This woman raised 3 kids, was always neat and clean and orderly. She was a teacher for 25+ years teaching gifted kids. She has been widowed for 15 years or so and helped raise her grandkids in Chicago until we brought her back to CA 2 years ago. She is currently on 100mg of Zoloft for depression, having had it raised from 20mg to 40mg to 75mg and then 100mg. I believe she also has seasonal affective disorder to some degree. She has not been officially diagnosed with Dementia or Alzheimers, but she often displays the behaviors of it or atleast early onset. At times she is very attentive to her hygiene, taking showers regularly, changing her clothes every day; and her room, keeping it clean, orderly, picked up and her bed made. She also is often attentive to her bathroom, keeping it clean and picked up. Other times however, she takes a lot of short cuts, ignoring disorder, ignoring soiling on bedding and bathrugs, not doing her laundry for weeks, wearing dirty clothing, not brushing her hair, etc. She sometimes offers to help with things, but more often than not would rather sit all day and do nothing. It is almost like sometimes her "switch" has been turned on and sometimes it is "off". Everything is completely "off" from mid-fall (late Oct) through until mid-spring (April). During this time she is non talkative, will sit for hours motionless, staring at the television, non participative, will sit in her robe all day if I let her, does not take a shower for weeks if I let her, does not eat unless I make her, etc. Sometimes she gets snitty with me when I ask her if she hs taken her pills, ask her to drink more of her water, get dressed, take a shower, etc. We have had long conversations about me caring for her and because I do love her and care about her, a little cooperation would go a long way, etc. She will often wait for someone to wait on her hand and foot, otherwise she goes without. I help clean her up after potty messes, she is also incontinent during the night, so I help her with that, as well as clipping and filing her finger nails, clipping her toenails, help her fix her hair, etc. She does get her hair done once a week, so that gets her out. We have a wonderful senior center here and she has been there a few times, but now she has not wanted to go for about a year. I just want her to care about herself, her hygiene and her living conditions. Am I asking for the impossible?
Wish I could take a peek into her mind, but since I'm not a psychiatrist but want to help I'll give my opinion. Her "catatonic" state might be caused by an adverse reaction to prescribed medication. Sometimes, people with catatonia will hold rigid poses for hours and ignore any external stimuli. So you can waste your breath talking to them while that wall between your reality and theirs comes down. Also, keep in mind that when there's no hope there's no movement. Tidying up and others bursts of energy might be fueled by boredom or habit, but the severe depression tells her there's no point in continuing to do what she used to because it's not going to make any difference anyway. I suggest you pore through all the medications she's taking, paying particular attention to adverse side effects. Then talk with her doctor, and chat with her when she's up and about her feelings. Do it before she goes back to that broken down state complete with the whole give in and give up demeanor. Good luck my friend.
And I am very sorry you are having this horrible battle with cancer on top of everything else....
But it sounds like she needs medical attention whether it makes her angry or not... What is the worst that is going to happen when you insist she get medical attention. if she flips out, then you go to plan B, she goes to the local behavioral center anyway...Sounds like as difficult as it may be for you and your husband you are going to have to stand up to her and insist.. you are not going to let her live in her own filth, you have your hands full with your own health issues and do not need all that stress while you are trying to get healthy..
But something is wrong and it is not going to get better with ya'll talking to her, or it would have already improved... I wish you luck in finding some answers and again I am sorry if I offended you, no harm intended...hugs
I'd wait for one of her more "normal" moments and explain that this is what has to happen in order for the two of you to feel comfortable continuing to help her. You need guidance to do the right things, and a professional evaluation will give you valuable insights to help you understand how to treat her. Without this kind of guidance you feel that you are not able to provide the environment she needs, and will begin looking for a placement for her. DO NOT present this as a threat or an ultimatum. It is simply the reality of the situation as you see it.
Then set about making an appointment.
And I'd give up on the lengthy discussions about why she is behaving this way and how she has to do better. All it gets you is blue faces and it probably makes her feel worse.
She doesn't know why she is behaving this way. Enlist the help of a professional who may be able to determine that, and suggest effective ways of dealing with it.
My primary doc once treated me for "anxiety" -- she tried one pill after another, and none of them worked. Of course they didn't work. I had undiagnosed diabetes, not anxiety. She prescribed based on a few questions. When I later went to a psychiatrist (for depression) I had to fill out a five-page questionaire, and talk to the psychiatric nurse for an hour. Then I talked to the psychiatrist for 20 minutes and she prescribed two meds, telling me what side effects I should call immediately about if they occured and other side effects the I could ignore and they'd probably go away. I vowed that I will NEVER take those kinds of drugs from anyone but a specialist. If your MIL's primary doc doesn't want to go further with depression treatment, respect that.
I'm struggling with that with both my parents right now. It seems that they are just waiting to die. I'm trying to get them involved with the Senior Citizen's Center (which has a lot to offer, including senior exercise classes) and our senior's group at Church. I've met a lot of resistance.
Drugs alone won't give her the will to live.
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