This might be a long post so sorry in advance.
this has been such a hard month, my mom fell and broke her hip at the end of last month. She wasn’t in good health to begin with. She had to have hip surgery and we tried to get her into rehab for her hip but one of the places turned her down.
she went home to stay with her friend who is a retired nurse, and she ended up falling again and going back to the hospital 2 days later. She re-broke her hip and needed surgery on it again.
the next day she had a massive stroke leaving her left side paralyzed. She is unable to walk and it takes multiple nurses in the hospital to move her. She then caught sepsis and is being treated for that with Antibiotics. She just had another hip surgery a few days ago for a hematoma on her broken hip. She has been though so much.
She has been a smoker for 50 years, she is also an alcoholic and she addicted to opioids. She can’t smoke anymore after her stroke or she will die, she can’t drink either.
With all this I know there is no way she could come live with me. Before this we already had a strange relationship. I have a 2 year old and a 4 month old who need me and I already feel stretched thin. Also my marriage and well being would suffer if she moved in. She physically I can’t move her or help her.
I still feel guilty, like I’m sending her off to a nursing home but there’s no one else to talk care of her and she needs round the clock care. I’m so stressed out and I just don’t know how to stop feeling guilty for things that are not in my control. I’m worried about her going to a nursing home. I am worried they will kick her out since she is an addict.
any advice would be great.
She's where she needs to be. In your heart of hearts you know that. There's NO way you could care for her without hiring a team of outside help to assist you, so just take comfort in the fact that your mom is now safe, will be cared for, and won't be able to drink or abuse any opioids.
And they will best be able to treat her addictions, so she can safely detox from them.
Hang in there. You're doing the right thing. Your husband and children must come first and should be your only priority.
Your mom has made her bed and now she will have to lie in it.
It's not your fault she is an alcoholic, opiod addict and smoker for 50+ yrs.
It's not your fault she fell and broke her hip.
It's not your fault she fell a 2nd time and re-broke her hip.
It's not your fault she had a resulting stroke and now has paralysis.
It's not your fault she became septic.
It's not your fault she developed a hematoma and required a 2nd surgery.
It's not your fault that she requires way more care than anyone can provide in a home.
None of what happened *to* her is your fault. And, it's definitely not your fault that you are prioritizing your own young family -- as you absolutely should.
Think of your feelings as grief, not guilt. At this point and in your circumstances you can only provide "least bad option" for your Mom, and that is her getting ALL the care and attention she needs in a facility. I hope you are not the one paying for it. Please don't do this. You are robbing from your own kids if you are.
If your Mom gets kicked out because she can't stop using, that's her problem to solve, not yours. Have you considered that you have a dysfunctional co-dependent relationship with her? Have you ever talked to a therapist about this or about healthy boundaries? You are NOT responsible for her care, recovery or happiness. Please work on boundaries and rejecting guilt. May you receive peace in your heart.
She is in this situation because of her own life choices. You are not accountable for those choices.
Understand that you've done the right thing for her care. The sadness you feel for what has happened to her is a different feeling and entirely justified. Just don't confuse sadless and guilt. There is nothing to be guilty about.
she is young but in very poor health before this happened.
You and your family are lucky that you rightfully realized that you could not possibly take on the care of your mother. You are waaaaay too busy and as I know you know, your priorities have to be your hubby and your babies.
Mom will get the care she needs in the nursing home. She may not like it but her choices and her bad luck have put her in a very bad way that you could not possibly handle at home.
Give yourself permission to put yourself and your family first. Squash that guilt and know that your mom is safe and where she should be. Bringing her to your home would not have been in her best interest.
Its ok to feel sad about how she's wound up due to her choices in life. It's not ok to blame yourself for any of it.
Don't even think about bringing her into your home, not even for a second.
I would like to add, that children can help as well, even when they are little. It is a wonderful blessing and it teaches them to care for others, they love to be included and given tasks. Given their age, they can help feed a person, sit with them, hold hand etc. By demonstrating love and forgiveness, they will remember that when they are grown with an aging parent. And it might not make you feel as though you are all alone. If you go visit your mother in the nursing home, include your children by talking to them beforehand, what to expect and they will likely enjoy going there. Your children will watch your actions and follow that example.
All the best to you.
know that in home she will get the care she needs and she’ll be safe.
so find best home you can … visit often … stay on top of things … and please forgive her !!!
it may turn out be healing for both !!
NOW- consider this. There are MANY SITUATIONS in geriatric care that have NO HAPPY SOLUTIONS. MANY of them.
When this happens you make the safest decision, the one that may potentially case hurt or anger or discomfort, or ALL THREE, and realize that you did the very best for her that you could, without causing more destructive processes to befall the others whom you love.
You might also consider that your mom has made a series of painful life choices for a very long time, and that her next poor choice, if left to her own devices, might result in far worse consequences than what will result for her decision.
The nursing home should be told in advance that you are willing for her to receive psychiatric evaluation and appropriate medication for her addiction(s) and the consequences of them.
After placement, you will hug your husband and children, admire and appreciate and nurture them, and move forward yourself. You will have done all that you could. No guilt, sorrow for what she did to herself.
Making the right choices.
Bereavement just takes time.
You are right to not accept having your mother live with you. When you really accept that this is the right decision, you will feel less guilty.
You have your own family to deal with. Visit her as often as you can. If she’s negative, make them short visits, but do visit.
True she can’t abuse drugs/alcohol in a facility, however it doesn’t sound like she’s able to get anything due to her condition. What has the Dr said about her addictions? Sounds like she’s already had to stop abusing due to all the health issues she’s had.
Don’t feel guilty about keeping her safe. She won’t like where’s she’s at, but who would? It’s for her safety. Do not under any circumstances move her into your home. You have your children, your husband and yourself to take care of. Let a nursing home take care of her, where she’ll get better care and visit her.
God Bless!
I'm 63 and care for my 95 y.o. mother in my home. I can tell you for certain that I would not be able to care for her if I were still raising my children. There is absolutely no way.
My mother has never accepted being anything but first place - no matter who else had to be pushed aside - even her grandchildren.
She in fact lived with us 17 years ago for 7 weeks after an automobile accident that left her with broken bones. At the time, I was homeschooling my 12 and 14 year olds. My mother's presence, needs and demands during those 7 weeks totally upended our home, our schedule and our peace. There was so much stress on me I thought I would crack up. I was so relieved when she was able to return to her own home.
Now she is living with me once again - for the past 5 years - but my two children are now grown and gone and my dog is dead.
There is absolutely no way that I would voluntarily take on one more thing, at this time because my mother's needs are increasing as we go along, and once again she has no ability to tolerate not being first.
If you make sure that your mother has the care she needs, then you have done your part. You can't fix a lifetime of bad health choices in someone else that have now come home to roost.
One more opinion if I may......I would think twice before taking my little ones into a nursing home because it can be super traumatic for them and they are not equipped at their ages to process what they see that can be disturbing.
Peace.
You don't want her to live with you, ok, that's not a crime.
You're doing your reality check. Can she afford a nursing home?
Then do it and love her to the best of your ability from afar.
Often times, guilt is a nasty tool of the devil that can blind you
from seeing the things you CAN do, and as you do them and
talk to others you may find other ways to DO positive, loving things.
Don't be blinded by it; do what you have to do, own it, and look
forward and look for and see opportunities for good. Kinda like
what Paul said, "keep your eyes focused on the goal". Remember too,
that looking at the waves, Peter began to sink. Keep focused.
Look towards the good and the positive; shake off the guilt as dirt
on your shirt - you don't need it to do the work at hand; it's rubbish.
Do positive, and love yourself your family and her the best you can;
that's all you CAN do.
You are doing your reality check and you don't want/can't have
her to live with you, and that's OK - it's not a crime!
Question is, can she afford a nursing home? If so, then do it and
love her to the best of your ability from afar.
Often times, guilt is a nasty tool of the devil that can blind you
from seeing the things you CAN do, and as you do what you can, and
talking to others, you may find other ways to DO positive, loving things.
Don't be blinded by guilt; it really is a black-out curtain to your ability to
see what you CAN do. So focus on looking forward and seeing the opportunities to do good.
It's kinda like what Paul said, "keep your eyes focused on the goal".
Remember too, that looking at the waves, Peter began to sink.
Keep your focus - shake off the guilt like dirt on your shirt -
you don't need it to do the work at hand.
Do positive, and love yourself your family and her the best you can;
that's all you CAN do.
Thinking of it this way does make it a bit easier for me to let go of some of the resentment I have with her. It certainly isn’t perfect and each day is a new challenge, but to me, going to therapy has been the biggest help in releasing a lot of the stuff I saw as “guilt”. That’s what I would suggest for you to try. It takes time and you have to really put the work in, but it will have positive effects on ALL your relationships, so I say it’s worth it!
Your answers are in your own words: 'I have a 2 year old & 4 month old,' 'your marriage and wellbeing would suffer,' 'she requires skilled nursing care,' and you previously had a strained relationship.' You are simply unable to provide the cares that your mom now requires, through no one's fault, and you have to find a way to absolve yourself of this guilt.
Do not bring her home from the hospital for even one night because that will be where she stays. You need only read through this forum to understand the pitfalls. Mom goes from the hospital directly into a care home.
I understand how you feel. My now-88 year old Mom is in a care home, MC unit, and I feel some level of guilt every single day. No way that I can care for her at home even though I'm a retired RN. My adult daughter and 2 school-age grandkids live with me and at 65, I can't dedicate myself to being Mom's 24/7 caregiver, even though she's still relatively independent.
Once a person reaches the point of needing skilled nursing care, it's a 24/7 job and impacts every aspect of home and family life. Your mom is now in the place where she needs to be and with a transfer into long-term care, you can remain very involved in her life. You can advocate for her, love her, and provide for her emotional support and quality of life needs. I talk to my Mom every day, sometimes more often and visit her weekly or as able; I bring the great grandkids at least monthly.
Please don't worry about your mom's history of substance abuse and that causing issues for her at the care home, it's truly not all that uncommon and her care team will know best how to ease her into a prescribed medication regimen that meets her needs. With all the medical issues going on with your mom, it's quite likely that she's being kept comfortable. Do let them know of her history of alcohol use so that she doesn't go into DTs that is not recognized as such (it's likely that the window for that is passed), but it's good for her care team to know about.
We all know that substance use is self-medication for deep personal pain and she may have some underlying depression and other issues that she can receive help for. She may socialize with others there and even make important friendships.
No info here on DPOA or any of that or your ability to facilitate care for her. For you to be involved will require your being named her Medical POA; the room phone and TV charges would require estate funds that you can manage as her DPOA to provide her with those things that straight Medicaid won't cover. Depending on your own finances, you may be able to kick in that approx $50. / month for phone and cable to keep that lifeline open, if no other payment source.
Bring your mom the things from home that remind her that she's loved and part of a loving family, mags and books or other things that she enjoys. You can do a lot to spruce up her room with family pictures, pillows, bedspreads, plants, kid art, sweaters, shawls, small lamps, and coverlets. Provide her with the clothing that is practical for her physical condition and give her your love. You may not realize the extent to which your mom may be relieved to be in a care home and not be a burden to family. Talk with her about these things and develop an understanding that will bring you both comfort.
You're not abandoning her and you can help her acclimate to the SNF by visiting when able, talking to the unit SW to let her/him know the activities that your mom enjoys so that she's pushed a bit to be involved. Make friendly with the care staff, the CNAs and RAs, tell them about who your mom is and advocate for her. The quality of care varies so greatly from one home to the next and if able, do some research and try to get her into the best available place. Be vigilant on her cares.
Give yourself the grace to let go of guilt, recognize your limits and give your mom the love and support to help her settle into this new stage of her life.