Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have posted here before about my 92 yo father who is just starting to show signs of short term memory issues but is mobile and in pretty good shape otherwise. I recently moved both my parents (mother is 89 and independent) into an independent living community which I’ve been very happy with so far. It is clear after this move that he needs assisted living. They are working with us to get that move going but in the interim, the transition has not be smooth for my Dad. He does not want to be there. It helps that my mom is there but he is experiencing sun downing, has been hospitalized twice for dehydration, his mobility seems worse since he moved. I suspect the move confused him but I also suspect that I didn’t know the extent of the care he needed until I saw it up close.
I am exhausted, sad, fed up, and constantly feeling like 1) things aren’t happening fast enough (ie getting him moved to assisted living) and 2) that I might be hyperfocusing on their care because my loved ones (sister, husband) tell me that I’m doing great and the best I can but need to accept the reality of their age and stop being so hard o myself or I will fall back into anxiety. They want to help and I’ve gotten better at delegating certain things but I really am doing it all.
I feel constant guilt that I’m not doing more. That I can’t figure out how to help them in a way that doesn’t lead to another fall, another hospital visit, another [insert elderly issue here]. I think I just want to surround them in safety so nothing happens to them. I know this isn’t rational but it’s all I think about. I have a husband, two adolescent kids and a job. I don’t know why this feels so all encompassing. Normal when caring for the elderly? Or do I really need to take a step back and recognize some reality that I’m not seeing. I truly don’t know how much I should be doing to help them or what is a normal level of “I can make this better”
I’m sorry if this feels all over the place, I’m not sleeping much at the moment. TIA.
OP, I hope this is not too harsh, but yes, you need to step back and accept the reality that your parents are very old and are in the sunset of their lives. You can work yourself to the bone and think of and do nothing else, and yet you can't turn back the clock.
MAybe you can find a support group? Or a few therapy sessions?
Anonymous wrote:It is hard!
What I did was hire an elder care advisor, usually a social worker, who knew so much more than I did.
She could check the apartment and saw things that weren’t safe, such as slippery bathroom floor mats. Easy fix.
I could call her when I didn’t know what to do.
This ended up costing a total of $1000. Today, it would be higher.
Yes, there were times I lost sleep over elder care. Yes, there were hospitalizations. Yes, I returned early from an international trip once.
At the end, my mom was lucky enough to die in her sleep at 96.