I know there are probably no easy solutions, but I'm just wondering if any of you wonderful people have had to deal with the anger that can affect people dealing with Alzheimer's. I'm into year three of caregiving for my parents (both with dementia/Alzheimer's) and this forum helped me so much in the first year, so hoping to find some answers again.
Lately, my mother has become increasingly angry with me. Although it's not based in fact, she seems to think that she was promised by one of her daughters (I'm the second daughter, she has three) that we would live with her and take care of her full-time. I stopped working three years ago and moved to an apartment nearby. After a year of full-time caregiving, I was exhausted and have started finding caregivers to help. We now have a team of three wonderful caregivers, and my mother seems to like them, so I don't think she is actively rejecting them.....
And yet it has become an almost daily occurrence now that when she's alone with me (usually when my Dad goes for a nap) she starts to tell me how disappointed she is in me and how angry she is that I'm not doing more. I know that it's not "her" talking, it's her fear, but that doesn't make it any easier to handle or respond to. I spend a lot of time saying "I'm sorry that you're disappointed in me, Mom" and I'm happy to take the blame for everything that goes wrong - which seems to pacify her somewhat.
I find I'm dreading my days with her and sinking into a pool of self-pity, which doesn't help. Has anybody struggled with this, and did you find a solution or response that worked? Thanks!
In answer to your question, I have dealt with my Mom's anger for years now and no closer to finding a strategy to deal with it. With or without a UTI, she's angry. I have taken her to multiple doctors who refuse to offer medications other than antidepressants, which didn't help at all but made the anger far worse! The more I'm around her the angrier she gets. Most recently she's gone on a slander rampage, making up horrible stories and dragging my name through the mud to anyone who will listen. And I can assure you there are plenty of clueless people "out there" willing to listen and believe her outrageous stories.
I don't know what to offer in the way of coping strategies or comfort. My mother lives in a memory care facility, which helps, as do a handful of family members who participate in her care; yet none of them are the target of so much anger. My husband suggested I try to imagine she's not my mother but a person I was hired to care for; in other words take the mother-daughter relationship out of the equation and see if that helps. I don't know if I can put that in practice, but it's worth a try. I wish I could just cut off all feelings and make myself numb to Mom's anger but don't know how.
Lorrie, just try to imagine the multitude of children and grandchildren that share the same anguish that you're feeling now and completely understand what you're going through. That's why we're here; to encourage and support each other through the craziness of caregiving.
This too shall pass.
I was glad to read that you now have 3 wonderful caregivers help you out.... in the past it was very difficult for you to be doing this all on your own, to a point of exhaustion.