I found this article helpful.
https://www.agingcare.com/articles/caregiver-fix-it-mentality-leads-to-burnout-152629.htm
I realized, and I hope many of you do too, we can't "fix" old. As we seem to feel good about a living situation, a medical regime, a day to day routine, inevitably something else goes wrong. My question is, I still seem to constantly sit in an anxious state waiting for the "next thing." Do any of you have any suggestions for me on how to rid myself of that anxiety? I am an only child. My mother lives in AL in a retirement community 3 minutes away. I'm married and have two children (20 and 15). I have a full time job and am off in the summer.
I came to mostly acceptance and lost the constant anxiety when I was able to accept Mom had entered a new stage of life that I could not change. There would be changes, often as quick as her fall, I could not anticipate nor change what would happen. I focused on providing as much good care and opportunities for enjoyable interludes as I could. Physically Mom loves a whirlpool bath and getting lotion applied so I made that part of her daily routine. Mom also has some dementia so I looked back over my childhood and her life for the things she enjoyed that she might still be able to do. Mom always loved music and sang most of the time when she was working during my childhood so I started singing with her. She remembers every song and hymn we ever sang and she loves our time spent singing. So while conversations about current events or books we have read don't work very well now, we can enjoy the time spent singing. I don't know when that next "changing" event is going to happen so I focus on today. I know that changing event is going to happen because Mom's declining health and eventual death is a certainty I cannot change - worrying about it before it happens will not change it.
I like the concept of giving a few minutes day to the 'worry du jour' and then putting it away mentally.
We have so very little control over ANYTHING except for our own attitudes!
I like Maple's suggestion about warding off worrying by reminding yourself it doesn't change the outcome of anything; it just makes US sick. I often think my mother will outlive ME b/c of how anxiety ridden she makes me. I'll be 64 next month. So I work on ridding myself of the anxiety producing comments and drama she creates every day. I fact check her statements with the staff at the MC, and realize that 90% of what she says is either a lie or a huge exaggeration. I highly suggest doing that, btw, if your mother is prone to telling you lots of ugly details about how much pain she's in or that she's 'dying' or the like. I often feel much better after making a fact checking phone call and hear that she's sitting in the activity room doing FINE.
Anyway, there's nothing WE can do about THEIR old age and infirmity anyway, so why make ourselves sick over it? Get out and about, keep your mind on productive activities, and tell yourself you'll cross the crisis bridge if and when you have to. In the meantime, you'll enjoy every moment of the life God gave you, your children, your husband, your job and your friends. In reality, we wind up worrying about things that never even happen!
Best of luck!
My first husband was in law enforcement. I used to worry every single day when he went to work. That he'd be injured or killed. Gave myself bleeding ulcers.
Then one night about 11:30 we got a call that one of the agents had been shot and for him to grab his long guns and get to the scene as they were actively searching for the shooters. I stayed up all night waiting to hear who got shot, if the other agents were okay, if my husband was going to be okay, etc. Worried myself into the hospital for 3 days because I kept throwing up blood (sorry this is so graphic). A lovely internist who treated me asked me, how did all your worrying change the outcome of the situation? I said it didn't, it couldn't. He said, then why do you worry? You are wasting energy and making yourself sick, AND YOU DIDN'T CHANGE A SINGLE THING!!!!
From that day on I stop myself from worrying.
I think we are programmed to worry as a sign of caring. But you can care for someone without worrying. So the next time you start to feel anxious, stop, breathe, and ask yourself if becoming anxious or worried can change the situation. Then let it go. It's only hard the first time. After that, it's a piece of cake. Big hugs and comforting energy to you.
If you are OK physically, then your next appointment should be to a psychiatrist. He/She can get you a prescription for an anti-anxiety medication to help with your symptoms while you work with a therapist to find new coping strategies. If you commit to working with your therapist, you should find your anxiety soon decreasing enough that you do not need to rely on medications or a very small dose.
I was more anxious before mom and dad moved to AL - they were in IL and dad was falling - a lot - at the time we didn't know dad was having strokes in the balance center of his brain - no outward signs of the stroke). Dad was unhappy still being alive and I was afraid he was falling (not necessarily on purpose - but ... I sometimes wondered). When a retired nurse told dad he didn't have alzheimers sent us to have dad evaluated by neurologist to confirm the alzheimers and as a result of MRI found the evidence of his strokes.
The anxiety went down after they moved to AL - however dad continued to fall - but I knew he was safer than he had been.
Anxiety soared through the roof in Jan 2019 when found dad didn't have the "creeping crud" but was suffering CHF, AFIB, leaky valve and another circulatory issue. At 91 he decided not to pursue active treatment and went on hospice. Once things got sorted out and dad was on hospice - anxiety went down again. Yes he continued to fall - at least weekly - and I'd cringe whenever the phone rang early in the morning or late at night. While I knew he would continue to fall - I didn't stress out over it. I didn't stress over his end of life decision or when one afternoon, he went to sleep and never woke again.
While I always wondered what would happen next - I never worried much about it - and I'm a worrier and prone to stressing out by nature. However with my parents I actually wait for the shoe to drop before freaking out - which lasts until I can get my head around what's happening - luckily with dad (I believe his bones were essentially made of rubber - 2 of his early falls in IL resulted in a couple of cracked ribs and a compression fracture of his spine) the rest of the his fall essentially left him bumped and bruised - later falls were slides to ground as he was too weak to stand.
Spend the summer off - visiting your parents, but especially taking care of yourself. Have a spa day - or 2 or 3. Have long leisurely lunches, lose yourself in several good books.
Be good to yourself and good luck.
My mother was around 90 when dementia came calling. Initially it wasn't too bad, but I wanted "eyes" on her as I live 1.5 hours from where she lived. Hired aides 1hr/day weekdays only, with intent to increase time and duty as needed (it was only to check on her and make sure she took her meds from the dispenser we set up.) She thwarted that by refusing to let them in less than 2 months later. She was still mobile, could dress and eat (couldn't cook anymore, so boxed crap and frozen dinners) and was messing up finances so I took that over. We had to take her car as well - between hearing loss, Mac Deg and dementia, she was an accident waiting to happen (dents, dings, and a ruined tire and rim said NO MORE!) Just before we moved her to MC, she "bruised" her leg and developed cellulitis. She didn't even have enough sense to know how serious it was OR tell one of us. Thankfully she told her neighbor, who reported mom said she bruised her leg.
Although she had one big "step back" in time to about 40 years ago, she was holding her own there. Eventually she was using a rollator, then refused to stand/walk on her own, so wheelchair the last 6-8 months. Around Labor Day last year, she had a stroke. It impacted her right/dominant side. She was still pretty feisty (got mad they called EMTs and tried to kick the nurse!) It also impacted her swallowing and some speech, so she was losing weight and hospice finally came on board. Mid December the second stroke did the worst. She lasted another day after that.
I didn't worry too much, as she'd had a good long run. Of course any time a call from the facility came, it would pick up my BP a bit, but usually it was nothing. I suspect the high BP contributed to dementia for her and certainly the stroke (esp when she started refusing the meds, unable to swallow them. I did talk with the pharmacist and was told they could empty the contents into applesauce or ice cream - they are time-release, so any chewed would lost effectiveness, but most would likely go down and any we could get in was better than none!)
When those thoughts hit, take a deep breath and try to banish them. Often I would get a song stuck in my head and had to work to get it out. Same idea, think of something else, sing a song you like or listen to music you enjoy, just to get your mind onto something else. Tackle some task that's been deferred that requires some thought. Anything, just to get your mind off the "what ifs." You have two grown children - if you're like me and many others, we go through all that when raising them. You can try to protect others from certain things, but in many cases we just have to tackle what really happens, not the feared things, when they occur.
It is good that you've come to terms with end of life. That's a start. Now just work on getting those thoughts out of your head!
1.Send lots of mail. Little cards and notes. Small packages, etc... even though you are a few minutes away.
2.Call right before her meals/activities... she will be occupied after the call is over.
3.Make in and out visits. Again, before an activity. Don’t go alone, bring another person to buffer.
4.Talk about the busyness of your children and their activities.
I struggle with anxiety. It’s a lot to handle. Being the only child of a declining parent is extremely hard. I never want my sons to experience the upset and stress I have been through. Warmly-Sunny
I am a worrier and can get myself anxious over what is in the mail that day, so being POA and Trustee of Trust for my bro could kick me into high gear in seconds. It isn't worth it. Most of the things you worry about won't happen, but OTHER THINGS will. So you need not to expend that energy and part of that is training yourself with "I will not think about this again today; I thought about it this morning. I can think about it again tomorrow morning" and then divert yourself. We can train our minds. Try meditation, and try deep breathing exercises. Good luck. I understand to the depth of the core of me!
My mom has taught me, through what she's experienced, what I DO NOT want to have happen to me or DH.
Poor planning, poor choices, letting one sib rob them of their savings and having the belief that SS would support them 'just fine'--when in fact, it barely covers the basics....losing their home due to said sibling...moving in with ANOTHER sibling--going on 24 years now...
Watching my sweet dad suffer the absolute indignity that is Parkinson's--and watching mother just slowly slumping into nothingness. Very little QOL and no interest in much of anything.
It doesn't cause me anxiety--b/c I know that there is little to nothing I can do for her to really help her. Aging is a personal thing. I can drive her to Bingo once a week. I can try to clean her apartment, I can spend about 1/2 an hour with her before she drives me nuts...and I can see how easily that can happen. Hope to not do it to my kids.
My YB has primary care of mother. I step in and out depending on how the winds are blowing (kinda like Mary Poppins)..she NEEDS me right now, so she's being super sweet and I find that kind of ironic.
My parents never came 'ahead' of my own kids. So, there's no 'guilt' there.
It just is what it is. Mom will likely live a few more years (she's 91) and she likely will wind up in a NH the next time she falls. We all just try to go with the flow.
Perhaps you are a far kinder person than I am. I have enough personal issues to deal with, I cannot climb up on mother's cross too. I care, but I can't care too much. It's unhealthy and I won't sacrifice my life for hers.
Maybe you need some talk therapy to get feeling cenetered about this, if it's keeping you upset or depressed. I did work out some issues about mom through therapy and it really helped me.