Here’s a quick update on my NAO, and a little longer update
on the things going on in my life. Feel free to skip either, or both, if you
must.
I can’t remember the last time I went two nights in a row
without drinking (though it was probably only a few weeks ago.) I woke up
feeling fine this morning, but I’m still in a grumpy mood. I’m sure that’s
because of the ongoing issues I’m having with the devices at work. We should be
fine tonight, but the weekend will be the real test.
My mother is in a memory care center at a nice retirement
facility in our area. Her dementia has been a growing problem over the past 10
years or so, probably brought on to her reactions to anesthesia she was
administered during various operations she’s had over that time. She went from
being mildly forgetful to noticeably unsure of most things over the past eight
years, but my stepfather was able to handle the issues and even hide them to an
extent. I don’t think he was purposefully doing this, and certainly not out of
any bad intent; he was in denial as to the extent of her growing problem and
saw it as just normal age-related forgetfulness.
Two years ago, early summer, mom had hip replacement surgery
and that led to a huge drop in her cognitive ability. It also led to an
increase in the anger issues that she’s really had all of her life. Whatever
filter had been working for her to maintain civility most of the time (with
some notable exceptions) suddenly expired and worked for less often. Sometimes
she’d be fine, but increasingly she was not. She would become irrationally
angry and mean, lashing out at whomever was around causing her annoyance. I
won’t go into details, but she went from making Christmas day (which she and my
stepfather insisted the family spend at their house) uncomfortable to damn-near
intolerable.
For the most part my stepfather was able to keep mom in
check, but last year he fell and suffered a series of small strokes, which put
him in the hospital and then in physical therapy. It quickly became apparent
that mom couldn’t stay at home on her own, and I started looking into having
her placed in care temporarily until my stepfather was healthy enough to come
home. He resisted at first, but when she wandered off from the hospital one day
for several hours when nobody could find her, he finally relented. (She was
fine, but it became apparent that she could do the same thing at night from
home, and anything could happen then.)
When my stepfather finally got healthy enough to come home,
he discovered quickly that he wasn’t going to be (or get) healthy enough to
resume taking care of mom. He couldn’t even drive himself anywhere, relying on
my stepbrother to get him around most days. I helped when I could, but working
full time in a new job made it difficult for me to be there much.
He visited mom almost daily until he got sick again. On top
of the other issues, he’d been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease a year
earlier, and during his stay at the hospital they discovered that he had
stomach cancer that had spread extensively. Knowing he didn’t have much time
left, he finally got motivated to get the legal documents done that would
ensure that mom could be taken care of. He died three days before mom’s
birthday (and a week after his own.)
There isn’t much that can be done for mom’s dementia, but
they have tried to regulate her bi-polar issues with meds. Once they realized
the extent of her issues, they were initially able to control her mood swings
and anger issues, but lately it’s been getting harder and harder to do.
Apparently one’s tolerance can grow towards these drugs and it becomes a
delicate balancing act between keeping her in a good mood and making her into a
zombie. Of course the alternative is that her moods aren’t controlled, and she
lashes out at people (thankfully just the staff so far) or things (like
recently kicking a refrigerator and hurting her foot.)
The wife and I go by most Saturdays to look in on her, unless
we’re out of town, and stay for about 10 or 15 minutes. When she’s in a good
mood we’ll stay a little longer, but lately she hasn’t really been in a good
mood. She wants to go home, which of course she can’t. Not only could she not
take care of herself to any degree, the house was sold after my stepfather died
to help pay for her care. Fortunately money isn’t an issue at this point,
although if she is around for another five years or so (which is very possible;
her physical health is pretty good) she’ll eventually run out of estate funds.
Then Medicaid (or Medicare, whichever is for retired people) will kick in, but
that will mean moving her to an actual nursing home. At the rate she’s going, I
doubt she’ll have enough cognitive function when that happens to be aware of
the change.
My stepbrother is in charge of the estate and of making the
medical decisions for mom, per my stepfather’s wishes, which is fine with my
sister and me. He keeps us informed and gets our feedback on anything big,
which is nice, but I have no desire to be the one in charge of that stuff.
Neither does my sister and she’s in Kentucky anyway so it would be a lot harder
for her.
I’ll update my NAO progress again soon, and if I have time
I’ll catch up with some other things going on.
I'm sorry to hear about your mom. But the interesting thing about this NAO post is, it wasn't about not drinking, and that's actually a positive thing. I of all people know it can be tough to skip the drinks. Keep it up, my friend!
ReplyDeleteThanks, James. Actually, when I decided to do NAO, and blog about it, I really thought I'd spend more time on the whole "not drinking" thing. Now it's just a vehicle for me to write about the other things that I kind of wanted to before, but never got the motivation to.
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