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My dad came to live with us (myself, my husband & 23 yr old son) 5 months ago, after my mom passed away. He is 84 and in mid to late stage of AD. The last 6 weeks or so, my dad slips into a delusion in which he thinks I am his wife. This usually happens in the evening, during his Sundowning period. Try as we might, we cannot get him to understand that I am his daughter. He thinks this is "our" home and that my husband and son are visitors. Usually around 9pm, he starts trying to kick them out. He gets very agitated when we try to explain that we all live here. He accuses me of taking in boarders without asking him first. When I've tried to explain who we all are, he will sometimes think that my husband is my first husband but I have divorced him and am now with married to him. He can't understand why I would welcome my ex into our home. He gets mad at me when I won't go to bed with him or gets up several times to see why I haven't come to bed yet. We have even had a few nights where he actually cries because he thinks I am either mad at him or sleeping with another man. My husband has been a good sport about this, sometimes sitting out in the garage until after Dad has fallen asleep. But it is now cold out and I don't expect my husband to give up his home in order to keep Dad calm. My son has also been very good to his grandpa, but it is hurtful when he says mean things to them and acts as though he has never seen them in his life. They understand that this is the illness, but it doesn't mean it doesn't hurt them. I am no longer bothered by the fact that Dad doesn't recognize me. I can accept that he doesn't know I'm his daughter. And if he thought I were a nurse or his sister or mother, I could play along. But we are at a loss as to how to handle this. We cannot live in his reality and play into this storyline! This is definitely not one of the things that any of us anticipated having to deal with. Has anyone else had this problem? Any suggestions for us?

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Your dad sounds extreme compared to my mom. She is 92 and I have to tell her I am her daughter about 30 times a day. If I were in your situation, I would not keep up a farce, like husband hiding in garage until dad goes to sleep, just reinforce who you all are and let it go. Also have a doctor check his medication, maybe something could help this. Sundowners? Is that a real thing, because my mom gets mean in the evening, I never know what sets her off and I actually call it the sundown meanies. My mom doesn't allow anyone over, but it isn't her choice so I let family come and visit, she hates it and stomps off, then starts saying mean things to them to make them leave. We just sort of ignore it. It's hard because sometimes she says very hateful things, but you have to let it roll off your shoulders, otherwise it makes you bitter and angry all the time.
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You can try finding a picture of you when you were young. Put it onto a card to make into a badge to wear. Underneath it put " I am ______ " If he had a special pet name for you when you were young, you can put that onto it. The older memories are the last to go, that's why older children are often not recognized. If you remotely have features of your mom, he will assume you are her. That is also why in nursing homes they frequently put pictures of the person and his/her family from long ago on their doors. If they leave the room, they can find their way back by looking for the old picture that they are familiar with. It probably won't help with your husband's issue, but if it gets dad to stop believing you are mom, then he will probably not see your husband as a rival anymore. Worth a try.
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If this weren't so tragic, it would be funny. My suggestion? Stop trying to be 'rational' to someone who has lost all sense of logic. It will only make you go crazy. Now this might seem extreme, but try a totally different approach where you can reason with him in his own 'reality.' Suggest that you no longer want to be his wife and that as such, it's best if you just keep a friendship going, but absolutely nothing more. See if that approach works. You have nothing to lose.
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He probably doesn't remember what you have told him from one night to the next, so I would work on finding a short refrain that you could use every night that gets him to bed with the least amount of stress. I would say "Daddy it's time to go to bed, let me know when you've changed and I'll tuck you in." or something more blunt like "Daddy, I'm your daughter, momma's dead and it's time for you to go to bed." Explanations will just confuse them more. If he wants to know abut the other people tell they're family.
I just have my mother, so I haven't experienced what you are going through, but mom has forgotten many family members. We keep a picture on the wall of my father, and mom will point to it say do you who that is (like she's quizzing me) and I'll say that's you're husband and my daddy. I used the above night time routine with my mom, I'd say it was time to go to bed, she'd crack her door and tell me she was ready (when she had her night gown on). I'd give her her meds, help her into bed, tell her I loved her, kiss her goodnight and turn off the light. She liked the routine and started just getting up and saying "I'm going to bed and I'd say okay let me know when you're ready for me to tuck you in." Kind of role reversal. Good luck to you, my advice is keep it simple.
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Yikes! It IS terrible but there is some humor here too. Seriously, what I have heard about dealing with advanced AZ is to go along rather than try to explain but you simply can't do that here! Is a nursing home an option at all? It may sound harsh and make you feel guilty to consider that, but this - if it doesn't end - is too much to have any semblance of normal life with.
"Marriages" often form in care facilities between two people who think they are each other's spouses and it 'works' for them. Often it is painful for a living spouse who diligently cares for and visits the AZ patient, but there is an interdependence for the patients that does offer comfort. Perhaps having him somewhere close by where you can monitor his care and visit him would really be, in this case, the best thing. Anger is or can be a huge issue with AZ patients. I think your marriage has to come first and it sounds like you have a very good husband. God bless you both.
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I agree with frustrated2. Your father needs to be in a nursing home/memory care facility. You may be praised for being a 'saint' to care for your father and push your husband out to the garage every night-I don't know what your son does. People who live with 'saints' become martyrs. Your husband and son's hearts and minds are intact. They know what is going on, even if Dad doesn't. What a horrible way for them to live. My Mom put my Dad through it with her Mom. She sat in a recliner in the living room moaning. He started staying in the basement to do his woodworking rather than have to sit and put up with it after coming home from work. Grandma came first. Always. My post will probably be deleted, but so be it. I am a caregiver now for my Mom. She is still able to talk and can get around with a walker. She refuses to consider leaving her huge home. I will never put my kids and grandkids through what my Mom put us through. No loving mother or father would want their child to. Your husband and son need to come first. You may think everything is fine with Dad in the living room and husband in the garage. My mother always did. Dad wanted to leave, but kept his vows. I found him crying more than once. Dad needs to move out. Your husband may forgive you, but he will never forget it. Dad will never remember. Time to get your priorities straight.
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My mom does the same thing on occasion (I'm her daughter!), but I just tell her, hey, I'm a girl, and I just like boys. That usually stops her and she just looks perplexed, but last night I had a hard time de-railing her. She just looked hurt and like I was crazy, and sat there pouting for quite a while, until I asked her if she would like a bowl of ice cream. That usually brightens her up and can often distract her from an obsession and break whatever negative mood she is in, at least for a while. However, last night when she was done with her ice cream, she came back to insisting that I go to bed with her, and I told her I wanted to watch the end of the tv program I was watching. She stomped off to bed and I breathed a sigh of relief. Mad is better than amorous! Sometimes when I can't get her off a track she is driving me crazy with, I finally resort to locking myself in the bathroom for a while. When I come out she usually has dropped it and is just glad to see me again.

Is there something you can distract your dad with - a favorite food or activity? It sounds like your father's "obsession" (for lack of a better word) is currently very intense, so it would probably be hard to just distract him, but it's worth a try. If that doesn't work, you might try buying into his "reality" and devise a "story" of your own that fits into his reality without meeting what he expects of you. Did your mother have any sisters? You could use a "therapeutic lie" - tell him his wife is away visiting her mother, and you are her sister who looks a lot like her, come to visit and look after him while his wife is away, and his wife would be very upset if you went along with him. If she didn't have any sisters, you could be her aunt or cousin. Your husband and son could be "visitors" like he believes, and they are having car trouble and need to stay the night. If he accepts that, you could use the same story every night. If not, they might have some more urgent need, like they are staying with us while their mother is in the hospital, so they won't be alone at a time like this and they can visit her more because the hospital is nearby, and they live far away.

How long has this particular situation been going on? It might fade away over time, or be replaced with a different theme. My mom had a bizarre fantasy when I first moved in with her. She told me that she was taking a walk recently and was suddenly surrounded by a bunch of teenage boys and felt terrified. This boy who she said lived across the street (i never saw any teenage boy anywhere on our street) came along and rescued her and kissed her very romantically, and the other boys all mocked him and she walked away and came home. She had that one for several months and always wanted to go over to his house and try to find out what was going on between them, and was terrified that those other boys were hanging around and would attack her. I was new to this whole thing, and tried to use logic to change her thinking, with no success. I think the only thing that helped was to look around the house and out on the street and show her there was no one there, and that I would protect her if anyone tried to hurt her. The whole theme just eventually faded away, I think it was replaced with another one, like, out of the blue, "are you ready to go? we are going to be late for work!", or, "we have to go to that place, they're waiting for us!" and pacing around the house till I finally got "ready", and we would go out to the car, and as soon as we got in, or after we had been driving around for a few blocks", she would say, "Where do you want to go?" This would happen a couple of times a day, sometimes we would get home and eat lunch and then she would say, "Are you ready to go?" and drove me crazy because I couldn't get much done, and she would become hateful if she didn't get her way right away, and pace from door to door, banging and kicking the doors and asking me to help her open them (I had "childproofed" the house so she could pace around the house and the backyard but couldn't get out on the street and wander away and get lost) over and over again, sometimes all day, if there was something I had to do and couldn't leave the house all day (those were HELLISH days) but in general it was a relief from her other fantasy. Then that was replaced with a similar one, wanting to go home to be with her mother and father. I tried again to use logic (they would be 130 and 140 years old if they were still alive) but she would just get angry and tell me I was lying, or if she believed me, the grief and gut-wrenching sobbing that she experienced was as strong as if it had just happened, and it just tore me apart. That's when I started thinking of "lies" that were better than all that pain. I began telling her that her parents were on a long driving trip to Mexico to revisit all the places and people they used to see when they went on trips there before. She would be disappointed but happy for them because they were having such a good time. That worked for months, until she INVENTED up a whole new set of parents! She began telling me that she wasn't talking about THOSE parents, she wanted to go see her "OTHER parents". Telling her that no one has four parents did no good (when will I learn!). The only thing that placated her would be to drive her around a while, "looking for her parents' house" and she had to give me directions because I didn't know where they live, which usually only lasted for a few blocks before she either forgot why we were driving around or could not give me any more directions, at which point we would just keep driving around enjoying the scenery, or go out to eat or to a movie (we have two good "one dollar" theaters in the area, so we can do this a couple times a week) or we would go grocery shopping or run other errands together. (DUH! I FINALLY figured out that all she really wanted was to get out of the house. I'm a bit of a homebody and enjoy puttering around the house, so it took me a while to figure that one out!).

Ireese mentioned medications. I had pretty much given up on any medication helping, but Mom's doctor added one more, Risperidone, to her other dementia medications and so far it has helped with the mood and agitation and pacing, so we don't have to drive around SEVERAL times a day, and we even don't have to drive around EVERY day, and it is easier to redirect her or distract her.

I guess my point is, it might help you to know that your father's current "obsession", for lack of a better word, might fade with time, or it might morph into something else you can deal with easier, and you might, in the meantime, be able to figure out a "story" that gets around your father's false ideas with a minimum of trauma and arguing, and that helps him to go to bed and gives you and your husband and son some peace as well. And it might help to, as Ireese suggested, to have her doctor adjust or add to whatever medications she is taking now.

Well, mom wants to go "somewhere" now, and has been very patient so far, so I guess I better stop writing now and get up and go! I hope this helps you deal with your very difficult and perplexing dilemma!
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Hi, I was just wondering if you could buy a nursing outfit-the scrubs -and wear them around the house as a short term solution until you maybe find a better one. I would tell him you are a nurse. Maybe even wear a name tag. Put your husband and son in doctor scrubs-simple white coats over their clothes -tell him they are his doctors. I am not kidding. It sounds absolutely horrible to have him crying and such and I do not think reasoning with him will help. It may not be a long term solution but may buy you some time. OR you could just have your husband and son wear the scrubs and call them his home health aides so they do not have to hide and you could just keep reminding that your are his daughter. This may sound weird and wacky but sometimes being weird and wacky is the way to go. So sorry you have to deal with this. Life really throws some twists at us doesn't it? Prayers to you and yours!!
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Hi, it's me, Kabeeena again. Hey, the scrubs are a great idea, because they would give visual cues to your dad and might not need as many verbal explanations or reminders, which is tiresome for everyone. He might just settle down and go on with his daily routines without bringing up the whole issue again after a while. When I have been out with my mom and she is trying my patience, on occasion someone who sees us interacting and getting frustrated will say to me under their breath, "Try to enjoy her while you have her", sometimes holding back tears themselves, which suggests they were in a similar situation and have lost the parent and wish they could go back and do things differently. And this haunts me during the times when I'm so frustrated or sick of mom's behavior, and I wonder, how can I possibly enjoy her now when she is making me insane? I know I will regret my negative responses and attitudes when she is gone, but it's so hard to be pleasant and positive when she's being so unreasonable and hateful and selfish and demanding, etc., etc., and I'm so grieving watching her lose more and more of herself everyday. But when I can suspend my own grief and try to accept at the current moment who mom is right now, and buy in to her "reality" for a while, it actually is enjoyable, like pretending was when I was a child. I actually enjoy driving around with mom at times like that, even though I know we will never find her parents' house, and it's all just a ruse. We actually have good times and have more to talk about as we observe the world around us, and I feel better knowing that it's helping her to feel better for a while. So, maybe that is a key to "enjoying them while we have them". Having fun with buying into their reality and coming up with creative ways to pretend along with them and make them feel more comfort and peace. Anyway, just some more thoughts. Bless you. Maybe you'll come up with even more creative solutions than the scrubs or a trip to Mexico!
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Hi Kabeeena - I am so glad you liked my scrubs idea. I was worried it might seem , er, too weird. I can see where it can backfire but I just thought that maybe it would give some quick peace to a desperate situation. I would even say Clara49 could change from daughter during the day to the "night nurse" that helps him get to bed-maybe helping settle down better to sleep.
I think your pretend time with your Mom is lovely. I think you are bringing much joy to her -and found some for yourself along the way. How wonderful! I take care of my mom for a long weekend a month now ( dementia, brain stem stroke) to give my Dad a break but feel that my care taking is going to be increased due to necessity. I have a child , though, with special needs-she is sixteen with a syndrome pretty similar in nature to Down's so I totally get making up your own normal. Though I do not have to play into a fantasy with her -anymore than any child at her developmental age would require-I certainly find being flexible and creative in my raising of her a very helpful tool.
Blessings
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I love the scrubs idea. Another thing that might work, is my actual situation. I hurt so bad anymore that I cannot sleep with anyone else in the bed. Try explaining to your father (as we all know, over & over again) that your health means you have to sleep in your own bed & that he has his own bed now. You and your husband just go to bed after he has and/or separately.
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Clare49, the situation that you now find yourself in is beyond what can be handled at home and it is stressing you, your marriage, your husband and your son. It's time for your husband to come in and for your dad to go to a nursing home. If a man cannot find peace in his own home, then where can he find it?
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this is for mishkaM please give me some info on the brainstem stroke your mom had. my husband just passed away and thats what he had, but i don't quite understand it and would love to ask you some questions
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Thank you to everyone who has responded. It is very interesting to hear so many different ideas on how one might handle this crazy situation we have. I'd like to first respond to @fordellcastle.

First of all, I would like to say that I am sorry that you experienced and witnessed so much pain as a result of your grandma living with you when you were growing up. My grandmother lived with my uncle and his family from the day they were married and, although she wasn't in my home, I saw first hand how damaging it can be to a relationship and to a family.

I did not enter into this with the hopes of being "praised as a saint." I just felt a responsibility to at least try to help my dad through this final chapter of his life. My parents were GREAT parents. My dad worked his butt off for his wife and family. He made many sacrifices for us and was always there when we needed him. Whether it was a shoulder to cry on, a bit of advice or just a hug, my dad provided it. In the 31 years I have been married, he became more of a dad to my husband than his own father was. My dad was and still is a good guy.

When my mother passed suddenly, it was without hesitation that my husband and I both agreed that Dad should come live with us. We decided that we would evaluate every 3 months whether or not this arrangement was working for us. Both of us reduced our work hours from 5 days to 3 days per week, allowing each of us to spend 2 days with him. On the day that both my husband and I work, I have hired an old friend to stay with my dad. My siblings have been very good about making regular weekend visits and offering to stay with my dad so the two of us can get out. We understand that we have to make our relationship a priority and, believe me, we work at it. I do not "push my husband out to the garage every night." He voluntarily started trying that to see if it would help the situation.

It is funny that the day after I posted this plea for help, my dad woke up that morning and had pretty much snapped out of it. He still has periods of confusion about what happened to my mom, why he is here, etc. but he suddenly recognized me and my husband. We were able to get back into the routine we had established at bedtime and he hasn't gotten up looking for me or his wife for the last 3 nights. Last night when I went back to his room to tell him good night, he thanked me for everything we're doing and told me he was so lucky to have such good kids. I told him that growing up with a dad like him is why we turned out like we did.

We know that he will inevitably slip away again but hopefully later rather than sooner. And we know that we will not be able to handle this by ourselves. We just hope to have the wisdom to make good decisions for both my dad and our family. If that means a nursing home then that's what it means. But for now, we'll continue to enjoy the good days and try to put the bad ones behind us.

God bless everyone who is affected by this horrible disease....
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Clare49 I am so glad to hear you are having some peace with your dad. Your husband sounds wonderful! And it certainly sounds like you are taking his needs into account. In fact it sounds like you are all handling things very well! God bless!

Suziesmom- So sorry to hear about your loss! -I am afraid I will probably not be much help to you, unfortunately. My 80 year old Dad is primary caregiver to my mom and very reluctant to share medical facts with me. Though I help him take care of her quite a bit he is not willing to let me go to doctor appointments and when I probe for clarity about the appointments I get vague answers.
She was diagnosed with a brain stem stroke in a very odd way -if you ask me . She had been going to a neurologist for an Alzheimer's diagnosis-she got the diagnosis as they found plaque on her brain and has family history ( her mother) I was the one who suggested she get checked out because her personality was changing-she was becoming very demanding and she seemed to be forgetting things at the time and telling me she would be driving and forget where she was going.This was -heck- 6 years ago. I approached it gently and she qagreed to get screened and hence th diagnosis.- She went on Namanda. Mom and Dad both started to go to support groups for her diagnosis but after a few years of non progression mentally they started to question if she had it. But she had started to regress physically. And started to have trouble talking. Her balance got terrible. So on a trip to her dentist she was telling him about her symptoms and he asked her if she felt like she was drunk all the time and she said "YES!" and he said it sounds like a brain stem stroke. She and Dad went back to the neurologist and to have my Dad tell it he confirmed then that , yes, her MRI did show she had had a brain stem stroke- at some time -no one knows when. I asked my Dad why the heck didn't the doctor tell them this earlier and he was all like "I 'm not sure -but there is nothing they can do anyway..." and dismissed it. Though the doc did put her on blood thinners and she did go to PT for a very short time. The doctor also said it was possible that my Mom does not have Alzheimer's so my Mom went off her Namanda( sp?). She has been off that for a year now and her scans are not showing any progression of plaque so I guesss that is good but I still question this. I see her getting weaker and weaker but her memory is very good actually so I don't know how she can have Alzheimer's. But physically she is getting weaker and weaker and she has a hard time getting her words out-like it is difficult to talk -not like she cannot find the right words. And she can be very child like in her demands( she is 74-75 in Feb) but she has OCD and was so active and now stuck in a wheel chair and dependent so I think she is just trying to gain control where she can.
I try to talk my Dad and Mom into letting me go with them to the docs but my Dad is stubborn. I try and get info from them but my Mom is not good at communicating and my dad is sooooo washy washy!! There is more I would love to say but will wait for another discussion. I wish I could be a better help to you. I do believe there is more going on then just the stroke but they are both not willing to do further tests though at one time her doctor was recommending it. again, another story. *sigh
Please feel free to ask me anything and I will try and be of assistance. I wish I knew more! For your sake and my Mom's. The research I did off the web doesn't seem to match up too well with what I see with my Mom but I do know how misleading and confusing MD sites can be.
Sorry so long. I am a chronic rambler. Blessings to you.
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Hello @MishkaM and @Kabeeena, it was great to read all of your ideas. I have actually thought about the scrubs because for a week or two he thought he was at a hospital. But before I got the scrubs, he had quit thinking that so I kind of forgot about it. If he wakes up in the middle of the night and can't find the bathroom or is looking for my mom, I usually address him as though I am a caregiver, offering to help him back to his room or to get him a drink of water. If he asks about his wife in the middle of the night, I tell him that she is visiting my sister for a few days. These things seem to calm him and he gets back in bed and goes to sleep.

During the day, I seem to have a harder time playing along. I'm never sure if he is "my dad" again or if he has daydreamed himself into another place. I feel like if I go along with it and he suddenly realizes that he was delusional (which he does sometimes), it will upset him to know I am not being honest with him. The one thing he asked me for was honesty.

Kabeeena, how long have you been caring for your mom? Do you have any help? You sure have your plate full! Your story both frightens me and inspires me. I can't imagine the road my dad is going down and it scares me. But knowing that there are others helping their loved one navigate that road makes me believe that I can at least give it my best shot.

MishkaM, I have a 35 year old niece with developmental delay. Her mom (my sister-in-law) passed away 13 years ago. I have been very involved in her life and consider myself a secondary/part-time caregiver. Your thoughts on being flexible and creative hit the nail on the head! And now that I think about it, so many of my experiences with her have helped me to prepare for taking care of my dad. To be honest though, I haven't seen her much in the last few months. I just can't handle both she and my dad together by myself. You are doing an amazing job, juggling the needs of so many. I hope you find time to take care of yourself as well. God Bless!
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Clare49 I can see where it would be very tricky to pretend you are a nurse with your Dad. He sounds like such an amazing man. And him asking for honesty from you- gives me a lump in my throat- he might be very upset if he came out of a confused state to see you pending to be someone else. Unless you were honest about that during his lucid moments. Could you talk to him now -explain to him tthqt at times he forgets you are his daughter and not his wife. Just be completely honest with him now and say -" Dad, we went through a period with you when you thought I was your wife and I could not get you to understand I was not. If this happens again I have decided to wear nursing scrubs so you know I am not your wife.". Then if you are wearing them and he comes out of his confusion and wonders why the heck you are pretending to be his nurse you can say " I told you, Dad, at times you think I am your wife and that when that happens if I wear these clothes it helps you realize I am not and you relax. " just throwing out suggests. Hoping one sticks for ya.

That is so nice that you are such a part of your niece's life. I cannot tell you the fear I have about what would happen to my daughter if my husband and I pass away. We do have siblings but out of the 3 we have maybe 1 would step up to the plate. I hope you can find some time to be with your neice again. But I understand how hard it is to find time and energy. Especially during the holidays! Maybe a simple card in the mail would suffice. My daughter LOVES getting mail ( from the mail box-the old fashioned way :0) . And she loves getting photos with the letter. Something tangible to hold onto. Just a thought.

Take care!!
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Clare49 -I 'm so sorry, I didn't mean to scare you. I just wanted you to know that things can get bad for a while, but they also can improve or change to a different form that is easier to manage. I've been caring for mom for 6 years now. We had a couple of very bad years. Mom was always very generous, loyal and loving, with a quick wit, but also had a somewhat difficult personality - stubborn and contrary and opinionated, and never wrong, all which really came out with her dementia, and she became demanding, selfish and non-compliant, and fought me on everything! Things are better now, partly my own adjustment and figuring out how to handle things better. Like, I used to get so mad when she was noncompliant about things I really needed her to do, one, because she was so ornery about it, and also because I just wanted that particular task to be as easy as it should be and not have to spend all this time trying to convince her and getting so frustrated. Like, taking pills. She would either refuse altogether or take a few and then say, I don't want any more. (AAAARRRRGGGGHHHH!!!!) And I would try to explain that she needs to take all of them, not pick and choose, and try to remind her that the times when we have forgotten and she didn't get her pills, she ended up feeling lousy by the end of the day, but that got me nowhere but angry and defeated. Now, I have learned to just say, "ok" and walk away. A couple of minutes later I go back and say, "Hey, mom, it's time for your morning pills" and this time, she is just as likely to say, "oh, thank you, honey! oh, you are so good to me!" And I walk away, thinking, "heh heh heh, I won that one!" and mentally patting myself on the back. No need to get all worked up and engaged in conflict! Things are also better because my brother has come around and is much more helpful and supportive, and the medications she is on now have helped with her frustration and agitation, and she is much more easy -going and cooperative. And finding this site has been a godsend. It has really made a diference. Clare49, it sounds like you are way ahead of the game, you have a lot going for you already. You have a wonderful father, and it sounds like he has an easier personality to begin with. Your husband and son are with you and they love him and are committed to helping him. They are a team you can brainstorm with to find creative approaches. And you found this site. As difficult as caregiving for someone you love who has dementia is, I don't think you need to fear that your situation is going to be as difficult as mine was for a time. And though there may be times that are particularly trying, they won't necessarily stay that way forever.
Bless you
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This is about the most challenging caregiving situation there is. If this is destroying your family it is time to place Dad in a Nursing home. Hard and cruel as this may sound it can go on for years
Try to keep a simple routine and put away decorative items around the house. Place a few items around and in his room that remind him of long ago. Old photographs or maybe things he or his wife made. Make his bedding old fashioned, similar to the way it was when he was younger. His vision is probably poor so if he needs a clock or watch make it a big one. Sometimes an animal can be a big comfort especially if it resembles one he had in the past. TVs etc can be very disorientating as is constant noise. If he loved music keep it playing softly. When you approach him identify yourself. "Hi Dad It's Mary your daughter" or "Hello Gramps it's Billy your grandson" personally I think the idea of playing Drs and nurses will only confuse him further because on some level he does recognize you and in the back of his mind there is likely a deep fear of being put in a nursing home.
Often when the elderly are talking about "going home" they are talking about dying not returning to a former abode.
Above all give yourself a break, even if it's just for an hour or two to have lunch with friends,get your hair done, have a massage or read a book in the park.
You can also try lying on the bed beside him for a short while if it calms him before sleep as long as he doesn't think he has marital privilages.
God bless and good luck
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If you ask your husband and son to come home after a long days work and play 'dress up' as health care workers, then send your husband to the garage, you need to do them both a favor and get some serious family counseling. Don't be surprised when husband and son pack up and leave to make their home elsewhere. It is the sanest, healthiest thing for both to distance themselves from this situation. If Dad were in his right mind, would he want you to be destroying your marriage for him? Okay, toxic parents would, but the normal, loving parent would say your marriage and son come first: "I've had a long, wonderful life. Don't sacrifice yours for me."
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True.
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fordellcastle- yes, and in the mean time? What should she and her husband and son do while waiting to get into a nursing home? They should just abandon her in her hour of need? I certainly do not think dressing in a scrub top a permanent answer and I am sure Clara does not expect her husband to keep going out into the garage- sorry Clara if I am putting words into your posts- but it seems to me she wasn't going to be able to just up and get her Dad out of the house that fast-unless I am missing something . I pictured her THAT NIGHT having to deal with her Dad crying and begging her to sleep with him and I tried to see how it could be helped for that very night. Not a solution to the overall problem but a way to handle the nights until she could get an overall solution.

Good thing she said her Dad has stopped his behavior. I hope that continues and do agree that it may be time for assisted living.
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I realize placement in an ALF or nursing home can't happen overnight. Plans need to be made, though. It is going to get worse-a lot worse. No one who has lived through watching this cruel disease ravaging their loved one would want to live like that or put their family through the pain of it. My background is different from many of you. I loved my Dad dearly, and he had a brain stem stroke which resulted in dementia of a sort. He did not want to go on living like that. I love my Mom, too, despite everything. Caring for her is what my Dad would want, and I do my best. She is stage 4 now. She will go to a Memory Care unit, as my aunt did for a short period before her death. I am a strong advocate for living wills, and indicating alzheimer's/dementia as a terminal illness for which I do not want treatment/medications to be continued. I have said before-my message was evidently reported, and will no doubt be reported again-my aunt (Mom's sister) had Alzheimer's. Her living will stated just that, as does mine. She had witnessed her Mom's 'living death' as she termed it, and could not help care for her. She and her husband refused to put their family through it. Watching our family disintegrate from a distance was too much. I guess I want people to know how horrible this disease is, and the damage it causes not just to the victims of it. There is a difference between quantity of life and quality of life. I'm a helluva lot more scared of living with Alzheimer's than being in a nursing home or dying. Life is for the living. It goes way too fast, and these are years with your husband, children, and grandchildren you will never get back. I could never be that selfish and put my daughters through it. I won't post again.
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Fordellcastle- you story seems sad. I am sorry you have had such grief in yur life. Alzheimer's such a horrid disease. My grandmother had it and I worked in a nursing home years ago with many residents that had it. So hard. We all just do the best we can. I do not know why your post would have been taken down- I do not think you are saying anything bad. I just wanted to stress that I was coming from a short term solution.
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I think all situations are unique when it comes to Alzheimer's. The relationship you had with your loved one before this disease invaded your lives has a lot to do with the commitment and passion you put into helping that person. As I have said previously, my dad was a great dad and family man. He sacrificed alot for all of his family (including our spouses and children) and so helping him in this final chapter of his life is a no-brainer.

Obviously, I am sure Fordellcastle is rolling her eyes and will always think of me as selfish and self serving. She will not believe me when I say that my husband is an equal partner in this journey or that my son is cool with Grandpa living here. (On a side note, my son is 23 years old and has his own life. Won't be living here much longer anyway. And we don't expect him to stay just for my dad.) But the fact is, we didn't enter this journey with blinders on. And we aren't going to give up the first time something happens that we weren't planning on. For goodness sake! In my opinion, it would be much more selfish of us to place him in a NH just so we could get back to our lives.

Last night at dinner, my dad was so "with it" that we were all amazed -- I think even he was a little surprised! We had great conversation, talked about my mom, our lives, and just took a little time to enjoy each other's company. Those little pockets of time, when we get to see the real man again, are what energizes us and gives us the strength to keep going.

Good luck to all of you! I hope you are all able to find peace with whatever decisions you make for yourself and your loved one.
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Amen, Clare49! What a blessing that you were all there to enjoy that gift! It does my heart good just to hear about it.
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CLara, you sound like a wonderful daughter, mother and wife and I am sure you are making the best possible decision for your entire family. None of us, myself included, should tell you what is best because how could we know-like you said -each situation is unique. I think you sound lovely. And your husband and father and son are blessed to have you in their lives.
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Kabeena, this just a normal stage. For us, it worked out well because my Mom thought my husband was her husband and he held her hand every night during supper for maybe a year. My Mom went through the aggitation, sundowners, and wandering stages too and its so true that you can not reason with them when they are in that mode. (Keep all the doors locked up high) If you want to, we ended up putting Mom on depakote sprinkles after a year for her aggitation. My sweet little Mom was trying to jump out my window!! It was a life saver for us. Once on them the anger and aggitation stopped. Hang in there, its just a stage and they are so worth it, this too will pass.
Hugs
RR
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Claire49, Your house and family sounds exactly like ours!! We spoile Mom and we sing at supper to her, especially the old songs and Christmas songs. Some nights her arms and feet start to go and she is so happy it brings us all to tears. Big hugs to you, we are in the same boat and my son, who is still here also, is such a joy to my Mom. He wont let her go to sleep without giving her a big kiss and trying to make her laugh and he now knows how to use the hoyer lift and helps us out with that . He and his fiance even gave us a few weekends to go away and cared for her, diapers and all, pretty good at 26 if I must say so. Keep holding your head high girl!!
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Foredelicastle -- I don't know what you wrote but ... this is a Public Forum. Everyone has a say. If this is based on YOUR personal experiences, then I don't see why anyone would object. I have recently experienced with this by saying something and was "verbally attacked" by others. Unfortunately, it also got other posters to "verbally defend" me. I went to AC admin and asked them to delete My Comments because it was causing division among the posters. As other posters kept telling me, this is a Publin Forum and we all have a say - as long as we dont' Attack other people or Tell them what to do. We can suggest or bring up what helped for us. I have learned to be more careful with what I say - most times.

Fordelicastle -- from the comments that is still here on AC, I did not find anything wrong. We each have a choice - parents stay at home vs. Nursing home/Assisted Living. Each of us have a Limit before we want to have our parent move to some form of assisted living. And some do Not Have Limits and can care for that parent to the end. We each need to base on what we can do. As for myself, if we had the funds, one parent would definitely go to assisted living but in reality, the one parent I would love to go - would not be the one chosen. Anyway, the point is moot since we have no money to send either one. So, I just do what I need to do. Too bad with 7 siblings, only 1 is helping me physically with the parents.

Foredeli - please come back to AC if you are still caregiving or still suffering from the effects of caregiving. I have read over and over on this site, that just because parent is now in NH or AL, the cg is still suffering from Post Traumatic Stress.

Reverse -- I am sooooo glad that your son and gf are helping! I have nieces/nephews of that age living just next door to us. Bro and his wife, too. I have no help even though I have asked and asked. Since I came on this site, I have learned to Accept that every person (siblings) have a right NOT to help. Since then, I don't have so much anger and resentment towards the rest of my siblings. But, I am soooo glad that my visiting nieces do help suctioning mom when they do their weekly visits. Yep, you have a pretty good son!! =)
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