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I'm adopted and there is a big age gap between me and mum, 48 years - I'm only 31 and she's 79. We lost dad when I was 16 to liver cancer and around the same time my mum became semi-invalid due to spinal cord problems. She's not wheelchair bound but she can barely walk. As if things weren't bad enough, she had breast cancer 2 years ago, had to undergo a mastectomy and chemo and she's now left quite debilitated but recovered. I live abroad with my partner, so I have to travel every other month back home to see her. My mum's sister and her husband live near her and are there if she needs anything. In the last two years, we have noticed how mum isn't really safe home alone anymore, she has fallen a few times in the past and injured her knee. The problem is that mum is struggling mentally with all the bad things that are afflicting her and not coming to terms with the fact that she needs support. She lost her parents young and I think she grew up thinking she needs to hide any sign of weakness, especially mental health struggles. She's a serial liar and it is part of her persona to pretend that things are fine even when they aren't. My aunt is becoming increasingly worried about mum living by herself and even though she has only good intentions, she has become very pushy in regards to finding mum a carer which my mum completely opposes and they fight a lot over it. Personally, I'm struggling between agreeing with my aunt that mum needs care but also wanting to respect my mum's will to retain independence. I'm starting to feel like because she refused any sort of help (including psychological help) over the years. She's close to breaking down and perhaps she's already depressed. But she can barely walk, has incontinence, struggles to cook meals and wash herself. She takes our advice for a home carer as an imposition and opposes it with all her strength. I feel really bad for making mum feel like this but I also feel it's irresponsible to leave her home alone by herself. I suggested she at least starts some psychotherapy to work through her trauma and I hope she accepts to do that. Any advice on what to do in this situation would be greatly appreciated because I'm on the brink of losing it myself, I'm constantly stressed and anxious about the situation :(

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Things don’t get better from here.

my mom didn’t want a caregiver. I lived out of state. On a visit, I contacted an independent caregiver company. They were super. Gave my mom minimal hours to start. Of course she sent the caregiver home. But I kept pushing, Told her they were coming over anyway. As time went on , my mom needed them more and more and finally saw the value. I also got her a home alert pendant. She said she couldn’t afford it, I told her she couldn’t afford not to have it.

you have to be frank and assertive. You should also start looking at the next step of where your mom will live, when she can’t live alone. It sounds like she’s not far from that… I wish you blessings, my m9m was difficult. If she had only been more reasonable, things would have been better for her…
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You are not there and are unable to participate, though happily you do recognize that your aunt is right.
This is going to have an inevitable outcome either more or less disasterous. Meanwhile your Mom is not only limited for mobility, but it seems for mentation at least a bit, and with incontinence, which is a serious problem when you cannot keep up. I am assuming your Aunt is no longer young. Unfortunately she is, while helping and undoubtedly completely overwhelmed, enabling this. Were she to step away completely this would be one and done.
You Mom likely needs now to move into care. I doubt there could be in home care adequate for her staying in the home unless her financial status is fairly unlimited. You and Aunt need now to lay the law down to Mum together. Aunt needs to let her know she cannot go on as she is caregiving, and you need to let her know that she needs to be safe; you are far away and can't help.
I am so sorry it has come to this. And if Mum continues to refuse help I think that Aunt needs to back away and allow the incident that WILL happen TO happen so that Mum is in care and safe. We have seen this on Forum before. I am so sorry you are having problems getting your Mom to accept reality.
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sad1991 Mar 2022
Thank you for your response! Yes definitely, that's another aspect - my aunt is a fair bit younger than mum but not that young of course and she also has grand children she wants to spend time with. It's not fair for the caregiving to fall on her as my mum gets worse. She is able currently to have a caregiver at home but I do know eventually she will have to move to care :(
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Agreeing with your aunt is not disrespecting your mother. Mum can have the wishes she wants, but most of the time reality gets in the way of wishes.

If Mum is competent, you can't do anything. If she isn't, then someone needs to take charge and make these decisions for her. If you hire caregivers, make sure they know they work for YOU, not Mum, and she can't fire them.

Unless her home is wheelchair-friendly, I'd be looking for placement, because she'll be in one very soon.
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sad1991 Mar 2022
Thank you, I needed to hear this. I have thought about placement eventually, she has started using the wheelchair a bit although it's another thing she strongly opposes. My aunt even thought about taking mum to live with her but where they live isn't wheelchair-friendly at all whilst my mum's flat is on the ground floor.
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Certainly sounds like the time is past for mom to be able to successfully live on her own. I’m glad your aunt sees this clearly, she’s closer and has a good grasp on what she’s seeing. Though it’s hard to feel like you’re going against mom’s wishes, she’s not safe in the current situation. If she’s of sound mind you’ll have to wait for the fall so to speak, an incident that will force change, never easy but will happen. If she’s not of sound it’s time to make the decisions for her, despite the protests. If you and aunt prop her up less, it’ll haste the time that she’ll accept care
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sad1991 Mar 2022
Thank you for your reply, I see what you mean, we are both dreading that 'fall' and wish to prevent that if possible. We seem to have found someone and I hope that it will bring less struggle to her daily life so that in time she accepts it as being beneficial for her
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Thank you so much for your reply, this is what I'm hoping, that she will see the value in the caregiver and stop resisting it. I also agree, there is so much self-inflicted suffering that was unnecessary but only burdened her more on top of the other bad things that happened for her. I'm trying to get her to accept reality and find some peace and a balance even if things are objectively bad.
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I think psychotherapy is a wasted effort at this point. Your mother's age group views such things (normally) as a stigma, especially since you say 'she grew up thinking she needs to hide any sign of weakness, especially mental health struggles.' Why then, now, would she be agreeable to 'psychotherapy'??

You should probably go visit mom and see for yourself what your aunt is talking about and look into getting her placed. Of course your are stressed and anxious about the situation, who wouldn't be? If you are POA over mom, then YOU are the one who gets to make these decisions for her if she is incompetent to do so, which it sounds like she may be. Being incontinent, unable to cook and wash herself sounds like she's unsafe to live alone and 'what's best' for her is to have help. Be it in home help or to live in managed care, she needs help. At some point, respecting your mum's will to retain independence has to be overlooked when you KNOW she's unsafe! If/when she falls and gets rushed off to the hospital, it is very likely they will refuse to release her to live alone ANYWAY, and then the choice is taken out of her hands! If you go speak to her in those terms, perhaps she will agree to get the help she needs NOW, before the choice is taken away from her.

I see that you seem to have found someone to help your mom...........good news! I hope it all works out. Good luck!
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sad1991 Mar 2022
Hi, thank you for your response! I didn't mean psychotherapy alone, I'm 100% pushing for her to have someone looking after her every day but I thought about the psychological aspect because I know she is resisting it due to the trauma of losing her independence and 'herself'. She is far from having dementia or anything like that, her main issues are physical :(
She now has someone at home we are trying to make it work and I will visit soon
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dear sad,

hug!!
(i haven't read through the other replies).

sorry to hear you (and your mother) are in this situation.
i'm in a similar situation -- LO (sound mind) screaming against any solution i come up with.

just like you, i want to balance respecting her wishes vs. taking safety action. (my solution? i try to find techniques to convince her, to try various solutions. i also back off sometimes, because i need to work on my life, and anyway she's against my solutions. HOWEVER, as is true for many of us, all emergencies/problems land on us. hence preventing problems is a very good idea ---- for them, and for us).

-------
my proposed solution, for you OP:

say you have a "friend" who wants to help out.
actually the "friend" is hired help (make sure it's someone trustworthy/competent. some caregivers are thieves; some are negligent/uncaring. we went through bad ones, now we have fantastic caregivers).

your mother might accept help from a "friend".

your mother might be embarrassed to allow others see her in this way (incontinence, etc.).

poor her.
it's really not easy, for anyone, to get older. some people have luck, and it's not that bad.

----------

a side-comment here, which is not related to your question OP.

i'm so surprised at HOW MANY elderly people (sound mind) fight their adult children like crazy, regarding very wise, safety ideas.

maybe we (when we're older), will do the same.

------although i have another theory:
many of the elderly LOs (sound mind) screaming and fighting against our wise solutions, NEVER themselves took care of their elderly parents (maybe the parents died young; whatever reason).

i do believe actually, that many of us taking care of our elderly LOs, will not behave in the same way, when it's our turn.

in addition, we (through all our helping) have become EXPERTS in beds, mattresses, walkers ----- we could pass any quiz with FLYING COLORS.

hug!!!

strength and honor (a motto i like).
:)

bundle of joy :)
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Your mother needs hands-on help now. She also needs psychotherapy. Try to get the carer (caregiver) into her life first though.
You and your sibling have a talk with her. Ask her if she would have denied the two of you care when you were kids if you said no to it.
Let her know how much it hurts the two of you to see her living like she is in a dirty house, incontinent and unable to keep herself clean, and not eating well because she can't do for herself.
She's your mom and you love her and she needs to know how it's breaking your hearts to see her suffer because she won't accept help.
I think your mom will consider help if you tell her this way.
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Your instincts are correct - you Mom needs help and living alone is a recipe for disaster. Please hire someone who is a good fit for your Mom. I understand this is a huge undertaking since you live abroad but it's a matter that must be attended to ASAP. Ignore your mother's protests. Anyone would want to remain in their own home with no help from "strangers" so your mothers attitude is very normal. Once she has help and "clicks" with her caregiver, she will see the value in it and her life will improve substantially. This worked like a charm with my own mother - she grew to love her caretaker and looked forward to her being there each day, and all of us were much happier.
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Get your mom a social worker who can help with elder services . Speak with your Mothers Primary physician and get Healthcare proxy . Explain you are worried about the falling and get a medical alert bracelet . The social worker can contact elder services and get house cleaning , a grocery shopper . meals on wheels for Lunch and a CNA To Bathe her . The Primary care Physician may able to get a Visiting Nurse to come in and check on her also . There are services and resources available learn how to use them for her . The social worker will help immensely .
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LakeErie Mar 2022
Where does one find a social worker? I’m not able to get anyone to even call me back.
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I was living abroad when my mother faced similar challenges. I couldn't come home frequently and although my mother was adamant she didn't need help, she did.

You will feel less stressed and your mother will be safer if you get her home care. It isn't your mother's choice anymore. You wouldn't leave a child on their own as they wouldn't be able to care for themselves and your mother is in a similar position now.

I would start with physical help before mental help. I say this as she needs to be in a safe environment before she starts to deal with her mental state.
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sad1991: Your mother no doubt cannot live independently any longer. Perhaps on one of your monthly visits a social worker could provide excellent advice. Prayers and hugs sent.
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When you go to visit soon, it might be a good idea to talk to your aunt and uncle first, and then go altogether to visit your mother. Your aunt and her husband should work out their own boundaries (which include their willingness to be so worried). What will they do if your mother falls and breaks a bone? Will mother expect them to move in with her – or have her move in with them? What will you do? Can you drop everything to be there for a considerable time? And what about your own worries?

That’s what you then talk about with your mother. This is one time when ‘ganging up on her’ is a good idea, because you three are the only ‘gang’ she has.

Find out about the other options as well. A caregiver can only do so much in the time that she is there. Is that going to be enough? Would AL be more appropriate? Or a group home?

This is always a difficult situation, even if you are on the spot. Present the problems seriously to your mother, don’t accept ‘I’ll sort that out when it happens’, and try to get your mother to use her brains! That's what you can respect about her, not denial that doesn't add up.
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your mother needs 24/7 care if she’s a fall risk..she is having trouble with all Activities of daily living (ADL’s). So either she goes to facility or has 2 12 hour shifts of caregivers…which can get complicated since they might not show up & some family member has to supervise, get supplies, pay bills buy food, prepare meals, wash clothes, etc etc etc…it’s a lot to manage from far away. Forget about the psychotherapy..that would be a waste of time…she needs different kind of help. Get her tested for dementia by neurologist.
Hugs 🤗
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"needs care but also wanting to respect my mum's will to retain independence"

Aunt is advocating at the 'duty of care* end. She sees it as her family duty to protect her sister. But too much protection could lead to overriding Mom's rights to choose.

At the other end, too much freedom - allowing Mom her choice to refuse care could head into neglect.

Now there is no legal *duty* here. (Unless Mom has been deemed mentally incapable & a POA or Guardian is in charge of her affairs). We are talking more about ethics. Aunt feels it is unethical to leave her home alone when it is clear she cannot look after herself. Aunt has every right to install boundaries & not become Mom's maid. To not enable a *farce of independence*. So she has turned to you with hope for action. But you have no more power than she to force change...

I have been in a similar place.

My LO could no longer self care. It was obvious to others, but not to her. There were falls but no immediate crises of house fire, wandering or med mismanagement. No big crises to force change..

I too felt a moral obligation to not let her stay home dirty etc. I sought a LOT of advice.

Dr noted 'lack of insight' (med term anosognosia). Not saying your Mom has that but may be interesting to read up on.

So that advice would be for your Aunt. She can say what she will do & leave the home help brochures for the rest. Eg Leave a cleaning agency phone number, don't BE the cleaner. It is kind of a life teaching method.
(Obviously not leaving her in a dangerous way, eg without food, water, heating, power).

The big thing will be stay on the same team as your Aunt. She is the boots on the ground & you are both lucky to have her nearby. If you can get a plan & work together you will do well.

If Aunt gets overwhelmed & starts blaming you, try to refocus back to Mom's care. Explain you are as limited as she is.

My LO (who says she lives independent) was described by a social worker as *living alone, dependently*.

That took a while to wrap my head around. Would that describe your Mother yet?

PS
"She takes our advice for a home carer as an imposition and opposes it with all her strength".

If she can change her thoughts to *a home carer will help me stay in my home longer*...

Coz that's the truth.
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Don't prop Mom up in her current situation. When Mom can't keep herself clean and safe, she is no longer independent. Life alerts are cheap, but her sister needs to be the responder because she lives close by. If Mom refuses to use it tell Auntie to have Mom call 911 when she falls or needs help. That creates a legal record which you may need to get her into long term care. Taking care of our elderly loved ones doesn't mean doing what they want, just as caring for a child doesn't mean doing what they want. We all need to remember that, but also act with love.
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Next time mum falls, please make sure she is admitted to the hospital for evaluation and treatment. The doctor can evaluate, diagnose and treat mental health issues as well as the need for increased caregiving - usually in a residential facility/home.
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