you've already crossed the nastiest bridge of getting help in without mom kicking them out! If you find it still doesn't help, then consider a facility and accept NO GUILT trips from her or yourself. You've devoted 10 years already. Me? I didn't even let mom stay with me (or me with her) one day!
Might be nice to make up T-shirts with that on it for those who are telling us we DO owe mom and/or pop.... ;-)
(I should also get a T-shirt done which quotes my Mother's day thank you from my son - Thanks for pushing me out and keeping me alive!!! Guess he felt he owed me something!!! HAHAHAHA)
That caregiver who injects her opinion into the mix is wrong for doing so. How does she benefit her client by doing that? seriously...
We CANNOT assume the caregiver said this or anything like it. This could be mom and/or dementia talking. Calm discreet discussion with caregiver to get the FACTS first.
Don't shoot and ask questions after. This is the "good" one, don't throw her out until 1) it is proven and 2) she cannot correct/stop herself.
And like most everyone else, there is no sibling help. So, I have slowly and systematically, been forcing her to accept the hired help as I have been unable (and unwilling at times of exhaustion) to take her to doctors, to clean her house, to fix her meals, etc. It has been difficult, but it has been very necessary for me to distance myself. And I have had to distance myself from the emotional abuse of a lifetime that continues today, I cannot afford to listen to it, much less take it to heart. It is untrue and unhelpful. So I just don't listen anymore.
I have felt a sense of freedom since I have forced her to accept the outside help. Then, I am a little more refreshed to deal with her. Please don't let it enter your brain. It is untrue and unhelpful. You are an awesome person to care so much for your family. That speaks volumes.
"So I just don't listen anymore." - use the mental earplugs!!! ;-)
The fact is anyone can take care of the physical and medical care giving needs, in fact a non-related professional is often going to be much more efficient and effective at the physical tasks as a person ages and needs more but only someone closes, parent, child, grandchild, spouse, partner, sibling etc can give the loving emotional support we as humans crave, only someone who's lived with you, grown up with you, has known you intimately for years can know how to provide that care and support for us (and know how to use it as a negative) so those aging LO's who have the same person doing both are very fortunate but it isn't critical. If a professional is providing the heavy lifting, meeting the physical needs and the patient has LO's around providing the love and emotional support they are just as well cared for, perhaps even better cared for and there is nothing negative about that. Your mom seems to have confused this and is pushing away that loving emotional support perhaps out of fear and desperation for that physical care, she has created a situation where she is probably better off having a professional care giver doing the necessary physical things and that's on her not on you. You making sure she gets the proper physical care is taking care of her, fulfilling any personal responsibility you feel and extending love you are digging deep for. Who knows finding her good care somewhere else may even allow the space your relationship needs to make room for the positive love and emotions to resurface a bit so you can then shower her with some of that as well as the practical details of making sure her physical care needs are met.
As far as this care giver who is making poor comments to mom, there may be several factors here including the way mom hears or simply relays what the CG has said. Mom may have been doing her complaining about either not getting out or not wanting to & this care giver innocently said it would be good for you to get out with your daughter 2-3 times a week or offered to take her out & mom refused to go with her. Nothing wrong with letting CG know the negatives of that kind of thing.
I oversee/manage or whatever you want to call providing care without 24/7 hands-on for mom, and it is mostly because of that "sense of duty".
Regardless of the things she has said or done in the past, she is my mother and while I OWE her nothing, I will see to it as long as I still can that she gets the care she needs and I will manage finances and everything else. She generally isn't negative now, but no way would I want to be with her 24/7.
There should be NO ONE on this forum laying guilt on anyone else's PERSONAL decisions. You do what you feel is right and allows you to sleep at night and the rest of us will do what we feel is right. Every case IS different, both with respect to the one needing care AND those who might be called into care "duty."
For the possible caregiver issue - get the facts first. Calm private discussion with caregiver to determine if this even started with her or was it concocted in mom's brain? Could be made up (believes it to be true) or misconstruing something the caregiver did say, innocently. Since she was identified to be the "good" one, it would be better to calmly get to the bottom of this first, rather than considering "firing" her on the spot, as others have suggested. "Good" caregivers are hard to come by!
Essie - if you are religious, I believe we honor God when we honor ourselves (1 Corinthians 6:19-20)
"19 Do you not know that your bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God? You are not your own;
20 you were bought at a price. Therefore honor God with your bodies."
Remember that Jesus was Jewish. Accordingly, on the first day of Rosh Hashanah after the afternoon prayer, he would have gone to a lake, river or sea to recite the Tashlich prayers, and symbolically cast his sins into the water, leaving them behind and thus starting the new year with a clean slate.
Recognize that people like your mother carry their sins forward, nurturing them, feeding them, growing them, and making them stronger. There is nothing to be done for such people because they have cast love, mercy and kindness aside.
And plenty of agnostics and atheists show more love, mercy and kindness than many Bible thumpers!
There are 44 answers right now, and I don't have the time to read all of them. But, yes....I am going to write a long reply. So, I guess, my "time" excuse is not a good one.
I would like to offer some relief and help to you.
Only you know if your mother really means that you owe her, or if it's something else and that's just the way she expresses her life view.
Your mother is 93. My mother will be 92 in July.
My mother lives in a very good nursing home. I visit once a week, sometimes twice a week --- it's a 45 minute drive each way, so not exactly a little jaunt. I call her every day. Every time she talks to a friend (not many because most of them have passed away....I think there are 4 left) or a relative, she says everything is fine, wonderful, she is happy in the nursing home, the food is great, she's fine medically, and no problems. But, she calls me almost every day sometimes twice a day, even before I have a chance to call her, and complains and says she is sicker that day than ever before and nobody is helping her and she needs me and I am her daughter and must come immediately ---- and says that she should be allowed to call me anytime and vent about how she feels because I am her daughter. I have already received great advice on this forum on how to handle that, so I won't repeat it.
In some respects, this "my children/son/daughter will take care of me" or "I took care of you and now you need to take care of me" is a generational thing. And, a sociological thing.
My mother had 2 older brothers; she was 13 years' younger than the younger of the 2 brothers. Both brothers had to join the military for WW2. Their wives, and their children, moved into a small apartment with my mother and her parents (my grandparents). That was normal back then. It was also normal until about 15-20 years ago that at least 50%, maybe even 75%, of "kids," after high school or college stayed close to their hometowns. So, in most cases, for your mother and my mother, what they know is their history.....2-3-4 generations lived close in proximity. It's just not that way now.
Also, sociologically, it's just a thing: kids take care of their parents when their parents get old. It goes back to when people got married and started having kids at 16-17-18, and had lots of kids, and those kids helped with the family farm or family business. They did not move across the country. They stayed home. Of course, back then, the average life span was probably closer to 40 than 75.....but it's still a view, even if not expressed, that people over 80 have ingrained---you have to be there, or come home, and take care of your parents.
Okay, that's all very cerebral. And, since I do not know you, I don't know if you can relate to any of it.
So, let me see if I can help you in a more feeling way.
Unless your mother has taken care of you when you became an adult, such as given you money, loaned you money, let you live with her for free, cared for you more than once --- for several days or months -- when you were sick, as an adult, or somehow, otherwise, helped you when you were old enough to make your own way in the world, it's hard for me to understand why you "owe" her anything.
We all give from the heart, or from obligation, or from fear of being viewed as a bad person if we do not give. Sometimes all of those reasons. We all have to live with whatever reasons. But, none of us have to live with being made to feel guilty about not being able to, or even not wanting to, give up our lives to care for a parent. Unless....as I implied....as an adult, we remained dependent on that parent.
First because I have made similar posts about that older generational stuff. My mother/parents and her sisters/family cared for their mother, taking turns, but 1) they were all under retirement age, 2) she was very easy to care for and could fend for herself if left at home while the others worked (no dementia) and 3) she passed before age 80 (and again I think it was well before the daughters retired.)
While not everyone in that generation had a pension, many did and it with SS could help provide for their care. As the next generation(s) age, there are far fewer who will have a pension and they need to be able to save for their own old age needs!
Second, I get it also because my first degree is in Anthropology, akin to/includes references to sociology/societies.
While it would be nice to be able to provide that safe place to nice old mom and/or pop, the reality is many of us are seniors+ and have our own infirmities to deal with, or mom/pop are no longer (or never were) that nice! Some on this forum are much younger, raising their own families or still working to ensure they have a future (and their own retirement savings!) Some have helpful siblings, other have no sibling or no caring siblings, so in general the care of our current aging society is in deep trouble!
1. Take a deep breath.
2. Acknowledge how you are starting to feel.
3. Take a break and tell her that you are giving her (or you) a 'time out' - leave for 30 seconds 30 minutes or 3 hours (or 3 days) - whatever you can do.
4. Give yourself the unconditional loving support to the little girl inside that you would have liked your mom to have been able to give to you.
5. Prepare some thoughts / phrases for #4 above in advance.
6. Prepare in advance some ways you can respond to your mom when these triggering moments occur. Practice. Be succinct and do not engage in arguing. Simply saying "I hear you mom" and then stop. I need to take a break now. I'll be back in _____ minutes, hours, days . . .
7. Do your own inner work to become the woman you want to be. Your own woman. Of course this is not easy. It took me decades to learn to be my own person and there is still way too much of 'my mother' inside my head and body telling me what I should be doing which is certainly not in the least helpful to my own development and healthy self-esteem.
8. I have found FORGIVENESS to be invaluable to my shifting and growing. Forgiving the person's behavior is a gift of healing to you. Learning this skill was likely the most powerful lesson I learned many years ago. I may still feel hurt when someone says something I internalize as hurtful; it means I let it go for my own well being, peace of mind, and equanimity.
9. Remember, your mom is wounded and passed that on to you (as many of our mothers did - do) what was passed on to her. Her unfinished business of self-development is what you are dealing with - as many of us are. Not until someone in that chain has the courage and fortitude to say "enough" I want to be the whole healthy being I am created to be - and work through the feelings, and make hart decisions to take care of yourself, staying stuck or reactive won't change.
10. Get the support you need to change how you react and interact with your mom. She won't change. Only you can change how you respond to her (and internalize responses / feelings to yourself). You are worth it. Gena
Learning to let the barbs bounce or slide off takes time and effort. It does get better each time, if we are consistently working on it. Sometimes when stressed, backsliding can happen, but pick up and move on!
Definitely do not argue or try to reason with mom. Correcting her isn't going to work either. Not going to happen. You'll only frustrate yourself or spark her into even more nasty insults! Best to just calmly walk away.
Don't throw insults back, it is pointless and generally leads to upping YOUR stress. DO work on ensuring you have "me" time, especially time to spend with others (and leave any/all discussions of mom on the doorstep before you leave!)
Copy/paste the 10 steps onto something you can print and post on the fridge as a reminder!!
Fire the caregiver, it’s not her job to get involved in family matters, if your mother isn’t lying that is and claiming she is saying things she isn’t. My mother does that frequently so make sure first but she’s creating more stress if she’s really saying that garbage.
For the rest - yup. We can provide the "care" we are capable of, even if that means just ensuring mom/pop get the care they need and manage/oversee everything. It's what I do, and I do it because someone needs to, NOT because I owe anything to mom.
As a parent myself, here's how I see it: My 2 children owe me NOTHING. Why? Because I chose to bring them into this world and so I did, of my own volition, and made the choice to care for them until they were old enough and wise enough to move out and care for themselves. It's never been my job to raise children to be MY caregivers in old age! If I had children for that reason, I'd be a pretty shitty parent, imo. I love my children unconditionally; in other words, no matter what they do or what they do not do for me now, or later, when I get even older than I already am. It is MY responsibility to make preparations for my care in old age because hey, guess what? I'm an adult! I've always loved and protected my children, too, never raising a hand to them or emotionally abusing them in any way. Yet I STILL don't expect them to become a slave to me 24/7 when I get dementia and need Depends. If they'd like to help me in my old(er) age if and when I need it, great. If not, that's fine too., it's not their 'job'. I'll figure it out. And if I can't, I will swallow all the pain pills I'll have saved up along with a big tumbler of whiskey and then go meet my Creator on MY terms.
All of the people here who feel the need to remind us caregivers of what we 'owe' our parents, or what 'God' expects from us, GIVE US A BREAK ALREADY, WILL YOU? It's not for YOU to determine what's between me and God, nor is it for you to determine what I should or should not be doing for my parents, or what my children should or should not be doing for me! If I am posting a question here, I am seeking SUPPORT. I am looking for empathy, understanding, a KIND word or two, even. Not a lecture from a preacher on a pulpit. Try to keep that in mind when posting a response, okay? Sheesh.
I manage EVERYTHING else, which sucks up a lot of time, but it is something I can do, whether I owe her or not.
We don't all have sibling(s) or if we do, not all are present and accounted for to step up to the plate (some are even waiting in the wings to file penalties!) to provide/share the care. However, going it alone and/or dealing with a demented, sometimes combative, abusive and physically difficult parent is not for everyone. Even those times she balks when I arrive to take her to appointments (someone else said what I generally say - 95 going on 3!), I'm ready to walk away... Haven't yet, but I don't provide 24/7 care either. Deep breath, move forward.... one baby step at a time...
Not everyone had a sunshine and roses upbringing either. But, I agree with many on this thread that we CHOOSE to have and raise children, not slaves. While it is nice to provide care when the elders are failing, it should not be mandatory nor should it continue if it is sucking the life out of you!
If my kids want to help, fine. If not, I might be disappointed, but certainly if I end up on the road to nowhere like the one my mother is on, I do NOT want to be a burden to my kids! They appreciate me now, and express that (especially when mom still occasionally has to come to the rescue, but rescue means I'll help get you out of this, but YOU take the responsibilities - I'll just provide the means! So far this has worked, several times. We're in one of those segments now - daughter needed to refi to pay off recent ex, but needed debt moved to qualify. SHE transfers X amount each month and I handle the payments. We will continue this until she can transfer balances to her own accounts.)
Will they owe me later? No. Might I want or demand it if I'm on that road? Possibly. We can't know how our minds will work if/when THAT time comes... We just need to make our desires known NOW before that time comes. We should have all legal issues in place before then. Mom was always checking out various AL facilities and talking about some day "needing to get outta here", meaning go to AL, but when that time came? NO WAY was she going to move into one of THOSE places!!!
Anyway, thumbs up to lealonnie1!
And so you know, I've made so many sacrifices for my Mom. But she isn't even aware of it because of her dementia. I've said it before, I was one of the lucky ones to have great parents.
And, one more thing. I would NEVER want my daughter to do what I've done, now that I've been here.
Sorry so long, but take care of yourself. It's not easy, but there is a better way.
We CANNOT assume the caregiver said this or anything like it. This could be mom and/or dementia talking. Calm discreet discussion with caregiver to get the FACTS first.
Don't shoot and ask questions after. This is the "good" one, don't throw her out until 1) it is proven and 2) she cannot correct/stop herself.
Otherwise, good comment.
Be strong. Because as long as you know that you are doing what you can with regard to Mom's care, whatever she says and no matter how many guilt trips she plants on you.....you are doing your best.
Mom is probably just scared that you're going to place her in a "Nursing Home." And so she is lashing out in fear. However, as time goes by, nursing homes are no longer referred to as that, but more appropriately as Healthcare Centers, etc. Nursing Home connotations just bring on horror stories for our elderly.
Hang in there.
We CANNOT assume the caregiver said this or anything like it. This could be mom and/or dementia talking. Calm discreet discussion with caregiver to get the FACTS first.
Don't shoot and ask questions after. This is the "good" one, don't throw her out until 1) it is proven and 2) she cannot correct/stop herself.
Also, many people think NH is the only option (or just lump all care facilities into NH.) There are other options - NH is for those who need skilled nursing care. I will agree with your statement about how NHs are viewed, especially by much older people who are only aware of them as that was the only option other than home care. They are not (all) the same as they were years ago! Laws and preferences required changes, hence the big growth in IL/AL/MC care facilities.
No guilt when she tries to manipulate because her ideas hold no water. You can help her if you can or chose to, OR try to help her live better by changing her residence where she can get care. She can make calls to help herself if she is capable. If she is not, then she needs care that others provide like a NH or Asst Living.
I don't mean to sound so indifferent. I have a very demanding and self-centered parent who tries these manipulations and she tried to run my life. Even writing this gives me stress, but I had to draw boundary lines so I wouldn’t be her indentured servant in my retirement. She now has care at home. If she didn’t have this, I would have found her other living arrangements for her. I did care enough to help her find the care she has now. But that is where I draw the line. I will not go back to being her servant at her beck and call.
I would tell my mom ' I love you more than spaghetti sauce but not as much as chocolate sauce' & we would laugh about that but it gave her comfort knowing she was loved so when was the last time you said it to her? maybe just that will calm the unsecurity of her dementia
Don't let her guilt you into something you need done for her that she doesn't like - remember she is 93 going on 3 - no child would ever get vaccinated if the parent asked them 'do you want a needle?' - sometimes a small intentional hurt [like a needle] is the best option at the time rather than let an infection run rampant or other issue - hold your ground on the big issues
1. How do you deal with what your mother needs?
2. How do you deal with what your mother thinks?
1. Should be reasonably straightforward. Your mother, aged 93 and now with dementia, which always progresses, certainly does have specific care needs. These can be assessed, and then services are arranged to meet those needs. The care does not have to come from you. It can do, as far as you're willing and able, but it doesn't have to. If you dropped dead or left the country tomorrow, your mother's needs would still be met, one way or another, more or less to her personal satisfaction.
2. Is the emotional question, and some people struggle with this forever, feeling guilty because they seem never to be able to make the person they care about happy. And yet... isn't that strange? Because this question is a matter of opinion. Your mother is entitled to her opinion. Heavens! - even the caregiver is entitled to her opinion, though she'd do better to keep it to herself, and besides I agree with BarbBrooklyn and would not take your mother's word for it. But here is the key point: SO ARE YOU entitled to YOUR opinion, and since your actions should be governed by your own judgement, your opinion is in fact the only one that matters.
You can spend your time and mental energy mounting arguments against your mother's opinion. You could point out to her, and to yourself, that her case that she had you (by choice) and looked after you (as the law required) and therefore you (who are not volunteering) must now look after her (in a way that no enforcement agency requires) simply doesn't hold water. But why bother? Her argument is nonsense. All it amounts to is her opinion that you should look after her, because she wants you to. Well! - and what do YOU think?
You are saddened when your mother makes critical and negative comments. You feel an obligation to devote yourself to her care. You feel oppressed by her demands. It's no good our counselling you not to care what she thinks - you DO care. It's the habit of a lifetime. You can't just drop it, just like that.
But, one thing you could do is think about it a different way. What do you think would be a healthy, comfortable way for you to manage the care that your mother definitely does need?
With 5 workers (food service, housekeeping, nursing and cna's, and maintenance) at her beck and call at all times it was a much better situation for her...realizing they could deal with issues faster than I could. By the time I could get an appointment and get her in or get someone to come out to help me took time. Where they could have it taken care of quickly. Also, she met other people and got to do activities she could enjoy.
As she has declined and now in full nursing care I know she's being well taken care of... she has not had a UTI in 5 years and I am thankful to the staff where she is.
My mom always used to say "You pay for your raising by raising your own." I don't agree with that. No child should ever have to "pay" for their raising. Dementia or no dementia, you could tell your mom that when she tries to guilt you. Even if that declaration doesn't "stick" with your mom, it's a self-affirmation that benefits you!