With respect: you aren’t making sense. There is no “shaking” anxiety. There is treating it. In an 87 year old person, that treatment may be terminal. It may still be better quality of life than she has now. She is, as you say, not her normal self now. She is in a state so bad that a significant part of you sees death as preferable to it. You also say that you understand that her disease process may be terminal—not because of her medications, but because of her disease. So on some level you do get that telling her to bootstrap her way out of a disease that is this intransigent is not effective and it’s not kind. Why are you doing it? |
| Why am I doing it? Because every time she’s been in a major depressive state before she’s come out of it and become her regular not-depressed and not-anxious self again. The last episode was when she was 84 and lasted 10 months and she had 3 good years following. She’s 7 months into this episode. I don’t know if she’ll come out of this or not. That’s what makes this so hard. I’m pretty certain if we let go and walk away she won’t come out of it and will die a miserable death relatively soon. I also have no certainty that if we focus hard on her recovery that it will work. |
|
OP here with an update. It's now 11.5 months since my mom's extreme depression and anxiety began, and it has FINALLY lifted. She's her normal self again...still very elderly (she's 87) and still very frail, but the depression and anxiety is GONE.
What happened since I last posted... The main thing is she started seeing a new psychiatrist who diagnosed her with bipolar depression and started her on lamotrigine. We also continued the other treatments: - CBT for insomnia (she started sleeping normally for her about 6 months in to this episode) - therapy - she started seeing a therapist weekly, also about 6 months in - exercise - slowly over past 8 months she has been increasing her exercise. For the last 2 months we have been walking together at a faster pace than she walks on her own - about 2.5mph for 15-20 min. I had read so many studies emphasizing the benefits of exercise for depression. I think everything we were doing in addition to the medication was helping, but the bipolar depression diagnosis and new medication probably were the game changers. Lamotrigine is supposed to be better at preventing recurrence of depression than lifting someone out of depression...but here we are. I can't believe that with about 10+ lifetime severe depressive episodes that have each been up a a year in duration it took until age 87 to reach a diagnosis and find an effective treatment...but here we are, and we are all so thankful. |
| That's fantastic news! |
|
She got better when your sibling cut her off????
There's a message there. Step back. This is codependency you have going on. She's miserable, gets attention. Try dropping the rope. |
Both of my siblings stopped coming multiple times a week - they each live about 45 minutes away and the time was overwhelming. But they still came once a week spending at least half a day with my mom. So no abandoning, more setting a boundary that my mom couldn't call with an anxiety emergency. I also set the same boundary and stopped coming over on call when my mom said she was frightened, etc. I saw my mom more like 3x per week plus taking her to doctor/psychiatrist appointments and occasionally running errands. But this was all planned ahead. Now that she's feeling better she says she's not frightened at all. The depression is gone. She signs up to run errands with the shuttles at her assisted living facility. We've cut back somewhat on the number of visits but she still sees at least one of us at least twice a week and I talk to her on the phone every day. |
Yes, I can still barely believe it! I wanted to share the update so others would hold out hope. It's really tough getting the right kind of psychiatric care, and even with it, getting better can take a long, long time. But it's worth keeping trying! |
| I am so impressed your mom was receptive to the meds, therapy, exercise!! My mom is younger and will only go back on meds or try a different med and therapy when she hits rock bottom. As soon as she feels better, she gradually goes off, against doctor's orders. I hope your mom continues to do well! It's good that your siblings stopped enabling, but still check on her. |
|
OP, I am truly so happy you took the time to update this thread. My heart was breaking for what you were going through, and hearing this outcome, better than I'd even thought possible, is just wonderful.
Wishing you and your family all the best. |
No. Found your problem. |
The end result is dying for everyone, depressed or not. Your mom has already lived a good long life that will end soon. Her kids have done well by her. Maybe you'll be lucky and be both undepressed and long lived. |
This is cheerful lol. Yes, we’re all going to die one day. I’m just glad we found some new meds (plus therapy, CBT for insomnia, exercise, going to daily activities, etc etc) that finally worked and the depressive episode is over. Elder care is rough, but the bipolar depression sent me over the edge. Now I feel like I have my mom back. Hoping for this to last as long as possible. |