Showing posts with label family memories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family memories. Show all posts

Saturday, January 24, 2015

Taking Care of My Grandfather: Guest Post

Janeen at Strawberry Crest High School
This was a simple assignment I gave at the beginning of January at the high school where I have been assigned as a substitute for the month of January until the school can hire a new teacher. 

What is the greatest gift you have been
given and what are three reasons why?

I was very surprised to get this heart-warming answer from sophomore Janeen, who has as a career goal to be a Cardiovascular Surgeon. For a summer she received the gift of helping to take care of her grandfather who passed away two years ago. She is so glad she did and her memories of helping him are amazing. This photo and writing are used by permission of her family. 

The best gift that I have received this year was being able to get through another year without my grandfather. Yes, it seems like a weird present to be grateful for, but when I explain more you will understand. When it came to my grandfather's death, everyone saw it differently. 

For me, I was relieved. You see, my grandfather had a disease called dementia, king of like Alzheimer's, but a little more complicated. In his last year I got to be by his side during the summer. At first it hurt, but then I got to experience the good--such as watching old westerns and hearing him laugh or when he lost his leg and cried in the ICU. Actually he let us get closer to him and take care of him. It really touched my heart.

So when he passed away of course I was sad, but at the same time, I was happy to know he isn't in pain anymore. Every year I remind myself he is okay and I will be too. 

Friday, March 14, 2014

Traveling With a Dementia Loved One

Sunday dinner after church
with brother, hubby
and Kenny pictured at
Grandmother's House
Restaurant in
Owens Crossing, AL
Kenny, hubby and myself went to northern Alabama to visit my brother and his family. We started out on a Saturday, March 7th, with Kenny sharing the driving and the load of caregiving for my husband and came back on Thursday, yesterday. This year we drove straight through both days. In March of 2013 my husband and I made it a two-day trip each way. See HERE. We didn't know Kenny then, and hubby had not gone downhill as much as this March.

We woke in our own bed this morning. I started unpacking suitcases. What are those suitcases for? hubby wanted to know. He had forgotten about our trip.

Freshly groomed dog
We just got back from being at my brother's house in Alabama, was my reply. Hubby got a quizzical look on his face. Later today we picked up our dog from the kennel.

Wear and Tear on Hubby. While this trip was wonderful for me, it was hard on hubby. He had a calendar with the daily events on it, but let me know I didn't make sense. At times he was angry with me, but I have learned to stay calm. Bathroom issues came up--where was it and would he get there in time. This was not his home, the place he is used to. However, my brother and sister-in-law's home does have a convenient elevator that was so useful for my husband. He did fall Sunday morning, but was okay when Kenny and my brother got him up from the garden.

Family. I had a couple of goals for my time away. First and foremost I wanted to enjoy my family, and that did happen. Who knows when I will be able to see them again? Several nights my niece and nephew came over to my brother's home along with their families.  Kenny interacted seamlessly with my family who really came to appreciate him.

Activities. At times Kenny stayed with my husband while I did things with my family. Kenny stayed with hubby while I heard a special violin concert by a four-year-old, daughter of my niece and her husband. Another highlight was hearing my nephew teach an adult class Wednesday night at his church while Kenny was with my husband.  One day  Kenny went off sight-seeing with our car, and hubby missed Kenny. I was able to get a lot of sewing done that day. I wanted to be able to sew on a quilt of my husband's grandchild's and I was able to finish the patched front side with my sister-in-law's sewing machine. My time at home is so limited and getting to sew on an important project was such a delight. When this quilt is done, I will post in here.

YouTube Raps. This is the niece and nephew that made me MC AC The Rap Lady on YouTube. My nephew recorded three more of my raps while I was there, and my niece showed me how to use iMovie to post raps on You Tube. Together we posted "Cell Phones". Now the ball is in my court to put up more raps. It will be hard work, but my niece and nephew really do not have time to do this. I have the computer now that has iMovie. Can an old lady such as myself learn iMovie?! Hope so!

Honor. Early in the time away on my iPhone email I realized that my book, Getting Off the Niceness Treadmill, had been reviewed by a favorite author, Aimee Byrd, HERE. What an honor! I posted posts of her book on my theological blog earlier.

New Fellowship. A special highlight of the trip was the fellowship I had in a ladies Sunday School class at my brother's church. The teacher had read my book and the ladies wanted to hear me rap as I had last March! I did that and essentially the leader let me teach the class. I did have Scriptures ready. I shared prayer requests for my husband, my dissertation on caregiving and the rapping channel. Then they shared prayer requests with me. We will keep up with one another. Tuesday morning while Kenny was with hubby, my sister-in-law and I had breakfast with most of those ladies (there are seven in all whose prayer requests I have added to my prayers). Then my sister-in-law and I went to an estate sale where I found a bird house for Jake's collection.

Prayer. Pray for Kenny as he has medical issues coming up. Pray for my other sister-in-law in California who had surgery today. Prayer is such a special privilege and I am excited to have seven ladies in Alabama who now pray for my requests in their southern accepts and MC AC prays for them as well.

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Interview of Karen, Caregiver for Her Mom

Karen and Her Mom
When Karen sent me two pictures, she said that even after taking care of her mom who had Alzheimer's the last years of her life, she can only remember her mom as happy. At the bottom is one of her parents she says--"happy times". 


Karen and I met somehow in the Alzheimer's caregiver blogging world. She would write on my blog and I would write on hers. She always seemed so lovely and was willing to let me interview her.

Carol: How long did your mother have Alzheimer’s and how did you come to live with your mom?

Karen: In total I believe that Mom had Alzheimer’s ten years or more while we lived with her. I was 4 months pregnant with my son when my dad died and she went right into baby-sitting. I got a divorce when my son was 4. Mom babysat for me while I worked and my son loved her so when I divorced we got our own place but my son wanted to stay with Mom. I figured why pay rent! Why not stay with mom all the time! So we moved in with her. She told me once that my son saved her life. She said she would have died without my son to care for! Mom and I were best friends. It was perfect. I did not date until after my son was in college. I just was so content with our life.

I drove a School bus and worked in the school kitchen when my son started school, so we would have the same hours. He rode a different bus than mine and Mom would be on the front porch at 3:00 waiting for him everyday. When he started middle school, I started driving a transit bus full-time for more money. I did that for three years. That is when mom‘s Alzheimer’s started.

As she got worse, my son would come home from school and find her walking down the street or at a neighbor’s house and not really remembering why she was there. As he got older she was not eating, not bathing and hoarding stuff in her room. She called my brother and sister all day and me at work over and over. My sis worked nights but she started coming over to care for her in the day while I was at work.

Anyway she got worse and worse. After months and months and years of decline she would not get up to go to restroom or do anything for herself. I would get up at 4 am to have her ready for my sis to come in after work to care for her.  Then I would go to work. That was not working for anybody. So I went back to being a part-time School Bus Aid. It just got worse. My sis was wearing down working nights and here during day and I was too from being here the rest of the time and working. My brother helped when we asked and he tried hard, but he is a guy and he felt awkward with Mom’s personal needs. He had to work too. Finally I gave up and became her full-time caregiver.

Carol: So the caregiving role just developed over time and anyway you were living with your mom. Your relationship with your mom seemed so mellow.

Karen: The reason our relationship was so mellow is that I am the baby of the family and my dad was a truck driver—we were used to each other and my sis and brother were grown and gone seems like forever and it was just she and I. We were best friends. I wanted to be with her more than with my girlfriends.

Carol: As the situation changed with the Alzheimer’s entering the picture was it hard to maintain the mother/daughter relationship?

Karen: Over time I lost the daughter mom dynamics. I went from daughter to caregiver. I regret that. I bossed her around so often and now I try to remember if I gave her any loving and did I talk to her in her last stages?  Or, did I just go through our routine of sleeping, eating, bathing, getting out of bed?

Carol: How long did you take care of her full-time after you quit work?

Karen: About four years at the end of her life.  

Carol: You didn’t seem to have much of a break in your caregiving from what I can tell on your blog. Was it stressful?

Karen: I remember sometimes I would be so stressed I would get in bed with her and lie beside her and just cry--wanting some love from my mom. But I don’t' think I gave her enough love.

Carol: Why do you say that?

Karen: Mom became like a child, and then a nothing--she was just there. NO words--never moved. I had to do everything. I hope your husband stays hard to handle because that means he is still “in there”. Hard on you, Carol, but better than his not responding to you anymore, I think.  Your husband might be hard to handle but he still argues and talks back to you a little so you know he still is thinking about stuff.

Carol: I am still fortunate after five years. We do talk and he tells me he loves me and I tell him I love him. Our routines are getting past the stubbornness. He is really not hard to handle, and I do have a volunteer caregiver neighbor who helps out when he can.

Carol: What was it like—switching roles?

Karen: At first she was very independent as far as paying bills and handling her money. She wanted to keep taking care of money matters, but she was writing checks wrong and not keeping up with the bills or losing them. So that was hard. I had to ask her, Mom, do you want me to write the checks for you? And at first it was no then later not now and then she would say later for like months. Then she got to where she would say yes. She always had to have lots of cash in her purse but was losing it. She would want to get $500 out of bank every month but not take care of it. She could not drive. Never did so and that was a blessing because someone would have to take her to the bank. We finally talked her into just getting $200 out. Very slowly she would give in to letting me do more.  As the disease got worse, the more I could do for her.


Carol: I have taken clues from others. I happened in our case that when I retired from full-time teaching, my husband fortunately turned finances over to me because he would work for another year. I still compliment him for the fine budget spreadsheet he set up that I follow. He caught me on-line banking and so I write very few checks. At times he asks to be informed. Also taking clues from others in the blogging community, my husband still has a wallet, a driver’s license that he doesn’t use and a key to our car.

At one time you placed your mother in a nursing home. What happened to bring her home?

Karen: We could not pay for another placement. She had too many assets according to DHS and not Medicaid to pay for bills--just Medicare. We lived paycheck to paycheck but she had two houses and they had to be out of her name for 5 years before she would be able to get Medicaid. If she had only had the one home I think she could have gotten it. But one house was rented and so we would have had to sell it and use up all that money before help. She did not want to sell it. It is a long story but she gave it to my sis. And she gave her house to me. But not on paper--just in the will. First thing we did wrong was not to get the titles transferred officially. It is hard but you need to explain to your parents that everything has to be out of their names and in yours for over 5 year now for them to get any government help. And if you are not rich, you will need help or have to live paycheck to paycheck like us. I cashed in my IRA and teachers retirement to pay off any outstanding bills and we used her and my savings as we went along when her Social Security check was not enough.

Carol: Name some extraordinary stress you encountered living this way.

Karen: She got so hard to care for that I bought a van with a wheelchair ramp and took her into see doctor for years, She would yell and scream and it got harder and harder. They put her on Alzheimer’s meds to slow it down and she was in the early stages for years with slow changes.  The mid stages were about 3 to 5 years.  The last stages were around 2 more years. But it was awful. We had to do every thing for her she did not help to do anything anymore. My cousin said to ask for Hospice to come to house. I said, No, she is not ready to die. My cousin said they would come if her doctor agrees with it and she does not need to be near death. Well I asked her doctor and they called Hospice.

To keep Hospice there has to be a decline in a patient every 3 months. Well it was slow but she did decline some. And hospice was so nice and wanted to keep coming. They paid for everything--all her needs. All I had to do was buy food. Thank goodness for them. It was great. They did take her off blood pressure and Alzheimer’s meds but she was never in pain--they made sure of that. She had Arthritis really bad so they kept her pain free. They came twice to 3 times a week depending on her condition. She would have a bad day or week and they would ask me if I wanted them to take her to hospice,  but she would come out of it. This happen at least 3 times in the almost 2 years they were coming.  But then she got Aspiration Pneumonia. Everything she ate or drank went in her lungs. She was choking on everything. They gave me options to take her to Hospital and she might get better but she would no longer be on Hospice or I could send her to Hospice and they would make her comfortable and let her go peacefully. I gave in and we took her to Hospice. It was awful. She was so sick. And I was so tired. I just needed sleep. The first night at Hospice I sleep on sofa all night. First all night sleep I had in years! The next day they said she coughed all night and I told them I did not hear her cough once. Can you believe it!  I slept though her coughing all night. Not good.

When she went to Hospice she had no pressure sores. I worked so hard to keep her turned and clean. I was so proud. That is the only thing I am proud of. I was not nice enough to her, I felt—it was just so hard. I just changed her diapers got her up, dressed, and fed her  like a robot . We had a routine and it never changed except on the days the Hospice Aid or Nurse would come.

Carol: Looking back, what advice would you give someone taking care of his/her parent with dementia?

Karen: If you are going to care for a love one fulltime, have the finances in order. Call an Elder Attorney. Ask for help. Get all the info you can get. And if you can, try not to be the fulltime caregiver.  Be the daughter or son and let someone else be the caregiver. I believe if she had been in a nice assisted living home, I would have loved to come visit her as a daughter--never a caregiver.  It would have been wonderful to have someone able to care for her at home while I worked. We could all be her kids and she our mom. I missed all the years we could have had in the later years because I was her caregiver and not her daughter. You can't get them back.

Carol: Since your mother died, was it hard to get back into the work force?

Karen: I used my recent experience. After she died I went to Lifestyles to work. It was working with people who have disabilities. All ages. I just helped them live on their own. I took them shopping and out on the town.  I helped them with chores or just ran errands. I did that for the first year, but I needed to get away from caregiving all together. I am a Courier now. I am driving again. I love to do that. I run in and out of clinics and banks picking up and dropping off stuff to them. Love it.

Carol: What a pleasure it has been to hear your story! You were an awesome daughter and maybe didn’t give yourself enough credit for the difficult job you had. Your advice is timely for others who read this blog. Thanks so much, Karen!
One of Karen's Favorites of Her Parents

 





Tuesday, January 14, 2014

How a Dementia Brain Is Working Now


  • Hubby thinks he needs extra protection. I had a police officer talk with him and then he stopped  this obsession.
  • He tells the waitress that the same couple sat there three days in a row; waitress didn't verify and of course it wasn't true. 
  • He believes that he has been in his new doctor's office before, whereas I know he hasn't. 
  • Recently he called me mommy and said he was sad because I was up early and wasn't going back to bed. That was only once and I do hope he meant that I "mother" our dog. We go to bed so early and I am an early riser now. Early morning I can write better than late at night. 
  • He confused sisters and wives. He thought he had three sisters. He still knows I am his wife and that he has two adult children with his first wife. He feels related to relatives that call or that he sees often. 
  • He has difficulty understanding why he hobbles when he walks. He tells someone it originally was a military injury, but I have never heard that before. 
  • DH thinks a barber shaved his head, but his thin hair was always sticking out and I was the one to give him that bald look with a trimmer. 
  • He is increasingly stubborn. The shave is easier, but not always his shower for me; when Kenny is sick as he has been lately, it is my turn to get the shave and shower done. Sunday morning Kenny surprised us and VERY SMOOTHLY took pills with my husband. This is their "pill pippin' buddies" routine where Kenny takes his pills at the same time. Then Kenny easily gets my husband into the master bath for a shave and shower. He has the touch. I appear to be the nag for my stubborn husband. 
  • He forgets that we have a different car that we purchased last month. 
  • He asks where we live and how we came to live in our home. 
  • He can't keep track of relatives he doesn't see often. I have too many relatives, he says. Have I really been married three times? 
  • How remote controls work and how to put in his false teeth are starting to be a concern for my husband. 

I adjust to what he says and does and do not argue with him. I am rejoicing that I have hubby walking and still at home. 

We changed health insurance in 2014 because I felt there are more benefits for my husband's dementia situation. Monday the new doctor asked hubby to take off his shoes so he could inspect his feet since hubby is a type-two diabetic. I was impressed. Previous doctors have not done that. I told the new doctor how, since anesthesia makes the Alzheimer's worse, we have avoided surgery  on my husband's knee and how the chiropractor has helped him. Even though admittedly husband is in a middle stage of dementia and losing memory and function after five years, the doctor felt that he should continue the Exelon patch and of course Namenda. 


Me: Did I put your patch on this morning?
Hubby: You must have because I am not leaking anywhere! 

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Grandparents' Day

Poster from media-cache-akl.pinimg.com
I received a challenge from Esther at Caring Across Generations in a comment with a recent blog post:

  Write a post about grandparents for 
National Grandparents' Day September 8, 2013. 




So here goes. I decided to write for the grandchild and others who want to know how to interact with their grandparent/friend who has Alzheimer's or who is getting up there in years. 

It is difficult to talk with your grandparents who may not remember what you are saying if they have dementia. They may have Anosognosia Dementia and not know they have memory problems such as our friend has; anosognosia has caused so much confusion for our friend and causes so much grief for his granddaughter. The grandparent may not remember what they ask you and how you answer. Be patient with them when they ask again. They have emotions and the emotional connection of just being with you is so important. We have discovered that emotions live on even if memory brain cells do not.  Get over being annoyed. They can't help it. 

Visit them or spend time with them. I realize this is so difficult for many families. Those grandparents are most comfortable in their own home, but make family holidays special while you can.  Ask to hold their hand if that is comfortable for you. Emotions count! We enjoyed so much spending last Christmas with family and may not always have the luxury of traveling to do that. When you are with them do not spend all your time on you phone or electronic device. Be with them even watching a TV program with them.  My husband's son calls him often and this is a joy to my husband hearing about his grandchildren and great grandchildren. 

Find out what you can do with them. Go with them to a restaurant or a park or a movie. Invite them to your sports event as my husband's granddaughter did for her gymnastics event. Enjoy their smiles. Take pictures with them.  When my husband's ex-brother-in-law mows our lawn, we take him to eat or we have a meal with him at our home. This provides happy times for my husband.

Outings and special chairs.  My husband has favorite chairs everywhere he goes. He has a place he sits at the grocery store and knows he can call me on my cell if he feels I am taking too long. He has a comfortable chair at church that everyone knows is HIS chair. He has a chair at Toastmasters when we go there and my Toastmaster group allows him to be a permanent visitor. As the disease progresses, the grandparent will not be able to enjoy outings, so as a grandchild you need to plan now what to do with that grandparent before that disease progresses and how he/she will be comfortable on the outing.

Do not write off the old person. Years ago I was in a hospital room when a granddaughter broke down at the deathbed of her grandmother. She had to leave the room to cry saying she wished she had spent more time with this loved one as she had wanted. I grieved with her. As the sign above says, "Do something today that your future self will thank you for."

Send them notes. When they give you a gift, they are part of the older generation that expects thank you notes. They may have a fixed income, and plan for your gift. They may not text or receive email anymore for those gift acknowledgments. Receiving a note they can see again and again goes a long way. 


I absolutely loved being a granddaughter and as the oldest grandchild on both sides of the family have many memories that I included in my book, Getting Off the Niceness Treadmill, for the next generation.  After that book was published my cousins contacted me with more stories of our grandparents. Years later a letter I mailed my grandmother when I was a child was returned to me after that grandmother died.  Apparently she treasured that letter.

As a caregiver for my husband who has mixed dementia, I also am privileged to have family care about me. Thank you all so much. I do very much appreciate your care for me, the step-grandmother, and love giver for my care receiver husband. 

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Road Trip With an Alzheimer's Husband


Road trip with an Alzheimer's loved one.  
When you travel with them, you notice more how the disease is affecting your loved one. We headed north to visit my younger brother, the rocket scientist, his wife and his extended family in Huntsville, Alabama. We rented a car because it didn't make sense to use our gas guzzler which has over 200,000 miles now.  The trip can take only one day, but with an Alzheimer's husband who would be impatient I drove a day and a half each way staying at a hotel each leg of the trip.

Our dog was dropped off at a kennel and Sally and Jake took us to Avis at the Tampa International Airport. When I was not visible to my husband while he was watching our luggage, it was great to have our friends with him. I went to Avis to arrange for the car. Priceline had reserved a $12 a day car for us. You could fit one piece of luggage in the $12 car and so we were upgraded to a more expensive car ($35 a day)--a Ford Taurus. It took some adjustment for me to use this car, but even my husband liked it. For example, I didn't know how to turn the volume down at first on the trip to Huntsville and how to plug in my iPhone for our playlists. When it came to buying gas, I had to have help.

On the way to Huntsville I entertained my hubby by asking him to shell peanuts for me. We also talked and I was able to use playlists on my iPhone. On the return trip, however, I knew how to turn the volume down and use the plug in for the iPhone thanks to the smarts of my sister-in-law. We listened to a variety of music on the radio and on my playlists, and talked repeatedly about our dog Ziggy. I let my husband choose the subject of conversation because it works out the best this way and I don't get his comments--Carol, you aren't making sense.

While at my brother and sister-in-law's home, we also spent three evenings with my niece and nephew and their families including three delightful children. We went to Unclaimed Baggage in Scottsborough where I spent a total of $10.44 on a dress and a scarf. We saw the movie "Quartet".

Hubby had many repeated questions for me while we were gone:
  1. Are we in a hotel? (We stayed at my brother's home.)
  2. What are we doing here?
  3. Is our dog in the kennel?
  4. What does our home look like?
  5. When are we going home?
Questions such as these, asked over and over, are pretty standard for this stage of Alzheimer's, and hubby didn't have his printed schedule on the trip, because he would be with me and I wasn't sure what would happen each day.

My rocket scientist brother works for a subcontractor at the large Redstone Arsenal and on Saturday he took us to see the nicknamed "Pentagon South" building he is moving into. We had to show IDs to get through the gate to the Arsenal and hubby and I handed my brother our driver's licenses. When It came time to get give our IDs at the gate, my brother could not find the driver's licenses with a thorough search of the car. Now hubby is so good at putting things away. Finally hubby checked his wallet and sure enough both of our driver's licenses were here! We all laughed including hubby, who still has his license for identification but chooes not to drive any more.  

Hubby lost his cell phone at a mall and security did see a local relative to call, my sister-in-law, called her and my brother went to get that cell phone. On the trip back home while I stopped at MacDonalds to get hubby to take his pills with food, I went to the rental car to get something and hubby forgot where I was. He used his cell phone to call me, getting my sister-in-law instead of me. She told him I must be around there somewhere. He must just press TALK when he calls me and usually I am the last number, although this time it was the sister-in-law.

At my brother's home I made hubby's coconut oil/dark chocolate fudge and I realize it does calm him down. I just packed coconut oil, dark chocolate and two ice cube trays and then made it at our destination as I have described on this blog.

As we traveled in Alabama I noticed signs of recession, with shops closed. However new Dollar General appeared in small towns along HYW 231.


Not open

Other changes. The price of gas dropped 20 cents as we entered Alabama. On the way home it was even 2 cents lower than that until we got to Florida. None of this phased hubby. Place as well as time has less meaning for him.  Alabama has radio and signs protecting drivers from distracted driving such as texting while driving, whereas Florida's signs emphasize the "Move Over Law" protecting officers parked by the side of the road.

Alabama Choleus, herbs, Breathless Blush Euyphorbia, and Hot Water Ble Lobelia
One place that was not closed was Pat's Secret Garden in North Ozark, Alabama. I have noticed and stopped at this garden shop for years on my travels to Alabama from Florida and it didn't show signs of slowing down at all and I bought the above plants. Pat herself told me to put the plants I purchased in the trunk and a day later when we arrived home they were fine, ready for my areas 8 and 9 projects at our home. Pat has a secret garden open April 15th to May 24th in case you are in the neighborhood.

Getting home we first picked up the dog, drove home and unpacked. Sally and Jake came over. Jake spent time with hubby while Sally followed me to the airport to turn in my Priceline "bargain" rental that totaled $344 including taxes and other charges for six days; then Sally brought me home while we talked for the whole ride about our husbands and the past six days we both experienced.  

Highlights of the trip included relaxed time chatting with family, going to church, beating my rocket scientist brother at Checkers at Cracker Barrel restaurant, and having raps videotaped by the niece and nephew who say they are putting it on YouTube under a rapper name they have chosen for me.

Hubby seems very contented at home now. Things are predictable to him and hubby is more predictable to me. So glad I got to see family and that we took this trip.