Mom is constant with the same verbal sounds- nothing in the house to trigger it, Oh ho ho- from the moment the little souls feet hit the floor in the morning to bed time- it is like chalk screaching across a black board in my head- I have no one else to come in to give me a break- just me and my husband. Any suggestions on how to cope with the sounds?
her unconscious sounds drive you batty.
Once, I heard her having a conversation with "someone" before coming out. When she was out, she started the grunting again. Not sure why, but it's progressing. I'll take that over the zoning out...because once she snaps out of it, you don't know what you'll get.
She also clears her tbroat with each sentence when she talks to me. I asked her about it , maybe she needs a cough drop she said shes allergic to me. Shes doing it now.....
as far as the grunting goes a lot of people do that do give themselves "Cpap". Continuous Positive airway pressure(Cpap). It helps keep the alveoli open or air sacs in the lungs. It promotes better gas exchange between carbon dioxide and oxygen. Sorry for the rant but you just finish paying for your kids school and weddings and then this is dumped upon you. Living longer because of technology and pharmacology is not always better, at least I will turn that stuff down when the time is right. Where is the quality of life?
Have the doctor write orders for a night nurse 7 days a week if mom has to stay with you. I would also have her do a week in an outside respite program as well.
Time to evaluate whether you can do this every day & night for another 6 months, year, or longer. Sleep deprivation is a form of torture for a reason.
Because it is. And it multiplies day on day.
It's the same exhaustion you feel if you've ever had to deal with a colicky baby for long periods of time. The only time they aren't screaming is when they're asleep (for 15 minutes at a time....) Been to that movie!
It affects your ability to think straight or even hold a thought. You can't really relax. This will affect your mental health and then your physical health.
Anybody who criticizes hasn't walked two feet in these shoes and probably would be the first to "tap out".
You can't wish away the irritation. You can't pretend it's not happening.
It will wear you down if you don't do something. It's not going to get better. It may pass in time, but nobody can say when. It may be years - nobody knows.
What can you do? Day programs may be an option if your person meets certain criteria. Respite care, where they stay in a nursing home for a few days. Permanent placement in a care facility as well. Or in-house aid so you can get out & about.
Keep in mind that it's not just the humming, grunting, teeth grinding, teeth sucking, or whatever the repetitive noise is by its self. This is part of a larger package involved in caregiving. It's so easy to dismiss all of it as "nothing" and deny ourselves the ability to admit it's overwhelming and exhausting and that "I need a break right this minute or I'm going to explode!"
Ask yourself: would your mother or father want to live as an anpsychotic mutant who is long dead on the inside and can't be reasoned with or treated, besides being strapped down with regular injections of 'Bring-Down Blue'? I know how my parents would feel in that situation, and what I would do. Dementia is the result of pushing a person's lifespan so far, because we worship life (and not quality of life) and their minds give up when their live would have naturally ended, but since we're all trapped in the neurosis of 'life-preservation', we ignore the horrible grief these elderly people and their families go through, understanding if they were to end their parent's lives in mercy, they would be charged with murder. That is the horror we have come to, and I hope something even more horrible happens because of it, as that's probably the only way it's ever going to be addressed.
The thing is I can toilet her, change her poopy clothes, feed her, dress her, attend to all her physical needs, but is it this one "little" thing that is going to break me?
She does not have dementia. I'm talking mental illness here. She's been living with me (and MIL with Alzheimers). My mother makes noises constantly. Grunting, mumbling, fidgeting, muttering, etc. It drives me crazy............
Her loud TV helps a bit. There is no peace in my home. I have no privacy.
Don't get me wrong, Every day - I choose to do this.
It just helps to vent because I don't dare air my feelings to just anyone.