Guest guest Posted July 20, 2005 Report Share Posted July 20, 2005 I read the email you sent to Trev. Boy did I need that today. You were right on with everything. My husband has LBD and one is good, 2-4 days very bad. I have finally gotten over the guilt, I hope, and realize that I need to start taking care of me too. My daughter talked me into going to CA next month with her for 5 days, I finally agreed to go and you have no idea how that light at the end of tunnel looks to me right now. I feel like I have been given new life. We have LTC ins. and it provides 21 days of respite care and I am going to start taking advantage of it. It will pay for 90% of his stay and I guess that's better than nothing. Anyway wanted to thank you so much. Re: New to your group Dear Trev, Welcome to the group. I am new too, and have already learned lots from others. I could relate to descriptions of your nursing home visits with your mother. Although I wasn't working fulltime like you. My husband has been residing in a nursing home for almost two years now. He has had a stroke, a heart attack, has diabetes, LBD, or as he said the other day, " You name it, I've got it. " There are a lot of people in nursing homes and they're not there because people don't love them. They're there because caregivers have limits. Everyone has to determine what their own limits are. When my husband was living at home, I didn't think it was not a safe environment for him due to his hallucinations, wandering, falls, insomnia, etc. It was just me and him and I became wiped out. Like your experience, it was the worst day of my life when I had him admitted to a nursing facility. I felt so guilty, I would spend the entire day with him. I'd go around 8:00 a.m. and stay until 8:00 p.m. Finally, after some particularly aggressive behavior involving his hallucinations, we had a patient care conference at the facility. The director of nursing listened to him and suggested ways to make his transition to living there smoother. Then she said to him, " Your wife's going to take a little time off now. " I realized that what I was doing wasn't good for either of us. We had to move off on different paths and establish different lives. It wasn't what we wanted, but it was what was. Since then, he's accepted his situation. The facility is small, everyone knows and loves him. I spend every afternoon with him (he sleeps all morning), and often take him out. The point is, we need to take care of ourselves as well as our LOs. We aren't any good to them if we are feeling exhausted, frustrated, or even resentful. I've heard people say that caregiving is like the announcement you hear on every airplane before takeoff: " Put your own oxygen mask on before helping others. " All caregivers need respite time off. You feel much more energized when you return. It must be frustrating if you can't rely on staff at your mother's facility to feed her. Can that be changed? That sounds like a battle you might want to pick with them. So take care of yourself, and you'll be better able to take care of her. Florrie ____________________________________________________ Start your day with Yahoo! - make it your home page http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs Welcome to LBDcaregivers. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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