Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Elderly parents

Cracking up inside with the relentless of it all

40 replies

Lookingafterdad · 30/01/2020 21:48

Dad is 90. In 3 years has gone from living happily with his girlfriend of 15 years, playing golf, driving etc to being in a nursing home, on a constant rollercoaster of chest infections and delerium on top of dementia, near blindness, incontinence and very limited mobility. But still bright spots of lunches and coffees and chats, finding stuff out about him and feeling like it was/?is all worth it.

The decline started when he fell and broke his hip in 2017 and the day after his Partner was diagnosed with terminal illness and died within months. I miss her so much too.
Dad couldn’t go back to their home after his hip repair due to her illness and so we emptied out our front room and he lived with us for 6 months.
It was a struggle - delerium pneumonia incontinence, unable to be left alone for the first few months, broken nights etc. He accepted Carers for his morning wash ( my chance to leave house for 30-45 mins) but otherwise we were both housebound. If I left him I could not trust him not to try and wobble into the garden or go to loo on his own. I had 3 of my teenagers still at home as well and had to stop my work (self employed).

Finally got him rehabbed enough and well enough to move him into sheltered housing with a care package. But he kept sacking off the Carers because he ‘didn’t need them’. But relied on me to go daily to help ... I couldn’t and wouldn’t turn my back on him. He’s been a great dad and most of the time just a couple of hours of my time every day enabled him to enjoy his ‘independence’.
But he kept getting chest infections ( has COPD) with inevitable delerium - long periods of me getting phone calls at 2,3,4am, finding him with no bottoms on drinking his tea out of the milk jug. I’d get the GP out ( have to queue outside the surgery from 0730 to 0830 as can’t get through on phone) and the steroids would lift his delerium so he was then safe to leave ... but he would need nebulisers 4 times a day and the district nurses would only come once and the Carers ( if he had them) Wouldn’t administer them. So 3 visits per day from me during each crisis.
Crunch point was finding him on the floor having fallen 12 hours before - wouldn’t wear a falls bracelet as ‘they are for old people’
Another rehab period in hospital and discharged with a care package in place ... heart in my mouth all the time as he still had some delerium and was alone in flat overnight. I caught him leaving the flat in his pyjamas and said that’s it, full time Carers or care home.
He’s now in a nursing home. Dementia more advanced and still on the rollercoaster of frequent infections and delerium when he doesn’t know where he is, why he should take his meds, etc and I’m often the only person who can get him to so cooperate when he’s like that. The care home is 5 mins up the road. We still have nice chats when he is well and he’s still ‘Dad’.
The love I feel for him when I button up his cardigan and tuck his hanky up his sleeve is an echo of caring for my dc when they were little.
As is the bone crushing weight of anxiety that is always there. What’s going to happen today? Another fall? Another hospital admission? A nice normal visit?
I just don’t know how to get off this rollercoaster. He’s my Dad and I love him and want to do my best ... but my own life is on hold.
Feel so guilty for wondering how much longer this will go on for. Terrified he’ll die - terrified he never will.
Sorry that was long but cathartic - can’t talk to anyone IRL as people don’t understand unless they’ve lived it. So easy to say just step back. But I can’t.

OP posts:
thesandwich · 13/02/2020 14:32

Great news- and so glad you got out and took time for you.

AutumnRose1 · 13/02/2020 15:14

that's good

I bet they've given him a decent antibiotic now! Hope he continues feeling better.

Lookingafterdad · 10/07/2020 20:43

Dad suddenly deteriorated at the beginning of March - an awful few weeks of hoists, agitation, pain and distress but with a little sunlight here and there.
On the last day that he was able to talk, it was 7am and he asked me for a lager. I gave it him in his toddler cup - a recent replacement for the bone China cup and saucer or glass - and he said ‘you know what I’m doing today?’
‘I’m dying’.
I said ‘Is that what it feels like?’
‘Yes. but don’t worry. I’ve got my beer - it’s not too bad’.
He died on 28th March.
I just want to say thank you to all of you who helped me through such a dark time - it really helped.
@hambledon - your post stayed with me.
I found the last few weeks extremely traumatic but those memories are now fading.
So to all of you who are still on this treacherous, challenging labour of love - keep going, it will be such a comfort to you in due course.

OP posts:
thesandwich · 10/07/2020 21:28

Oh looking I am so sorry for your loss- he sounds like a very special person and you sound amazing.
I hope you can remember all the special times and hope the trauma is beginning to fade.
I hope you are looking after yourself now. 🌺🌺

cptartapp · 10/07/2020 21:40

MIL inevitably fell two days ago and badly broke her femur. FIL is 80 and muddling on whilst she's in hospital. They have a long road ahead, but haven't helped themselves over the last few years by refusing to delve into the large pots of unspent money they have to make life safer and more comfortable. They're now paying the price.
I've been nursing 30 years and think far too many people live too long.
We won't be their carers.

Cupoftchaiagain · 10/07/2020 22:15

@Lookingafterdad sorry for your loss. your words and love for your dad are so beautiful

Lookingafterdad · 11/07/2020 07:08

Thank you @thesandwich and @Cupoftchaiagain.

I am looking after myself and it’s felt very strange to suddenly have my life back. Now I will take on Dad’s mantra - ‘One Life! Live it!’

Obviously I miss Dad terribly at times, but I do feel a sense of peace now. No regrets. He’s still with me.

I’ve come away to our little holiday home by the sea, just me and the dogs. Hadn’t been able to come for ages because of Dad. The peace and lack of anxiety is just wonderful. I scattered Dad’s ashes at dawn this morning. A new day. I know Dad would have expected me to have a glass of wine whilst I did it but 5am was too early! Will toast him later at sunset.

Best of luck and huge hugs to all of you still in the thick of it. You will get through it! And thanks so much for your support.

OP posts:
thesandwich · 11/07/2020 08:17

looking i am so glad you are looking after yourself and honouring your dad.
As you say, he is with you. And his words are very wise.
Take care.

Lookingafterdad · 11/07/2020 16:59

Thank you @thesandwich, you too.

OP posts:
TimeWastingButFun · 11/07/2020 17:17

Oh my goodness, what a lot of heartache you've had. I'm so sorry to hear your news, after just reading your thread. It really is so cruel, watching an illness rob your loved ones of their vitality. You sound like a lovely daughter who really made a difference for him. My Dad too has COPD and heat failure, also kidney disease. He's also in denial, he's staying with my brother and while he's at work I take my Dad lunch every day and sit with him, and take him to his many appointments. On the one hand I'm spending lots of time with him and hearing stories of his life that Ive not heard before or that I love to hear again, but on the other he's not the same person that I remember. He can walk to the bathroom but gets breathless and he is wheelchair bound outside the house. He thinks he can go back and live in his own house 'when this is all over'. He doesn't seem to realise that his organs are in failure even though he's been told by the specialists. 😢

Lookingafterdad · 11/07/2020 18:24

@TimeWastingButFun Its so tough, isn’t it? I really feel for you. My Dad was similarly seemingly oblivious to the outlook (up until the last couple of weeks when he knew he was dying). For him, this seemed to be a blessing as he still had hope. Even as recently as Xmas he was looking at the travel supplements ( could only read the huge headlines, with a magnifier) and although I obviously didn’t encourage him to believe he might fly to France (!) I would gently turn the conversation around to his previous many holidays there which he loved talking about. His poor cognition was definitely a factor.

Sounds like you are doing a wonderful thing for him - he’s very lucky to have you.

Just a suggestion but if you’re a diary sort of person, it might help to write brief headlines every now and then. Three months on from Dad’s death I have just been able to read mine and although the final weeks were harrowing to live and read, it really helped me put it all in context of the last few years. A great comfort. I helped him seek out every small pleasure and savour it.

Wishing you strength and courage - unfortunately/ fortunately it will pass.

On a lighter note, Dad’s death excused me to go on the ‘chips and red wine’ diet .... Fantastic for about a month, took some effort for the second month but now dealing with the consequences :) also not now running around all the time.

OP posts:
Howzaboutye · 11/07/2020 18:50

OP I'm sorry for your loss X
You are a good daughter and a good person X

Lookingafterdad · 11/07/2020 19:12

Thank you for your lovely words @Howzaboutye - I did my best which is all any of us can do.
My thoughts are with all of you who are still going through it.
Although I wish Dad were still here, it would only be if he had some quality of life. It was his time. I was very lucky to have had him for so long.

OP posts:
TimeWastingButFun · 11/07/2020 20:12

Thank you for your reply Lookingafterdad and your lovely words
I wonder if the human mind naturally goes into this denial as a kind of coping mechanism. He's on steroids this week and it has made quite a difference (not gasping when he gets back from the bathroom) but I know he can't be on them for long. It's a scary time to have this kind of disease because if he needs a respirator or ventilator just now I know there will be people more likely to have a good long term outcome who will rightly take precedence. I think the diary is a good idea. I would hate to forget some of the things he has told me recently.

I like the chips and red wine diet, I will remember that Smile [wine}
Take care

FluffyFluffyClouds · 11/07/2020 23:08

OP I am so sorry Flowers
But you know I am glad you got to give him one last beer.
@hambledon - I know what you mean - I was so glad I got to spend time with Mum, yes even the day she was completely delirious and we all thought she was going to die within days (they tried a new antibiotic and bingo! so actually she had several more weeks). Dad went very quickly during lockdown and, well, better for him (didn't even have to put up with a doctor giving bad news) but hard for us.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page