Littlejohn
New Member
- Location
- Canada
Thank you for that. My mother remembers the house and address where she grew up but not the house where she raised a family. Someone told me that the home they see is a vague abstraction, not an actual home they would know, but who really knows, I guess.It's good of you that you want to take your mother in. But you are right, you can't do it alone. It also sounds, no matter how much she wanted it and how much you wanted it, for her to have remained in her home. Many seniors with dementia want to go home. Yet they can get to the point that they don't recognize the home they lived in for years. They may revert to a home they can no longer see in their mind or their childhood home. It's not uncommon for someone with dementia to think their child is their mother, father, sister, brother. Because they have gone back that far.
It's also common for the burden to go to one person. Believe me, I know. She may need long term care. She may not be happy. Perhaps some medications can help but those are highly regulated in nursing homes. Sometimes end of life is messy like this. The lucky ones go in their sleep before they get too bad or just go really quickly. Don't put the burden on you that you can fix this because you can't.
So far she has mistaken me for her husband, her father and her grandfather, in that order. My wife said I must be aging really fast.
"Don't put the burden on you that you can fix this because you can't." That hit home. Thanks.