[AT] Al Jones
Francis Robinson
robinson at svs.net
Sat Jul 21 21:54:49 PDT 2007
----- Original Message ----- Also
> dealing with a very sick mother in late stage Alzheimer's.
> Travis
>
Forgive the O.T.
Be careful about trying to deal with Alzheimer's alone... Diana and I
thought that we could deal with my mother's (she lived here on the farm 300'
away) Alzheimer's and care for Diana's legally blind and physically
handicapped mother at the same time (she lived with us for 3 years) in
addition to dealing with the rest of life (kid's problems, grandkid's
problems, great grandchildren's medical problems, money problems, farming
problems etc). Alzheimer's can stretch out for a decade in a long drawn out
gradual decline that can include a lot of paranoia and wild personality
changes, some of which can become very hateful and spiteful. Your parent can
become a stranger... We were treading much closer to the edge than we
realized when I finally had to order mom to move to an assisted living
center a couple of years ago because we could not watch her 24-7 to prevent
her from wandering off lost. She could no longer remember even where she was
in her house and she would slip outside and wander without any idea of where
she was, then she would panic and begin screaming. It began coming on
(noticeably) about 10 years ago. About a year and a half ago I had to
physically force her into a mental institution after the hospital called and
said that the doctors and medics could not handle her to move her. They
didn't want to restrain or manhandle an 84 year old woman. That happened the
same week that Diana's mom was having serious cancer surgery in another city
and we were on the road when they called. Today my mother is 85 and still in
assisted living but I'm quite sure that she will not see 86. She was placed
under Hospice care last week at the recommendation of the facility that
cares for her since they are convinced that the end is quite near. Diana's
mom is doing pretty well at 91 and is now recovering from gall bladder
surgery just last week. She has been in a nursing home about a year after
Diana's siblings observed what the whole load was doing to her and insisted
that their mom move to a home. Diana still has the primary responsibility
for her care but does not have to physically do it. At least her mom's mind
is still good.
Dealing with an Alzheimer's patient is one of those things that can
quietly sneak up on you and the load can keep increasing day after day until
it takes over your whole life and render you almost non-functional as far as
having any kind of normal life. At first you can get someone else to watch
them so you can catch a break but as they decline more and more other people
just can't deal with them so you eventually have to do it all, all day and
all night, every day... At some point you may find that you are unable to
get any of your needed work done and that you have absolutely no private
moments left. It becomes all consuming. Diana and I both now have all of the
surface symptoms of PTSS... Some days I think that maybe at this point we
might need a "keeper". :-)
I have been having discussions with our kids (all grown) lately being
very emphatic that they are NOT to attempt to personally care for us if we
end up going down that road. We will have the funds to provide for our care
in our home or in a nice "home" if it becomes necessary and that burden of
caring for us is not what I want for my kids.
I believe that you owe it to your parents to see that they are well
cared for "someplace" but that you do not owe them your soul or your
sanity... I suspect that on this list that there are several (judging by
statistics I read) that are now dealing with aging parents that are in one
stage or the other of Alzheimer's. The early stages are not all that bad but
beware of the later stages, it can truly drag you down... Don't try to go it
alone. There is help available, find it and use it...
OK, back to old tractors... Are you guys seeing as many as I am going to
the scrappers? We need to run out and adopt all of them we can to save them
for the next generation, even in a non running condition.
--
"farmer"
Francis Robinson
Central Indiana, USA robinson at svs.net
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