Anonymous wrote:When she gets sick enough to go to the hospital (From dehydration or whatever), they will move her to a rehab center after if no one is home. After that, you can find a temporary place near to you. That can be a local assisted living or nursing home. It is “temporary”. Then keep kicking the “temporary “ ball down the road. The key word to use is “temporary”.
This is the only successful way I have seen work.
Anonymous wrote:If she has the money to sustain this, it’s not yours to weigh in on.
Anonymous wrote:People have a right to live out their days as they wish, as painful as it can be to watch. At that age, any day a person can spend contentedly is a treasure. Moving them someplace they don’t want to be “benefits” only family members/friends who feel responsible for ensuring that person lives as long as possible, happy or not.
It’s hard, and I went through something similar with multiple family members (strong opinions about wanting to remain at home), including my parents. My perspective changed after seeing people moved “for their own good,” after which they were bitter and lived the rest of their days depressed. IMO it’s better to live a slightly shorter life on your own terms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People have a right to live out their days as they wish, as painful as it can be to watch. At that age, any day a person can spend contentedly is a treasure. Moving them someplace they don’t want to be “benefits” only family members/friends who feel responsible for ensuring that person lives as long as possible, happy or not.
It’s hard, and I went through something similar with multiple family members (strong opinions about wanting to remain at home), including my parents. My perspective changed after seeing people moved “for their own good,” after which they were bitter and lived the rest of their days depressed. IMO it’s better to live a slightly shorter life on your own terms.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent refuses to leave her large colonial home. She is dependent upon others for food, repairs, all phone calls out to doctors, servicemen, cannot clean her house, eats only carbohydrates and wine. Generally well, but gets sick often with flu and various sinus infections. All the neighbors she knew have moved away.
Won't get hearing aid
Won't hire outside cleaners
Refuses technology that would help monitor her ....motion detectors, life alert
necklace, cell phone, refuses all computer use
Cannot hear much over the phone.
What to do? Oh- hates most people. Won't have an aide, won't socialize with any peers.
Posters talking about "let her live out her life on her own terms!" may have forgotten the OP's description of an individual dependent on others for food, communication, and a clean place to live.
She is already requiring significant assistance; but rather than being honest about this, and either enlisting the home help she needs or moving to an AL facility, the elder is demanding her adult child provide the care.
Mom isn't living her best life like this, and she is degrading that of her child.
OP, if you're willing to provide all of this back-up for your mother, more power to you, but realize that your quality of life matters, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When she gets sick enough to go to the hospital (From dehydration or whatever), they will move her to a rehab center after if no one is home. After that, you can find a temporary place near to you. That can be a local assisted living or nursing home. It is “temporary”. Then keep kicking the “temporary “ ball down the road. The key word to use is “temporary”.
This is the only successful way I have seen work.
This. This. This.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent refuses to leave her large colonial home. She is dependent upon others for food, repairs, all phone calls out to doctors, servicemen, cannot clean her house, eats only carbohydrates and wine. Generally well, but gets sick often with flu and various sinus infections. All the neighbors she knew have moved away.
Won't get hearing aid
Won't hire outside cleaners
Refuses technology that would help monitor her ....motion detectors, life alert
necklace, cell phone, refuses all computer use
Cannot hear much over the phone.
What to do? Oh- hates most people. Won't have an aide, won't socialize with any peers.
Posters talking about "let her live out her life on her own terms!" may have forgotten the OP's description of an individual dependent on others for food, communication, and a clean place to live.
She is already requiring significant assistance; but rather than being honest about this, and either enlisting the home help she needs or moving to an AL facility, the elder is demanding her adult child provide the care.
Mom isn't living her best life like this, and she is degrading that of her child.
OP, if you're willing to provide all of this back-up for your mother, more power to you, but realize that your quality of life matters, too.
Anonymous wrote:Parent refuses to leave her large colonial home. She is dependent upon others for food, repairs, all phone calls out to doctors, servicemen, cannot clean her house, eats only carbohydrates and wine. Generally well, but gets sick often with flu and various sinus infections. All the neighbors she knew have moved away.
Won't get hearing aid
Won't hire outside cleaners
Refuses technology that would help monitor her ....motion detectors, life alert
necklace, cell phone, refuses all computer use
Cannot hear much over the phone.
What to do? Oh- hates most people. Won't have an aide, won't socialize with any peers.
Anonymous wrote:When she gets sick enough to go to the hospital (From dehydration or whatever), they will move her to a rehab center after if no one is home. After that, you can find a temporary place near to you. That can be a local assisted living or nursing home. It is “temporary”. Then keep kicking the “temporary “ ball down the road. The key word to use is “temporary”.
This is the only successful way I have seen work.
Anonymous wrote:People have a right to live out their days as they wish, as painful as it can be to watch. At that age, any day a person can spend contentedly is a treasure. Moving them someplace they don’t want to be “benefits” only family members/friends who feel responsible for ensuring that person lives as long as possible, happy or not.
It’s hard, and I went through something similar with multiple family members (strong opinions about wanting to remain at home), including my parents. My perspective changed after seeing people moved “for their own good,” after which they were bitter and lived the rest of their days depressed. IMO it’s better to live a slightly shorter life on your own terms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People have a right to live out their days as they wish, as painful as it can be to watch. At that age, any day a person can spend contentedly is a treasure. Moving them someplace they don’t want to be “benefits” only family members/friends who feel responsible for ensuring that person lives as long as possible, happy or not.
It’s hard, and I went through something similar with multiple family members (strong opinions about wanting to remain at home), including my parents. My perspective changed after seeing people moved “for their own good,” after which they were bitter and lived the rest of their days depressed. IMO it’s better to live a slightly shorter life on your own terms.
Thank you for posting this. We've been struggling with this exact issue with my grandmother and I think this crystalizes the various thoughts I've had trouble summarizing succinctly.