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I Feel so Awful….

hiya
hiya Member Posts: 110
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my DH is cognitively stage 6. He layers clothes, confuses hand cream for tooth paste, hasn’t known me for a long time, (though he likes me). When he is having a good day and 4 hour respite, it’s easy but he has to stay continuously busy which is hard. He loves the out doors, hasn’t wondered but daily gets cuts from picking leaves out of rose bushes. We have a lake that I’m concerned he will wonder close too so I’m always up and down. He is on medicine for agitation and anxiety. He sundowns most nights. We’ve decided it’s time for MC for safety and to give me time to enjoy our children. When it’s a bad day I’m ready…when it’s a good day I’m so guilty and upset. I know he is going to hate it initially. The guilt is awful. How did you take your LO’s the first day? I’m dreading it and it’s hitting me more than I thought it would.

Comments

  • Carl46
    Carl46 Member Posts: 784
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    My LO was taken by a wheelchair transport van, but if she had been ambulatory I would have driven her. She doesn't like it and neither do I, because we want to be together, but I know I have to do it. Caring for her 24/7 was killing me. I don't feel guilt, really, more grief that I have to live alone and she has to live in MC. I moved her on the recommendation of her doctor and mine, for her sake and mine. Sometimes, you just have to use the part of the brain that thinks and override the part that feels.

    I was having second thoughts the evening before she was to move. By morning, I knew I was right to place her. I was up most of the night, taking care of her. Every human being needs to sleep some time, and MC has a night shift.

  • SDianeL
    SDianeL Member Posts: 1,482
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    the facility will help you. They recommended to me that I should make up a fib. They recommended coming for lunch and having someone come with me. We told him that we were having lunch with my daughter’s friend. I did not tell my DH he was moving into MC. Once we were seated, my daughter and I left individually making excuses. I did not say goodbye. After we left, the nurse told him that I needed to go in the hospital and he needed to stay there. He was upset but they quickly distracted him. They recommended to wait 2 weeks before I visited. He settled in and was playing a game when I visited him the first time. He asked to go home and I said when the doctor says so. Part of the fib was true because I was being treated for cancer. It was the hardest thing I have ever done but I kept telling myself I was doing it for him. He received excellent care. Praying for your strength. 🙏💜

  • l7pla1w2
    l7pla1w2 Member Posts: 214
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    Yesterday was three weeks since I placed DW in MC. I know exactly what you mean about good days and bad days (or hours). When things are good, you think, "This isn't so bad." When things are bad, you think, "I can't move her into MC soon enough." I realized I couldn't keep going like this.

    DW is still trying to adjust to MC, and she talks about going home. When we're together, she talks about collecting items to take home. When she's kept busy and engaged by the staff, she's in a good mood. When she's bored by an activity, she's very unhappy. It's a roller-coaster of feelings for her and for me. But now at least I can have some control over my own life.

  • Old Iowan
    Old Iowan Member Posts: 13
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    I know it's hard but taking care of yourself so can take care of him and keep him SAFE IMHO is your priority - I had to place my DW in MC in January but I know she is safe and taken care of - Doing your best is all you can do - BEST WISHES to you & yours!!

  • BPS
    BPS Member Posts: 219
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    I took my wife went straight from the hospital to MC (she had a stroke and was in the hospital for over a month). I told her she needed therapy and she was ok with that. It has been a year and I visit most days and she still talks about going home and I go along with her telling her as soon as she gets the rest of her therapy then she can come home. It has been a year and she thinks it has been a couple of weeks. For me I always tell her when I am leaving and that I will be back later. Since she thinks she is there short term for therapy she is OK with that. I never thought a stroke would make things easier. Each situation is so different.

  • upstateAnn
    upstateAnn Member Posts: 129
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    You are not guilty. You are grieving.

  • Traveler18
    Traveler18 Member Posts: 21
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    Yes, when there isn't an "event" that triggers placement, the "where" and "when" are really hard. I had prescreened MC facilities so that I had a ranked list and was on the wait lists for them for when I was ready. I received a call from one that they had an opening and said thanks, I'll keep that in mind and hung up. Then thought, what the heck am I waiting for? This isn't going to get better (more down than up days) and it is taking a physical toll on me. So I called back and made a placement 7 weeks ago. It was really a matter of safety (and I love the prior comment on being the one-person MC center!). The weather was warming so he would be more likely to wander outside when he was up at 3 am, he was super restless so I couldn't sleep, he resisted care and I was the hated caregiver in his eyes. I agree with the prior note that I am dealing with grief not guilt. It had to happen at some point, so now is good before I get any more stress-related illnesses. It is a big change and it is hard, but there is a village on the other end who deal with this all of the time and can provide that 24x7 care. I'm not sure who your "we" is in this case - if he is aware, that is half the battle. You can be there for him - and you can be there better when you aren't a sleep-deprived spouse. Mine hated me by the time he moved, but loves me now and talks well of me (and he thinks the aides who provide personal care are crazy - paid trade-off! 😊) Good luck with the transition. Not easy, but one more adjustment to make it the best it can be for this phase of the disease. ❤️

  • Arrowhead
    Arrowhead Member Posts: 425
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    DO NOT FEEL GUILTY. Do what you have to do to get him cared for and to keep him safe.

Commonly Used Abbreviations


DH = Dear Husband
DW= Dear Wife, Darling Wife
LO = Loved One
ES = Early Stage
EO = Early Onset
FTD = Frontotemporal Dementia
VD = Vascular Dementia
MC = Memory Care
AL = Assisted Living
POA = Power of Attorney
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