At some point sooner or later, MIL will cease her life here on this earth and I will have to pretend to be saddened by her passing. I will have to be worth of an Oscar, though, because I will not be saddened at all.
She was admitted to the hospital two days ago with what they "think is a kidney stone", but they haven't decided even yet what to do about it. She has diabetes and her sugar readings are always high lately, even on consistent medications and insulin. She is refusing to eat at the hospital and is very, very weak now. She hasn't kept any food down since early last Saturday.
I've had two days now of complete relaxation and it feels great. They can keep her there for a month and I would appreciate it a lot. My house is quiet with the oxygen concentrator turned off and the oscillating fan turned off, her TV turned off. Things seem normal again for a few minutes.
This morning she did eat breakfast without throwing up and my husband thinks she will come home but he isn't certain. I have no idea what is going on and I hate all this uncertainty. Since I am only a "family member" and do not have POA, I can do nothing.
He asked them about the "kidney stone", loss of blood" ,"continued nausea", and no-one had an answer for him. He asked them what tests had been performed. They said "None".
I never said that I also babysit one to three grandchildren 8,9, and 10, while I "caregive" MIL, did I? Yep, I do that, too. What we do for our kids, huh. At least they can partially take care of themselves and get to the potty alone.
btw, it is completely impossible to get any information from anyone at a hospital during a shift change. they weren't being rude, it's just impossible to help you during that time. nurses have a very limited amount of time to exchange a LOT of information about each and every single patient on the ward with each and every nurse there, as well as the ward clerk, and sometimes the doctor on call. when i have been a patient, we were not allowed to ask for or get medications or drinks of water during that time, and god forbid anyone have to go to the bathroom if they needed help. you learn to work around the nurses and hospital schedule.
sound wrong? imagine if somebody gave you six or eight of your MiL to care for, at the end of an eight or twelve hour shift when you are exhausted, you had about 15 to 30 minutes to tell the next nurse(s) EVERYTHING about EVERY PATIENT. what meds, when, what food, how much, and when, what liquids, how much, when, urine, bowl movements, output and when, their mood, their visitors, and on and on.
choose a quieter time of day or evening to speak with the nurses. if you can't get any answers, then you need to ask for a patient advocate.
I agree, Funnier, I think your husband needs to grab the reins here, but I'm sure he's having some inner struggle with this. My heart goes to you though, and not him. You've been the one doing the work, and it sounds like it hasn't been one bit easy. Its been 24 hours as of now, since you last posted. What's the latest? You get to talk to a nurse, or am I way behind and mil is home now?
Yep, I'm a straight shooter! I developed the style when I was a mother and it's only sharpened over the years. I do have to watch myself that it's not overtly, or even covertly cruel, I can get carried away. But sometimes things just need to be said, wake up calls are in order. Often people know these things in the back of their minds anyway.
My helper told me today the doctor told her "they didn't get it all" when they removed more mammary tissue last week and are talking about a mastectomy now. If she needs that done, she will be disabled for awhile and I won't have any help at all while she is gone. I know others have been sole caregivers before, but I don't look forward to it. I had surgery in my future also and it will be canceled now.
You say, "find someone to come stay with her while you are gone". That's all well and good. But, she wants no-one but ME taking her to the potty. I suppose if I was gone and a stranger was here and she needed to go, she wouldn't have a choice, though.
The home health nurse told him recently that it was unbelievable how wonderful she is doing and it is only because of the care she is getting at home. I wish she hadn't done that.
It sounds like the people in your house who are important are #1 MIL, #2 Husband and then waaaaay down the list, little ol' you. Why do you put up with that crap? Seriously, why are you allowing this to continue in the same old pattern?
That's right, funnier. You are letting her rule. It takes two. My mother would like me to do everything for her too, but, guess what? I don't. Does she get mad? Yes.
Or at least she did. She has accepted the situation better now. Does she bad mouth me to relatives, and particularly my sister. You bet. Do I care? No! Did I have to cut way back on what I did for her to look after my health? Yes, I did. The end result of this is that other people do the necessary care giving, I am getting my health back, she accepts the situation better, though complains about the care she gets all the time. Now I visit her in her ALF, take her out for a meal once in a while, and answer one in 10 or 20 emails, when I feel like it. She is no unhappier than she ever has been, and is as well looked after as she can be.
Please do NOT put off sny surgery you need, because that prima donna wants you to take her to the potty. There was a phrase "Suck it up, Princess" which applies here. Look after yourself, and let her ( and your husband) suck it up. You have gone over and above your duty to her - look after your duty to yourself. See your doctor, schedule the surgery, make whatever arangements you need to for your mil's care, then tell your husband that it is happening.
NO our mil can't live forever, and neither can you or your husband. (((((((hugs)))))))
it's time to tell your husband to make a choice; is he married to you, or is he married to mommy? if you leave him, you do get some of his money, so don't let that stop you. 49 years of marriage is probably going to get you some alimony. also, when you do leave him, he has no way to take care of mommy by himself anyway. has HE ever taken her to the bathroom? and mommy ain't gonna to be too happy with that either. nursing home will look really good right about the time he has to help her drop trow.
schedule your surgery for crimeny's sake! to not do so is just plain suicide.
because i had been on medication and seizure free for quite a while, my oldest son's father and his wife knew it was more about my fear, so they gave me a car that they were going to trade in, and encouraged me to relearn driving. God Bless them. Nervous as hell, but with my husband's and my oldest son's help I learned. Failed the first test, got drunk and cried. Dried my tears, called back that afternoon, rescheduled the test for five days later. Passed.
: )
But the real truth is, I never stopped living even when I didn't have that license. I'm telling you the same thing I tell teenagers who tell me that they can't do anything or go anywhere without a license, BULL. I worked as a teen without a license, and I worked as an adult without one. I lived on my own without a vehicle when I got out of the military and held a job then too.
no excuses.
I had complained to my doctor about this situation a year ago and the stress I am under from taking care of MIL and from being afraid to even bring the subject up to my husband of placing her in a nursing home. He asked me "Why are you so afraid of him"? I guess it's because his words are as sharp as a knife. I think I used to be afraid of MIL because I thought she had some control over him, but I can tell it's he who has the control. I've turned control over to him at the beginning of our marriage, I'm afraid, and it would be WW111 if I try to get any of it back. I guess if I'm not willing to take the steps I know I should take, steps you have all suggested I should take, then I have no right to complain. Once when we actually discussed the D word, he said he would just stop making payments on this house. He said knew I couldn't pay for it and I would lose it. He can be the sweetest, kindest man on earth and get angry and be totally the opposite. I understand women who keep returning to men who physically abuse them. I am staying with one who has verbally and emotionally abused me. "Dumping" his Mother on me is just another thing he has done to confirm it. I'm free and she is safe here.
I'll probably keep my feelings to myself around him and just come here and cry and you can read my comments and ignore me.
You come here to complain and to vent. That is perfectly all right. But please, please, state right in each new thread that you are here to vent, that you know what you would need to do to change your situation, and you are not willing to do it. Then we can offer you sympathy and pats on the back, but we will not waste our energy telling you what you already know and do not want to hear.
Funnier, get a lawyer and find out what your options are re: divorce. You have let your husband tell you that you will be screwed, I really doubt that you will be. Often they can force the sale of a house with proceeds split evenly so that something like that does not happen.
Something you should do right now, follow the money, make sure he doesn't have any squirreled away anywhere in accounts that you have no access to. If he does, make note of them for your lawyer. Make a full accounting of all of his assets, etc. Do all of this without him knowing!
Funnierthanme is going thru a tough time. The responses showing lack of compassion with brutally , hurtful replies are monuments to poor taste and demonstrate a complete lack of understanding of "caregiver burnout"
freespirit - it is a very tough job. being there for someone from time to time is very different from being there hour, after hour, after hour. As we age, and still have to look after our parents, their needs/problems increase, and our resources decrease. It is not a parallel to looking after children when you are young, in my view and the views of many others here. To expect someone - or for someone to expect it of themselves - to give up their own health concerns to look after a senior, is, in my mind self destructive. I can agree that seeing that the senior is well cared for, is an obligation, but not that family, or family in law in this case, has the obligation to do it themselves, especially when it is tearing down their physical and emotional health. There is a risk to caregiving,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2008 Rocky Mountain Geriatrics Conference in Salt Lake City, Utah, Richard Schulz, Ph.D. from the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
- a heavy caregiver -- meaning that the caregiver must start helping the care recipient with activities of daily living (ADLs) -- is associated with the higher rates of depression, poorer health, poorer self-care habits, unintended weight loss, and increased chronic illness...•Increased caregiver strain, such as advancing from "light" caregiving duties to "heavy" ones, tends to increase caregiver mortality. In other words, caregivers who have heavier caregiving duties are more likely to die from any cause than caregivers with lighter duties.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
And we are cautioned not to take this lightly, and I don't.
punchnjudy - good for you - I wish funnier was in a better situation too, However, i can't completely fault her husband, here, though I, too, find his behaviour shameful. It takes two.
funnier, you have made your choices, to the best of your ability for now. I respect that. BTDT. My hope, and prayer for you, is that you move to a place in your mind, your heart, your life where you care more about you than you do right now. You are worth it, dear one. You are a caring, woman, a special person, please care for the treasure that is within you.
Love and hugs
Joan
my mother was an emotionally and sometimes physically abusive mother and still is. she is lucky that i do anything for her.
because of her i decided to be the kind of mother i wished i had had, one who was actually a part of her children's lives. i never could spoil them with things, i spoiled them with my love and time.
this does NOT mean that i expect my children to sacrifice EVERYTHING for me! i would never want my kids to ruin their lives, their physical and mental/emotional health, their marriages and family for me. HELLZ NO! trust me, i will end my life before i let my children ruin theirs over me. and THAT is what a GOOD PARENT does.
freespirit, UNDERSTAND burnout?????!!!!! you really do not have a clue and cannot speak to the women in this thread.
we finally got rid of terrimerrits, do not be another one of her.
Then you'll see when you visit her your time together will be more pleasant since you no longer have the stress of caring for her.
Talk to the hospitals social worker to find out what options are available to you. Ask about respite or having home health care workers coming to your home if a nursing home isn't possible. Good luck.