Introductions: Are you caring for someone with dementia?
My mother-in-law (MIL) had what was finally determined to be frontal temporal dementia. She had the disease from her 60s until she passed away at 86. My wife was especially involved in her mom's caregiving due to some serious denial in other family members and a GP who refused to diagnose, even when significant deficits were obvious (mistaking the UPS deliveryman for her husband and not knowing the difference between roads and sidewalks). The most unfortunate result of this, to me, was the lost time when my MIL and her family could have been having meaningful and important discussions about significant matters of importance to her and them.
In my wife's years of fighting her brain cancer, she, too, exhibited many of the aspects of mental degradation and physical losses one would affiliate with a dementia patient.
As an aside, for several years I worked for the national Alzheimer's Association raising money for their research programs nationwide.
I wish everyone struggling with this disease and their caregivers and families strength and peace.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Caregivers: Dementia Support Group.
Hi @jshdma - I agree with @IndianaScott and @hopeful33250 - I don't think God sends us those kind of tests. Your brother's situation sounds like one that you've dealt with for a very long time and it sounds as if it is deteriorating. I think Teresa's idea of contacting an attorney and a counselor is excellent. In addition to that, could you contact your local Council on Aging to see what other support services might be available - for him and for you?
@jshdma You are right in that "enabling is not the best way to go." Well said!
@hopeful33250 Teresa, the links you provided are interesting. My acupuncturist just recently told me that he had seen some research indicating that a ketogenic diet could help delay decline in cognitive function and even restore some cognitive ability in Alzheimer patients. I thought that was very encouraging.
@dorisena I think enabling involves the risk of actually teaching someone that anything he does is OK, whether it hurts him or hurts another person. No caregiver or relative should encourage this kind of action, if at all possible.
You know, @debbraw, I've heard many times that the kind of lifestyle that is good for the heart is also good for the brain. The gut-brain connection is probably stronger than we think.
@debbraw Good suggestions, which I would love to implement. Problem is--no family agreement. My sister will die for him, if that's what it comes to. If I drop out, that will happen. Indeed, there are support services, but my brother will not allow or accept anything. I used to go over and clean his apartment. Then he changed the locks and shut me out. So my sister is paying for maid service.
i also was told by a specialist that what's good for your heart is good for your brain.
Fine, debbraw. Let your sister pay for maid service. I doubt that your sister will actually die for him, but she can make a fool out of herself before she reaches a reasonable limit. I really understand the situation, as my sister-in-law enabled her brother who lived in a car with a dog and had her get his prescriptions for him. She finally got him some kind of assisted living until he died, but she kept his dog at her house for him. She already had a dog, in the house, of course. When your brother changed the locks, you were under no moral obligation to continue to be involved much. I reported a couple of relatives to the county health department because I knew they had programs to get involved and improve the lot of the people with dementia. One nurse went to court and got my aunt put in a nursing home because she was in bad shape and recognized no one. The nephew got access to the CD's and their savings disappeared, as well as a basement full of valuable antiques. That upset my sister, but I just laughed and was grateful the county took care of the couple.
Most of the time there is not family agreement to helping with care, so we do what we think is the right thing, including for us. My daughter, who manages my money and pays my bills, refused to allow me to contribute to my sister's benefit because my sister would have used it for her grandson who kept her in poverty most of the time. We must make decisions and not feel guilty. Dorisena
My late husband's grandmother lived in filth and poor eating habits and neither my mother or I could get him to put her in a facility because he knew he was getting everything she had left. and has already received title to her property. My sister died in squalor too terrible to repeat here, but I never saw it and knew I couldn't get involved, so I stayed out of it. For that my sister-in-law and her daughter criticized me repeatedly for not "helping" the situation and I knew that couldn't happen. She was diagnosed with Schizophrenia and had a number of chronic illnesses. There were mice in the refrigerator, I was told. Her husband was her caregiver and the county got involved because the mice came through the ceiling, which needed to be ripped out and repaired. The daughters live out of state. They are alcoholics and the entire family has OCD problems of some kind. I do not know how the surviving husband lives. I am living with sadness but not guilt. Dorisena
Thank you, Dorisena,. for your words of wisdom. As most people in these situations know, they give rise to a lot of guilt.