My mom is 100. I invited her to move in with me when she was 90 and my dad passed away. She had vision problems and had fallen several times. I figured it would be for a few years and I could handle that. Well it’s been 11 years now and at 101 it could be several more. I had cancer while she was here, and really don’t know how much time I have left. I resent her longevity and worry I will never get to enjoy my not so golden age. I try to hint that she should consider assisted living, but she says I have to “tell” her when I don’t want her here anymore, which of course I can’t do. I feel like I can’t breathe anymore. I can’t stand the looks she gives me when she doesn’t approve of something I do. I resent her budding in when my granddaughter is over. I can’t make her understand boundaries, physical and mental. I know no one can really give me any advice but if I don’t tell someone how I feel I’m going to scream. btw, I am alone taking care of her. No living sibling. All my responsibility. It’s too much and she can’t seem to get it.
You need to give your mother the "It's not you, it's me" break up speech and tell her that you're physically incapable of taking care of her, that you're terrified that she's going to be the one to suffer because of it and she deserves more than being stuck with you and you have to find her something better than living with you. And look for something that at least superficially looks appealing with social activities and good food to get her out of your house.
You deserve this. You are not a bad daughter for not wanting to actually get to live before you drop dead from taking care of your mother. I live in terror that I'm going to die before my mother and never have one day of actual peace without her ceaseless demands and hectoring constantly in the background, one day of not anticipating more verbal abuse. I only see her one day a week because it's all I can stand without wanting to throw myself off a bridge.
Even so, good luck to you because I got my mother in assisted living back when she was only 88 years old and she moved out 17 months later.
Even if my situation is easier than yours, I am also thinking about moving mon in a facility. I réalise I am putting my own health {mental and physical) at risk. I used to like driving now I am scared I may have an accident, falling asleep while driving for instance.
This is not selfishness! It is a hard decision to take but you have to love yourself and take care of yourself too.
I have put my life on hold for too long, take care more of my mom than of my son. I will never have this time back... I am realizing it now.
It is just not human to take care of someone 24h/24.
Take care!
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I also understand how you feel as a caregiver having taken care of my mother for more than 15 years by myself and the youngest child. Trust me even if you had siblings there’s no guarantee that they would help you. Mine did not even call to see how their Mum was doing.
Taking care of Mum the last 15 years was difficult and was more difficult with each passing year.
Nobody from that era wants to keep on living. But what do you expect her to do when she will not die a natural death? Kill herself? It is what it is and I understand your frustration.
I am sure it was not easy for you to go through cancer whilst taking care of her needs as well. I got Shingles, a sprained ankle, and a bad back while taking care of my Mum. It was the hardest job and unpaid too that I ever had. I cried many nights after I put her to bed. There was nobody who could understand what I was going through since none of my friends had sick or elderly parents at the time. I am now having major back issues after falling at work. I can not walk without a walker at 60! I never expected to be in this situation. I had so many aspirations to travel, etc. and right now I cannot even get out of my home. So I understand completely where you are coming from when you feel your life is fleeting by.
She is never going to say to you to place her in AL, I am assuming she is ambulatory, because she does not know how you feel.
I think she may actually thrive in AL, if all she has wrong with her is old age. She will have a new audience to tell her stories to, there will be others to talk to and commiserate with, other than her daughter. She can make new friends even at that age.
I would start slow by telling her you need a break for a week to go see an old sick friend, and that you will place her in an AL during that time.
See how she like it when you get back. After that take a week off ever couple of months until she feels comfortable there. Then, if she likes it, then approach her about moving there permanently, explain that if you get sick again, you would not be able to take care of her, since your body is also older and more fragile. Tell her that you will still come to see her and spend time with her, and take her out for lunch and outings. Your daughter can also do the same if she is able to.
My Mum did not speak English and culturally it would have been foreign to her to be placed in a facility. She died at the age of 91 and only because Parkinson’s took her life. If she did not have it, she may still be living too! She was very healthy before Parkinson’s disease. I always worried that if I died who would take care of her since my siblings were and still are AWOL even after she passed away 8 years ago.
I hope my sentiments help you understand your Mum better and form a plan to place her in AL. Good luck!
Be firm. You have given her your time and as you say, you now need space.
Great she can just go to assisted living and not nursing care.
But be firm and repeat that you are physically ill and cannot be home to care for her. "tell her" that.
Take her to visit 3 assisted living and let her choose if possible (as far as expense) so she feels a bit of power.
But if she is smothering and doesnt respect boundries, you have to move her out for your mental health.
Don’t shame people on the forum for sharing their feelings- I give her credit for being strong enough to be real and share here. Her feelings are valid, others even people even here on the board have felt the same way at some point but wouldn’t admit to it. She’s been taking care of her for ten years on her own and has suffered from cancer. Offer support or skip to the next post
Do some nice things for yourself- pamper yourself, cup of tea, watch a favorite show and make yourself the focus for now, you’ve earned it. Do you have some support from any friends?
Take good care of yourself - you deserve it!
mom can’t see. she can play games, do activities, even has difficulty getting food on her fork… her marbles are mostly there and i’m sure she worries she’ll be alone. since she can’t join in. she does have the gift of gab however. lol.
I'm sure you realize that it's not her fault she's lived so long, but try not to resent her---it will poison you. Remember she won't be around forever and try to treat her so that you have no regrets.
You are burnt out and have had a serious life-threatening illness, one that can return and one that likes stress. You are not happy in your role and it probably shows. This is not the best environment for your mum and would receive better care and more socializing in a care environment. Her relationship with you would also improve as you could visit and spend real quality time with her. And who is to say she won't be happier!! If Perhaps you could frame it from that angle that even though you love her, you are not fit to do it properly anymore... which is probably true.
You deserve a life, and happiness and also to have a relationship with your mum where you don't resent her. You are gambling with your health right now .
I have to say, he was as happy as a sand-boy about the whole prospect. We joked about his staying in a luxury hotel (certainly costs about the same), but more seriously I reminded him that the place he's trying out will probably have a fully adapted bathroom with one of those hi-tech tubs that you can bathe almost literally *anybody* in, no matter how complex their physical disabilities.
He has not a qualm about it. I think it must be his wife who's been struggling under the weight of "admitting defeat."
Just a point to ponder: whose feelings are you afraid of?
he was content: i wonder if that’s rare.
most stories i know, people hate leaving their homes.
hope you’re well countrymouse. hug!! :)
bundle :)
I gave them 30 days notice (w/o expressed/vocalized recrimination, no anger), and drove 1,000 miles away. I'm 66 now and have 2 years of healing under my belt. Within a year, they'd arranged for 4 hours/6 days a week care and decided mom could do on her own in between, come what may. Huh.