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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Would you spend most of your time caring for an elderly parent?

267 replies

ImaHogg · 27/04/2021 09:29

I have a real dilemma in my life right now, I am probably digging myself a giant hole and potentially causing myself future issues.
I’m 48, married with a 13 and 15 year old and work very part time hours.
I am and have always been very close to my parents. They live around the corner from me. Dad is 80 this year and mum is 78.
Dad is in good health and up till last year was riding a motorcycle. My mum has Alzheimer’s, she was diagnosed 3 years ago and as is the nature with this wicked disease, she is getting steadily worse. She is also in constant pain with osteoporosis.
My dad does not cope well at all, he gets so angry with the diagnosis and takes it out on mum as though she is forgetting on purpose! He says his life is over and he feels trapped and can not even go down the shed on his own. He does the cooking and washing up but really doesn’t do any other housework. He thinks if he keeps badgering my mum to do it she will suddenly ‘remember’, which obviously won’t happen, so subsequently things build up, laundry doesn’t get done, bed sheets go unchanged etc. Even mums hair doesn’t get washed regularly (something my sister and I are going to have to do from now on in).
I spend most of my spare time helping out. Every week I take mum out to give dad breaks, I arrange all her hospital and gp appointments and take her to most of these, I order mums meds and collect them too, I have arranged for her to go to a day centre once a week and I take her there and collect her (although she hates it so will probably cancel it soon!). I have organised financial things for them ie mum now gets attendance allowance and dad council tax reductions etc.
I go round 6 days a week.
My sister only goes once a week, she has no children but works full time, she will do some cleaning but that’s it as she says she is too busy (she’s home most days at 4pm!). She too lives nearby.
Obviously with this disease things will start to get much, much worse and I can already see changes, mum is very depressed and just sits in the living room a lot of the time, she often looks vacant and her short term memory is shot to pieces, she cries a lot. She does perk up when I take her out for a drive etc but goes downhill once she is at home.
I appreciate living with a dementia patient is bloody tough going but don’t think my dad helps as he puts her down and tries to make her do things which the Alzheimer’s just won’t let her do.
I can’t arrange for a professional carer yet as my mum is still aware of things and says she does not want a carer or a stranger in her home, it makes her feel useless.
I am so stressed with it all and find the burden of caring/worrying about my parents welfare 24/7 overwhelming. It feels like caring for children.
To add extra woes, my dh says I am doing too much and we are starting to have heated discussions about it. He thinks my dad is being very selfish expecting me to always be there to do so much and that he should be doing a lot of it himself (ie the laundry, changing bed sheets and washing mums hair etc) but I know he won’t do it so I feel stuck between a rock and hard place, although I admit I wouldn’t want to put this burden on my own dc.
It also pisses off dh that dad doesn’t offer me any money for the help I do even though he knows I struggle a little financially. Mum and dad are very financially comfortable so that does sting a little tbh.
I am concerned how much I could take long term as I already suffer from anxiety and depression. I can see as the disease takes hold I am going to have to help more and more. This will have an huge impact on my life and my dh/children’s too.
AIBU to give up so much of my time and energy looking after my parent? Would you do the same?

OP posts:
CookieDoughKid · 05/05/2021 10:55

I hate to say it as I think you seem like a wonderful person but you are your own worst enemy. You have control to step away. Put your foot down. I wouldn't even negotiate on this. Just tell it to your parents they are hiring outside help and ensure they have the funds to pay for it. You have no other option.

randomer · 05/05/2021 11:02

If anybody wishes they can message me and I will tell you what I have been through.
It is a complete and utter nightmare.....elderly care.

Late in the day, very very late, my mother is now in a nursing home. The care is outstanding, everything fantastic but it comes at a cost. Of course its eating into any inheritance which no doubt irks other family ,members.

" Enabling your loved one to remain in their own home" can be a code for companies to make money and the old person to be at risk.

randomer · 05/05/2021 11:05

it should be my job to do

Agreed, I recall a conversation about yet another phonomenally stressful Christmas and somebody saying "you could have another 10 or 15 years of this"
It seemed laughable.....but indeed I did.

RantyAnty · 05/05/2021 12:05

I went through this with my FIL and DM.

They both went to a care home when the care for them became too much.

It truly was the best thing for everyone.

I was just one person and didn't have the skills needed to properly take care of my FIL who became violent at times and unsafe for himself and others. He went to a good place experienced with dementia and it made a difference. 24 hour care with trained people was what he needed. There is no way I could have given him the same amount of caring without becoming ill myself.

My DM went when she broke her hip and had cancer treatments. She was reluctant at first but took her for a few visits and she saw that she knew most everyone there as patients and many were DC and DGC of her friends. She went and enjoyed it as before, she could hardly get out without a lot of help. She said she liked not having to figure out what to eat and cook it plus all the social bits she had been missing.

Like a PP said so well. You want to enjoy your parents as your parents and not their carers. They'd probably rather enjoy you as their daughter too.

Most people truly don't understand the reality of Alzheimer's/Dementia until you experience it with a loved one. The tv shows do present it as forgetfulness with can be the case in very early stages but the reality of them having complete meltdowns, losing control of bodily functions, becoming very aggressive/violent/sexually inappropriate, is something they never show.

From the things your DF has said to you, he is being incredibly selfish about this. I would start looking at care homes. I wish you all the best OP Flowers

Candleabra · 05/05/2021 12:15

Most people truly don't understand the reality of Alzheimer's/Dementia until you experience it with a loved one. The tv shows do present it as forgetfulness with can be the case in very early stages but the reality of them having complete meltdowns, losing control of bodily functions, becoming very aggressive/violent/sexually inappropriate, is something they never show.

This is so true. Even different types of dementia can present so differently. I get kind nods from friends and colleagues when they talk wistfully about their lovely nan with dementia who thought she was living in the 1940s but could still play the piano and loved gardening.
I want to shake them It's Not Like That!!

poppycat10 · 05/05/2021 12:21

a 30 year veteran of caring responsibilities including physical disability, cognitive impairment, dementia and bloody mindedness

And the bloody mindedness is the easiest to fix, if the most common. But involves losing the "guilt" and many women love to be martyrs. Men don't put up with this, they buy in help or find a care home. Only women think they need to do the job of six people (2 people per 8 hour shift for 24 hours, which is what dementia sufferers need). How is that, logically, even remotely possible?

Nanny0gg · 05/05/2021 12:36

@ImaHogg

I do try and arrange for some things but they get cancelled. I arranged for mum’s chiropodist to come to the house last week as mum’s nails are awful but dad cancelled it on the morning because mum said she didn’t want it done! Same with hairdressers, a couple of times appointments have been made at a local hairdresser only for the appointment to be cancelled last minute or they didn’t turn up because they forgot even though I keep their calendar up to date and remind them but sometimes things slip the net as I have my own things to remember.
Your problem is your father.

Assuming that he is not in early stages of anything, you need to sit down with him and firmly lay it on the line.

Your mum is not and will not be capable of being a housewife again and you and your sister can't do it all and look after your own homes and families.

Therefore, some help is going to be put in place (give him options) and they can accept it or be left in squalor.

But you have to be firm

Corrag · 05/05/2021 12:54

This is so true. Even different types of dementia can present so differently. I get kind nods from friends and colleagues when they talk wistfully about their lovely nan with dementia who thought she was living in the 1940s but could still play the piano and loved gardening.
I want to shake them It's Not Like That!

100% agree, I had no idea how hard it is until our family went through it. My relative was angry and aggressive at times, I often left her house in tears. Constant worry about whether she was safe. Feeling guilty that I wasn't doing enough for her. Or feeling guilty that I was neglecting other things to take care of her. My mental health is not what it was before, don't think it ever will be and it's hard to explain the impact to people who haven't experienced it.

Flowers to anyone currently caring for a loved one.

Rhannion · 05/05/2021 13:07

Don’t risk your children’s future and your marriage. A good friend of mine had her marriage end due to her parents overwhelming demands on her time, money and energy. It’s very easy to let your understandable desire to care for them dominate everything and it’s not fair on yourself and your own family.

Mary46 · 05/05/2021 14:15

Yes we were run ragged. It was years of it. I laugh at oh they not around forever. We had years of dads care. Got to a point nobody could keep on. God op feel for you. It put a massive strain plus family fights

BetterCare · 06/05/2021 11:06

I agree with regards to supplementation and diet being hard. However, you can sneak healthy foods in to other foods that is a trick I use with my Dad. His porridge for example is loaded with stuff he wouldn’t eat on its own. And with regards to the the supplements, I don’t tell him what they are I just say the doctor says he has to have them, that seems to work.

They really do make a difference and that through experience of both parents having Dementia it can really help to reduce some of the symptoms.

Also CBD oil can be really calming. It really works with Dad when he gets anxious and agitated. It may work well for your Dad as well.

It is a constant battle because you have to learn little tricks to get them to do things.

Just know you are not alone there are many of us in the same boat. It can feel lonely because the support is so shit and the so called expert really know very little of the day experience of looking after someone with Dementia.

Good luck.

SwimBaby · 06/05/2021 11:10

BetterCare those tactics with the supplements wouldn’t work with my mum, they would make her paranoia even worse. It shows how complex Dementia is.

ImaHogg · 06/05/2021 19:32

BetterCare which supplements have helped may I ask? I could try and get the gummie type ones in as mum would probably think they are sweets!

OP posts:
randomer · 07/05/2021 15:55

I dont think a few chewy supplements is going to move things in the right direction.

Pieinthesky11 · 08/05/2021 13:43

I honestly think it's a false kindness keeping poorly elderly parents at home, how can you provide the care stimulation and everything else they need. Accepting as much help as is available is the way forward I think

Pieinthesky11 · 08/05/2021 13:44

Also carer fatigue is a real thing that perhaps your dad is experiencing - sounds hard for them both

randomer · 09/05/2021 09:17

It is a false kindness. The elderly person claims to love their home and wont leave.They cant assimilate new information and cling to the familiar.Some private carers exploit this and make a very nice living from it.

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