Anonymous wrote:I guess I would give the opposite advice from everyone here and say can you lean into being there for her as much as possible over the next few months? There is something to be said for being there for someone who needs it and you may find it to be meaningful. Also your mom may blossom from the attention you give her and that may spur her to do more independently. It’s a little counter intuitive but rather than fighting being the center of her world try giving into it for a little bit and see how she does. She’s not going to be around forever
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a lot of magical thinking here. If you hire a housekeeper to entertain mom, you need to pay her for the lost time cleaning other houses. If you hire a chef you need to do the same. You cannot exploit people's kindness.
Going to a community center with her to help her make a friend isn't going to solve your problems. A higher functioning elderly person is not looking for a friend with more needs. If you find someone with similar needs, they will both need some supervision and in time the needs will grow. If your mom declines faster, the friend may dump her.
Elderly with many friends they had for decades often find if they decline faster than their friends, the friends fade off. Sometimes it's too heartbreaking for the friends to see, sometimes they have their own medical issues, and sometimes it was just a superficial friendship.
You need to think long term about what is best for her and what is best for your family you created. Don't count on a housekeeper/chef/new friend to suddenly make it much easier. Maybe it will help for a week or a month, but not for long term.
So what is your actual advice to OP. You’ve just listed problems with other people’s advice.
Anonymous wrote:I guess I would give the opposite advice from everyone here and say can you lean into being there for her as much as possible over the next few months? There is something to be said for being there for someone who needs it and you may find it to be meaningful. Also your mom may blossom from the attention you give her and that may spur her to do more independently. It’s a little counter intuitive but rather than fighting being the center of her world try giving into it for a little bit and see how she does. She’s not going to be around forever
Anonymous wrote:There is a lot of magical thinking here. If you hire a housekeeper to entertain mom, you need to pay her for the lost time cleaning other houses. If you hire a chef you need to do the same. You cannot exploit people's kindness.
Going to a community center with her to help her make a friend isn't going to solve your problems. A higher functioning elderly person is not looking for a friend with more needs. If you find someone with similar needs, they will both need some supervision and in time the needs will grow. If your mom declines faster, the friend may dump her.
Elderly with many friends they had for decades often find if they decline faster than their friends, the friends fade off. Sometimes it's too heartbreaking for the friends to see, sometimes they have their own medical issues, and sometimes it was just a superficial friendship.
You need to think long term about what is best for her and what is best for your family you created. Don't count on a housekeeper/chef/new friend to suddenly make it much easier. Maybe it will help for a week or a month, but not for long term.
Anonymous wrote:I guess I would give the opposite advice from everyone here and say can you lean into being there for her as much as possible over the next few months? There is something to be said for being there for someone who needs it and you may find it to be meaningful. Also your mom may blossom from the attention you give her and that may spur her to do more independently. It’s a little counter intuitive but rather than fighting being the center of her world try giving into it for a little bit and see how she does. She’s not going to be around forever
Anonymous wrote:She probably has more memory issues than you realize. At home with you she can mask.
I think you are at the point where you can't think of your Mom as an adult. Think of her as a child. If your child was depressed and sitting at home, how would you handle it?
You might have to force her to go to a senior center. I would threaten to put her in a nursing home if she doesn't go.
Anonymous wrote:First, it was a mistake to move her in. You need to reconsider the long term plan here.
In the meantime, you need to hire a “housekeeper” that is kind and chatty.