She lived an extremely unhealthy sedentary life and now at only 79 she can barely get around. Her home is not elderly friendly at all. The family and dining room drop down from kitchen and are very treacherous. I suggested moving the tv she’s glued to all day into the living room so she doesn’t ever have to risk falling at the drop off. I also suggested we get a small dining table and place it into the living room. She had a fit! Should I just do these things and ignore her? FYI SHE REFUSES TO MOVE TO AN AL.
Sometimes I think we protect our loved ones into living longer with a terrible disease that will only get worse over time, as opposed to letting them live they way they want but lose them sooner. My two cents.
At some point when my hubby came home from the hospital he became aware that his bed had been moved downstairs and everything arranged so that he couldn't leave the ground floor. When he started to walk he immediately wanted to go upstairs. One son put one of those doggy gates at the bottom of the stairs. Finally when hubby was pretty stable I removed the gate, because he wanted so badly to go upstairs -- there was no real point to it, but it made him happy and he felt freer. As it happened, no accidents occurred, but I (and our doctor kind of agreed!) felt that if he, at 93 and with dementia, fell down the stairs and broke his neck or injured himself seriously enough to hasten death...that would not necessarily be bad, better than living to 100 with full dementia. I myself would instantly fly to Zürich if I found myself in the beginning of these conditions and was able to get on a plane.
Main point: maybe it isn't necessary to make everything absolutely and completely safe, especially if the LO doesn't want things that way. Do the sensible things (no cords running across open floors, grab bars in bathroom) but don't force the person into a constant power battle, sensible as it may be, over safety measures that the person doesn't want.
My mother fell 95x living in a very safe AL and then Memory Care Assisted Living environment with caregivers propping her up 24/7. Even while in a wheelchair. Which proves the point an unstable/poorly balanced elder WILL fall no matter what precautions are taken!
Dad had a walker he refused to use in IL and fell one morning on his way to the bathroom. Broke his hip and gashed his eye open. After failing rehab, he was forced to move into Assisted Living with mom bc he was no longer capable of living independently. That's what happens to elders who ARE no longer capable of living independently: they wind up having an accident where they're forced into managed care or to hire caregivers in home.
Stripping them of their independence is not something we children can force. We can only suggest changes be made to help keep them safe and then it's up to THEM to take heed or ignore the advice. And to suffer or enjoy the subsequent consequences.
But to answer the question, no you should not do these things and ignore her. How would you like it if somebody suggested a change in your home, you declined the suggestion, and then they barged in and did it anyway?
Wait until your mother complains of a difficulty, and then suggest a solution. If she never does but instead falls and breaks something, or falls and is stuck on the floor for hours on end (if she won't hear of AL I imagine she has also refused a falls alarm, has she?), the responsibility is hers and not yours. She's an adult. Pay her the respect of allowing her to make her own (daft) decisions.
If your mother is one of those irritating, passive-aggressive types who complain endlessly but then reject all suggested improvements and solutions, you can't win - or not by yourself, at least. But if she won't take advice from you, she still might from a professional. An Occupational Therapist's home visit could be productive; or your local fire service may offer something like a "Safe and Well" check - this will cover not only smoke alarms and safe emergency exits, but more general advice on home hazards. Get allies!
She should probably have safety bars in her tub or shower. You could get railings installed on the stairs to the family and dining rooms.
So what if she pitches a fit? Why are you afraid of her? Time to be the adult and tell her to shut up. Either she gets safety features at home or she goes to a care facility. Simple as that.
She won’t listen to reason, though, so you might as well save your breath. Clue her doctor in and make sure she’s evaluated for cognitive issues. That’s what this looks like to me.
You may find you need to make suggestions about the TV multiple times. Eventually Mom may proudly announce "I've decided to move my TV". Or she will fall, & after that she will decide.
Advice, let them decide, consequences are theirs.
(A Social Worker told me this. I've got better with practice).
It said on her medical report Brain Atrophy, she was in a car accident and got T-boned, she head her head enough to get a headache, but did not get injured. I am her only child, and only family member, besides my wife here in our city.
She is obese and very unstable (wobbly) gets dizzy (broken ear drum). Either she can't remember to use a cane or it makes her look "old" but has fallen multiple times, in multiple places. I think being overweight has padded the falls. I have printed out a sign to Remind her keyes, cane, wallet.
When she had a car she would go to and from her storage to retrieve small boxes and had them all over the living room in a very unsafe manner. She said she was "looking for something" and had to go through her boxes to find it.
It turns out she did this for many years as a pastime, yet she complained that she had a mess. I would go help clean it up stack boxes neatly in a corner, date them and two days later it would look the same.
I figured she was losing her memory and every time she would open a new box it was like Christmas day, oh look I forgot I had these and she would repeat the process of Sorting the items all over the floors, tables, chairs again. So I brought her some waist-high folding tables so she could to do.
Her living looked like her Storage space on her recliner and t.v. were there. I got tired of playing warehouse man so I no longer said anything regarding Safety. I did remind her in a gentle way that it would be a good idea to "Leave a path" so she could walk. She fell a couple of times and got bruised, but no broken bones.
It's her life, but I don't have to be in it all the time. I don't "worry" about her safety anymore. These are her choices even if they make no sense to me. She has always been an independent woman and relied on No One.
What Emma wants, Emma gets and it's always been her way or the highway, the only thing different now is she is older, slower and meaner.
I called to remind her to pay her rent or she would be charged $100.00 late fee in her new apartment, new because she got evicted from the Independent Senior living apartments (bad attitude) but that's another story.
She told me she knew what she was doing and for me to get off her back and stay out of her life! Mind you I stay totally aware of the vocabulary I use and my tone of voice when I speak to her
(She's a Narc I'm trained not to upset her).
It's never demanding or demeaning. "It's just a friendly reminder Mom". When she told me to stay out of her life I replied, "Ok, I will" in a very compling voice, no sarcasm. (I'm just a boy doing what his mama's telling him to do).
She has plenty of people to advocate for her. They are all professionals from various organizations. She also has a therapist/s to speak to. Emma knows how to get what Emma wants/needs.
I have to "learn" to let the consequences happen to her, unfortunately, it's not easy for me. I just hope she remembers to pay her rent and doesn't get evicted from this new place because she blew it at the Senior independent luxury living place. They cater to seniors, but not if the staff continues to get verbally abused.
We can't help those who resist our help, even if we hold them in their best interest. It's their choice, their consequences. The poster is correct.
Angel from The Bay
I’ve been in this position more times than I would have preferred, and this “phase” of caregiving is, in my opinion, by far the hardest, especially when you truly love and admire and respect the person for whom you are caring.
Be vigilant, look for bruises/broken objects/other signs of stresses in the home and on LO herself, and develop a flexible but firm perspective.
There is no easy, pleasant, comfortable “right” way to do this, but if you can keep a sense of balance for her care and your role in her life, you can hopefully stay on the right side.
One suggestion would be, don't ask first! " Look what I got you Mom - a new TV for the living room! Isn't this great!? " "No? Ok just try it out for a couple of weeks and let's see"....
Because she WILL NOT use a walker--that makes her look 'old'.
He has fought her on this, stating emphatically that putting grab bars all around the house was simply propping her up in her feeling that she is still 'independent' which she most assuredly IS NOT. He told her (years ago) he would find a NH before he'd turn her home into one.
Well--she got her way and now she has grab bars all around the perimeter of where she creeps around. I guess it's better than her continually grabbing at & breaking towel racks, TP dispensers and the fridge handles. Dh lost the battle on that one.
She moves between her bedroom, to the bathroom and then into the kitchen/TV area. She sits in front of the TV and is isn't even on. Just sits and dozes. Then it's reversed and she goes back to bed.
NOTHING can be changed. One of my girls brought her flowers last week when she went for a short visit. MIL had her put them outside, out of her view. There can be NOTHING on the table nor countertops and it's driving her nuts that Hospice delivered her weeks meds and they are on the countertop and she wants them out of site.
Fight the battles you can win.
See All Answers