I prepare a healthy dinner, just about every single day. My mom, who knows I can't stand to waste food, turns around eats something else. She has been hospitalized for an intestinal blockage recently, but continues to eat bread constantly. She eats bread, pasta, waffles, pancakes, biskets, and all sorts of crud. I prepare a healthy dinner every single day, with veggies, and she eats something else. I know my mom likes cabbage. Last night, my husband grilled, and I made cabbage with skinless sausage in it. she ate ramen. Mind you, I don't buy this stuff, my mom does. I call that junk, weekend food. During the week, I prepare, pretty healthy meals for my family. It is so frustrating. I like spicy food, I have to prepare meals blander for her to eat. I do that, and she still doesn't eat. I'm not a chef, but my meals are good, and tasty.
Shepard's pie, rice pudding, yummy, I do like to cook savory, but these two stubborn Norwegian's are no fun to cook for, so most meals are now cooked by hubby. Please do keep telling us your meal plans, as my mouth is watering and it has given me some ideas as well. My Mom never cooked from a recipe, so from some of the notes she left, it is sometimes hard to decifer exactly the right measurements, it was all in her head. The Cooked more with my elder sister, so she's really good, so when I'm especially craving Mom's cooking, I beg her to make it and she always will. When I was in England and Wales, we went to a few car boot sales. And there was a family in a caravan there who sold Welsh cakes or Bake stones, depending on where you live, and they were so good with a cuppa, just like my Mom's. Anyways, I used to dream about winning the lottery and with my sisters, starting up one of those welsh cake carts to sell to the people down at the beach front, I would have loved that I think, but now I'm too old and too tired to fulfill that dream, well, I've had the currents in my cupboard to make them for a couple of weeks now, so I think I'll throw a batch on the griddle today, even my Norwegian's will eat those, and fast! TaDa Stacey B
Or you could mince left over meat from a roast meal and make rissoles with it or shepherds pie/cottage pie
Mum has also taken to potatoes something or other - have no idea what its called but she loves it. I chop rashers of bacon and fry them lightly with onions and place 1/3 of them on the bottom of a dish than top that with 1/3 of some blanched cabbage add some black pepper not too much then top that with thin slices of potato and a good splash of cream and milk repeat twice and top with cheese and chips (your chips that is we call them crisps) and bake - its not remotely healthy but she loves it and it is food after all and as long as she doesn't have it too often I think its ok BUT IT DOESNT FREEZE
The thing that really really annoys me and I know it is stupid is that while Mum will eat every last mouthful of food someone else prepares she will always leave 1 teaspoon of anything I prepare and quite openly admits to my daughter that she does it because she knows it annoys me.
You cannot imagine (or probably understand) how angry that makes me - to the point I think hell to it I will buy ready meals - but she knows that won't happen because I don't like ready meals (I don't know whats in them for a start all those e numbers and stuff that I have never seen on a supermarket shelf!)
I use a slow cooker crock pot to make great casseroles, pot pies, stews, steaks, bake potatoes, and many other meals with foods that she can eat per her elder dietary challenges. She loves baked potatoes. BUT, I've discovered, she won't eat them when they come out of the crock pot. Every time I cook she has to make these snide comments about me cooking the food wrong, it needs to be done in a skillet, or in the oven, or microwave, or this is wrong and that's done wrong, this is too spicy, or, too much lemon. She'll 'sample my cooking' but ends up making sandwiches or fry up a meal she will eat 'because she made it'. I have high cholesterol, so no fried foods, I will 'bake/broil' mine in the pot or oven/stove if the crock pot doesn't seem feasible to use for anything. She has to also watch her intake of vegetables because they make her gassy and with a hiatal hernia those veggies can aggravate her.
She has full blown heart disease, a permanent hiatal hernia high, blood pressure and high cholesterol, and is on many medications. She insists on FRYING many of her meals. Logically with her cholesterol and heart disease she should be avoiding fried foods. But she's 91, she's lived a full life and at this point she reminds me that no amount of 'dietary changes is going to make her live another 50 years'. She has a point. It's when we are younger pre-70 years of age that we should be 'watching what we are eating so that we can hope to live to see 100.
She complains to others that I do not do things, even though I am doing such things. What she is really doing is a control, power struggle game with the combination of a mental depression and angst over not being able to do and function around the house as well as she did when she was 60. it's depressing. She's angry, so she lashes out at the one closest to her either by talking up a storm of bitter tales to the neighbors, friends, family members to make me out to look like I'm practically committing 'elder abuse/neglect'. Yet, I believe(and hope) the majority of those people can 'see right through her bitter tales, angst, & narcissism(she's loaded with this).
I can't clean house right either..all because I am not cleaning exactly as she would clean or using the very products she would. I don't even weed the garden every other day. just once a week or every two weeks, if that. She screams at me cause she sees 1 tiny weed that needs pulled out. Again, it's not the weed that is truly bothering her but the fact that she no longer has the strength to go weed her gardens anymore and she tries to use such angst aggressive behavior to get me to go out and do it right then and at that moment because she 'wants it done now'. when i first moved in i was on egg shells and jumped when she said to do something. I soon was so over stressed that i finally stopped doing that and began to say, I'll put it on a list and get to it when i have the time and strength myself. I had to because I'm not a healthy person in my middle aged years. I have fibromyalgia and have developed photosensitivity to sunlight. Mom now makes a list of things she would like done, be they small or large projects. A few things i refuse to do and have insisted to have my siblings come help. They protest in coming home because they think they should not have to do any work for mom since I am hear and can do it. True, but don't I deserve a break from doing 'everything'...that isn't really everything since mom is still mobile and can still do plenty as long as she paces herself daily with small routine projects. Such as, straightening her bedroom and her bathroom, dusting the kitchen wood floor(she insists doing it cause, again, the narcissism shows up about the way I clean floors and bathrooms.).
I am still learning and keep reminding myself that I will never be able to please her so I let it go and just let her do. Ever since I was a little girl she would dust and sweep the rooms even after I dusted and swept them. Things have not, nor will not change in regards to my mothers perfection addiction.
Bottom line is let your mother's vents and rants about your imperfections roll off you because she's at a stage of life that is very difficult to accept, adjust. One day you too may be blessed to reach 80-95/100. Remember the lessons you are now learning from your elderly parent and make note not to react that same way towards your own children as they will likely be taking care of you soon enough. I hope my incite into this matter helps you comprehend things and understand that you are doing the best you can and doing it well.
Bright Blessing to you and don't forget to take time for yourself and unwind/relax. You got this.
She ate lasagna and salad and seemed totally content with it. I think she just needs to protest.
I wouldn't worry about what they eat as long as they are. Maybe a vitamin justto make sure. Our parents don't have that much going on in their lives so let them eat what they want. If they were in a facility, they would eat what they wanted. They are not monitored unless on a special diet.
Now I follow this pattern with Mum and she doesn't even know it and that way I get lots of little meals into her. PS The rule of thumb for us should be Eat Breakfast Like a King, Lunch Like a Prince, and Dinner Like a Pauper which effectively means that from a standing start you needs lots of fuel in the body first thing and then you should reduce the amount as the day goes on but you all knew that anyway
You say your mom suffers from dementia. I"m not sure what stage she is in, but I know that dementia patients are prone to have eating issues. For a while my cousin would not eat very much at all. In the next stage she would only eat sweets and junk. Now she heartily eats anything put before her, because she doesn't know the difference and likes all food. (She's in Memory Care.) So, your mom's food preferences may change on their own.
My focus in on keeping my cousin, who has advanced dementia, as happy as possible. She cannot recover from this disease. To me, the most important thing is for her to enjoy anything that she can enjoy within reason.
I think you may be frustrating yourself needlessly if you believe you can convince her to eat according to your desires. When reasoning and brain function are affected, your pleas, recommendations, and suggestions are not likely to help.
I would find a way to keep her unclogged with some supplement and allow her to eat her favorites. Maybe, I'm in the minority on this, but unless it's detrimental to her immediate health, I 'm not sure why eating a healthy diet is that important under the circumstances. It sounds like your work very hard to provide her with nice meals, but I don't think her refusal to eat them in any way reflects on you. Sometimes people who don't have dementia lose interest for healthful dishes. After a certain age, I think it's up to them.
Bluecube, I agree with your food philosophy for the elderly, 'don't fret so'. Wise advice, very wise.
So much for any benefit derived from his philosophy, 'first in, first out' in food service. Old bread, not even good for people needing a special diet.
I read a book titled: "Journal of Best Practices." The author was someone with Asperger's. He wrote that he appreciated it when his wife put his plate on the table with a cover, without nagging him to come to the table and eat.
Lonely and frustrated. I am someone who believes the family that eats together, stays together.