Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She is in her 80s and been a life long smoker. She is going to keep smoking. Your expectations don't seem aligned with reality. She is addicted and will keep smoking. Focus on harm reduction and figure out how she can safely smoke in her space.
Whoever encouraged or supported her in moving into a non smoking environment is partly to blame.
I have zero expectations that she’s going to quit and at this point don’t want her to. I just want her to quit smoking in her apartment. She lived in two condos prior to this and had no issues smoking outside. And she smoked outside at this place until about two weeks ago. I visit her frequently enough to know. I’m just not sure how to handle this new development.
And for anyone who has dealt with an elderly family member who has signs of dementia, the relationship does flip from parent/ child to child/parent. So I did “catch” her and she denied and denied like a child. I’m just trying to navigate this new situation.
Is there a way to keep her cigarettes at a front desk? So, she has to go to the desk, take the one or two she's going to smoke, and take them outside? Her judgement and impulse control are declining, so the cigarettes themselves have to be doled out and policed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She is in her 80s and been a life long smoker. She is going to keep smoking. Your expectations don't seem aligned with reality. She is addicted and will keep smoking. Focus on harm reduction and figure out how she can safely smoke in her space.
Whoever encouraged or supported her in moving into a non smoking environment is partly to blame.
I have zero expectations that she’s going to quit and at this point don’t want her to. I just want her to quit smoking in her apartment. She lived in two condos prior to this and had no issues smoking outside. And she smoked outside at this place until about two weeks ago. I visit her frequently enough to know. I’m just not sure how to handle this new development.
And for anyone who has dealt with an elderly family member who has signs of dementia, the relationship does flip from parent/ child to child/parent. So I did “catch” her and she denied and denied like a child. I’m just trying to navigate this new situation.
Anonymous wrote:Serious question - why did you move her to a place with so many restrictions? Or are they all like that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She is in her 80s and been a life long smoker. She is going to keep smoking. Your expectations don't seem aligned with reality. She is addicted and will keep smoking. Focus on harm reduction and figure out how she can safely smoke in her space.
Whoever encouraged or supported her in moving into a non smoking environment is partly to blame.
I have zero expectations that she’s going to quit and at this point don’t want her to. I just want her to quit smoking in her apartment. She lived in two condos prior to this and had no issues smoking outside. And she smoked outside at this place until about two weeks ago. I visit her frequently enough to know. I’m just not sure how to handle this new development.
And for anyone who has dealt with an elderly family member who has signs of dementia, the relationship does flip from parent/ child to child/parent. So I did “catch” her and she denied and denied like a child. I’m just trying to navigate this new situation.
Is there a way to keep her cigarettes at a front desk? So, she has to go to the desk, take the one or two she's going to smoke, and take them outside? Her judgement and impulse control are declining, so the cigarettes themselves have to be doled out and policed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She is in her 80s and been a life long smoker. She is going to keep smoking. Your expectations don't seem aligned with reality. She is addicted and will keep smoking. Focus on harm reduction and figure out how she can safely smoke in her space.
Whoever encouraged or supported her in moving into a non smoking environment is partly to blame.
I have zero expectations that she’s going to quit and at this point don’t want her to. I just want her to quit smoking in her apartment. She lived in two condos prior to this and had no issues smoking outside. And she smoked outside at this place until about two weeks ago. I visit her frequently enough to know. I’m just not sure how to handle this new development.
And for anyone who has dealt with an elderly family member who has signs of dementia, the relationship does flip from parent/ child to child/parent. So I did “catch” her and she denied and denied like a child. I’m just trying to navigate this new situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously OP - get her a vape.
I'm not a smoker, but would this work? It seems like a safer solution. I have a family member who is so addicted to cigarettes that she can't go into assisted living. She would lose her mind if she couldn't smoke- she's been smoking for nearly 70 years.
Anonymous wrote:She is in her 80s and been a life long smoker. She is going to keep smoking. Your expectations don't seem aligned with reality. She is addicted and will keep smoking. Focus on harm reduction and figure out how she can safely smoke in her space.
Whoever encouraged or supported her in moving into a non smoking environment is partly to blame.
Anonymous wrote:Obviously OP - get her a vape.
Anonymous wrote:Obviously she's going to keep smoking in her house. Can you help her find a way to do it without causing danger to others?
It's stupid to think that an 80 year old is going to change their ways. Stop your futile efforts to make her stop, stop acting like her po (caught her!) and figure out where and how she can smoke. Not the parking lot, because she's shown you several times that isn't the solution. Maybe a place with a balcony?