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Betty, don't ever feel that you are boring folks! This site is a

life boat for many folks. I have been " lurking " myself lately as I

have alot going on and sometimes feel like I can hardly think

straight! Somedays the only thing keeping me going is Sandie and

Courage's antics and whoever they take along for their rides on those

days!! Sandie and a few others are better with words but I felt like

I had to reply. I think that sometimes just venting helps alot. My

mom has been almost secretive about my dad and that really concerns

me. Now that she is back in NY I feel like I am getting even less

info out of her than before. Beth(NY) got to spend a week with them

and was really shocked at my dads looks. Alot of weight gain, swollen

legs, his remaining teeth are becoming rotten, but as far as his

mental health she said that dad appears to be normal. She said she

could hear Russ now about how an LBD patient keeps up a front, but

Beth said he could pass for " normal " if you didn't know anything was

wrong. I'm very concerned about my mom, though, as she sounds just as

tired as she did before. She kept blaming it on the Southern heat but

I think she is just plain worn out. Be glad for the physical hugs, I

am so jealous of those going to the Conference in Aug. Oh, well,

someday my rowboat will come in and I can have my pick-up truck and

drive myself out that way and join Sandie and on their way up

to Canada! Be careful, Betty, and really watch out for your physical

and mental health. So many people are pulling for and looking out for

each other. Well, I'll quit rambling for now. Don't hide so long

next time!! Hugs and prayers, in hot, humid, muggy SC

> Hi All,

>

> So much has gone on since my last post, it is difficult to find a

starting

> point. What brought me back (there are many reasons) was a website

I found

> while browsing the AARP website. It is called Fathom and is an

online learning

> source. One particular article caught my attention and thought you

all might

> find it helpful. It is about stress and a " Quick Calm " way to

dissolve it. The

> lesson is also on audio. I'll list the link below. On the left

side of the

> Fathom home page, click on Health & Medicine. If you click on

either the

> Physiology and Human Biology or Mental Health link, it will bring

up the " Quick

> Calm " lesson. Hope you get some time to check out the other online

lessons.

>

> AARP: Fathom Archives

> http://www.aarp.org/tools/partner?

url=http://www.fathom.com

>

> I took a break on posting just after my mom had a heart attack in

mid-May. I

> have managed to finally catch up with all the posts. Lots of

newcomers in

> the last six weeks. It is great to see Russ continuing his

participation. This

> group has also been blessed by another generous & knowledgeable

soul, Geri.

> Thought I'd start at the beginning, some for the newcomers, and

some as I need

> the release.

>

> My mom, Marjory (79) was diagnosed with the general term 'dementia'

during

> the fall of last year. She has lived in my home since 1994, with a

two year

> break from '98 to 2000 when she went to live with my brother after

we had our

> first major mother-daughter argument. It was during this time when

she was

> drinking quite regularly that she had the first symptoms of visual

hallucinations.

> I found this out from her boyfriend who she stayed with every

weekend from

> Fri till Mon since 1994 up until January of 2002. She also drank

during on the

> weekends with her BF. When she was at home with me, she never had

anything

> around. During the fall of 2001, she was coming home from her

weekends with BF

> and began telling me bizarre stories of machines attached to

people's heads,

> nurses climbing in bed with them at night, among various other

hallucinations.

> As she was suffering these toward the end of the weekend drinking

bouts, the

> research I found lead me to believe she was having alcoholic

delirious

> tremens. This continued for several months until her BF asked that

she take care of

> her problem before spending anymore time at his house. At the time

of onset

> of these symptoms, he had just had his son with MS move into his

home, coming

> from Wyoming, giving up his independence. It also was the same

time Mom lost

> the last of her 4 cats (within one year), all living to be 18-19

years old.

> January 2002 I took Mom to the doctor, had MRI done, found low

thyroid and

> high cholesterol. With the advice of the Dr. to stop drinking, Mom

did so for

> about 7 months and then started again a month before I went to

Texas to see my

> dad in mid-September of last year. By the time I was to leave, she

was going

> downhill fast and when I returned, she was in a full blown

psychosis. For a

> month my home was the twilight zone with my mom as central

character. By the

> end of October, I had her admitted into a Gero-psychiatric ward in

a hospital

> in Seattle, about 90 miles from our home. She was briefly in

another gero-psyc

> ward before Seattle, a voluntary one, but she tried to escape the

first night

> and became violent with her hands and throwing chairs. Hence the

transfer to

> an involuntary unit. All the tests were run, she was placed on

medication,

> risperidone and Trazodone, and after two weeks, I was told she

should go into

> 24 hour care. I brought her home.

>

> Fortunately, I had scheduled surgery for the beginning of October

on both my

> feet. I knew I would be off work for several months so I had time

to decide

> what to do with Mom. He motor symptoms became progressively worse

with her use

> of risperidone.

> She needed help dressing, bathing, etc. In December, she had

cataract

> surgery. I definitely helped the visual hallucinations, but the

auditory ones have

> been with her constantly since the beginning. This could be due to

the fact

> she has severe hearing loss, hearing aids for both ears, (she'll

only wear one)

> and has isolated herself from social events as she cannot follow

> conversations well.

>

> My feet healed slower than anticipated and I didn't return to work

until

> March of this year. Then I only worked part-time in the afternoons

and evenings

> when someone would be there for Mom. I had given up a full time

management

> position to part-time sales at minimum wage. With my SO

(significant other)

> contributing and the meager contributions of the several young

adults living here,

> I figured we could make it work.

>

> I found this group on Feb 22 this year, Mom's 79th BD. It was a

gift from

> heaven for both her and myself. I need that gift again. My world

is crumbling.

> It has taken me three days to get this far on this post. Up until

about 6

> weeks ago, I was quite a regular on this site. My enthusiasm has

not waned

> since then; life has just been happening to fast. On a stress

test, I'm off the

> scale. There is not one situation that has happened, that hasn't

been

> followed closely by another. I barely adjust and find I have to

adjust again. There

> is a meaning to all this, it is not real obvious to me right now.

The one

> thing that is for certain, I've been cutting myself off from the

support I have

> needed so badly. No longer can I " do it all myself " if there is

any self left

> at this point.

>

> In May I had the honor of going to Sacramento, CA to a caregiver's

> conference. The highlight was meeting three fellow LBDCaregivers

there, Jan, Jim and

> . Before I left, my mom was at a very low point, sleeping a

lot and barely

> eating. It is so hard to know what is LBD and what could be signs

of

> something worse. While at the conference, my mom was taken to

emergency and

> discovered she had had a heart attack, in addition to having

extremely low blood

> pressure, pneumonia, and a firm diagnosis of emphysema. I changed

my tickets and

> took an earlier flight home. That goodbye hug from Jan has

sustained me for a

> long time.

>

> Mom was in the hospital for 8 days. When she came home, so did the

oxygen

> tanks and all the related trimmings. We had to use a nebulizer

with Albuterol

> for 4-5 times a day. The best thing that happened in the hospital

was Mom

> being taken off her previous meds, to be put on Exelon, what I had

been badgering

> her Dr. to try as it has taken a long time to get appt with

neurologist and

> with heart attack, had to be delayed again. It is scheduled in

another few

> weeks.

>

> Three weeks after being home, Mom took herself off the oxygen. She

had been

> doing it secretly for several nights. An appointment at the Dr.

later that

> week showed her oxygen saturation a 96% at rest and 94% after

walking up and

> down the hall. He said as long as she doesn't have any angina or

shortness of

> breath, she could stay off. All the equipment is still here, just

in case. The

> same day she stopped the oxygen, she started smoking. It has been

downhill

> since. At first, I tried limiting the number of cigarettes she had

per day.

> This got to be a real drag.

> no pun intended. Mom has been a smoker for 65 years and I am now

learning

> that it is her only true love. When given a full pack, she will

smoke one after

> another. The loss of oxygen has only served to increase her

auditory

> hallucinations. I quit giving her a full pack. Now she

constantly, and I mean

> constantly goes to everyone in the house, and who comes to the

house, asking for

> cigarettes. Last week she told me she wasn't going to eat what I

made her for

> meals as I was poisoning her. Then she quit taking her Exelon and

Synthroid.

> So, I quit giving her cigarettes. She didn't get dressed for two

days, and

> wouldn't eat. Last night my son brought over some hamburgers and

got her to eat

> one. Then she took her pills. Then she got a cigarette. This

morning she

> was up at her usual early time, (she had been sleeping in until

11am and after.

> She had breakfast and I coaxed her with a cigarette to get

dressed. I hate

> this! The very thing that makes her worse, she craves the most.

>

> So much for life with Mom and on to the imprisonment of Betty. So

much has

> happened around me that I have no control over, yet the effects

have been

> profound. I quit my job in May as the paperwork was complete for

me to be an

> independent provider of care for my mom. I began on June 2nd and

have yet to get

> my first paycheck. My SO (significant other) left at the end of

May, with no

> explanation, and eliminated the major financial resource this house

has

> depended on. My youngest son and his girlfriend moved out also in

June. That leaves

> me with my oldest son who works sometimes 14 hrs a day in

construction and

> his friend who works odd hours with the tides at his father's clam

& oyster

> company. There is virtually no assistance for me now when I need

to get away for

> any reason. Several weeks ago, I had cousins come to visit from

CA. One

> drove up with her son and the other I picked up at the airport in

Seattle. On the

> way home, the transmission went out in my car. It has been over

two weeks

> and the repair still hasn't been authorized by the warranty company

so that I

> can get a rental for a few days. Life has been difficult to say

the least.

>

> To top it all off, I have been in a deep depression. I increased

my

> antidepressant as I was only taking half the 200 mg dosage, up to

150 mg now. I'm not

> feeling much better, but not any worse either. I'm just waiting

for the next

> bomb to drop. I have to start finding ways to cut the budget

severely and

> part of that is giving up my health insurance. I was only paying

$75 a month

> for full medical, dental, & vision. The copay was nil as I was in

a preferred

> network. Now, after giving up full-time, I can pick up Cobra

coverage at $220

> a month. The is no question I can afford it when I don't know if I

can even

> maintain my mortgage payment. The loss of my SO was something that

had been

> occurring for years. It was my ex-husband of 23 years that had

been living

> here. To be honest, it was the final chapter of a story we've been

trying to end

> for several years. Although the stress of that relationship has

finally

> begun the healing process, but all the other consequences of that

finality have

> taken their toll. Wow, talk about rambling.....guess it all needed

to come out

> cuz, guess what? I already feel better after writing this. Hope

it didn't

> bore you to much.

>

> I could go on....but will save for other posts. This one is behind

me and I

> feel maybe it will be less of a battle from here on...with the help

of this

> group. I know I can't do it alone. Don't know why I tried. So

I'm back,

> perhaps a bit more humble, but like they say, it takes what it

takes.

>

> Love & Prayers to All

> Betty

>

>

>

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Guest guest

,

It was so nice to hear from you. I have followed both your and Beth's posts.

There were so many things I could relate to. The knowing without really

knowing. Those moments in time that are such blessings but beyond human

explanation, these I have experienced all too often and in many different modes.

I

speak little of them, there are too few who really understand. The secret is to

remain open and teachable. And it is wonderful when the spirit communicates

with messages unspoken. The subtle signs often come and go so quickly. I am

not surprised at what is going on in my life. It has been relayed to me in so

many different ways what my tasks would be and that I would be doing them

alone. OK, now what!!

Just taking it day by day and listening and watching and waiting and praying,

praying praying.

A trip to Canada sounds like a lot of fun. I even got out the atlas to see

exactly where Toronto was located. Just a hop, skip and jump across North

America.

I haven't raised any hell for a long, long time. Maybe it's just about time.

Glad to see you posting too. Take care of you and yours.

Love & Prayers

Betty

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Guest guest

Betty I'm so glad you have come back for some active support. I know

you've been busy with a lot of things but this is where we all

started and you're story I'm sure has made a lot of folks take a good

look at their own situations and make a collective sigh of 'thank God

that's not me' in addition to sending their love.

What can I say. In the words of my grandson, " That really sucks! "

Although this will undoubtedly make you a better person, (we're

promised that right?) the trip sounds like a real bummer.

It's hard when you've already met someone, especially someone of your

character and strength, because you know there's only one thing left

to do and that's give you a big hug. So here it is.....

(((((((((((((((((Betty))))))))))))))))

I know you don't need advice on how to handle things because you have

the knowledge and definately the brain to put it all to work. Keep

yourself centered, Betty. There's a plan...you know that, now you

have to trust it.

Post more often. It warms my heart to know you're reaching out to

your safe place.

A million hugs,

Jan

Sacramento CA

or something like that, guess we get busy and forget > So much has

gone on since my last post, it is difficult to find a starting

> point. What brought me back (there are many reasons) was a website

I found

> while browsing the AARP website. It is called Fathom and is an

online learning

> source. One particular article caught my attention and thought you

all might

> find it helpful. It is about stress and a " Quick Calm " way to

dissolve it. The

> lesson is also on audio. I'll list the link below. On the left

side of the

> Fathom home page, click on Health & Medicine. If you click on

either the

> Physiology and Human Biology or Mental Health link, it will bring

up the " Quick

> Calm " lesson. Hope you get some time to check out the other online

lessons.

>

> AARP: Fathom Archives

> http://www.aarp.org/tools/partner?

url=http://www.fathom.com

>

> I took a break on posting just after my mom had a heart attack in

mid-May. I

> have managed to finally catch up with all the posts. Lots of

newcomers in

> the last six weeks. It is great to see Russ continuing his

participation. This

> group has also been blessed by another generous & knowledgeable

soul, Geri.

> Thought I'd start at the beginning, some for the newcomers, and

some as I need

> the release.

>

> My mom, Marjory (79) was diagnosed with the general term 'dementia'

during

> the fall of last year. She has lived in my home since 1994, with a

two year

> break from '98 to 2000 when she went to live with my brother after

we had our

> first major mother-daughter argument. It was during this time when

she was

> drinking quite regularly that she had the first symptoms of visual

hallucinations.

> I found this out from her boyfriend who she stayed with every

weekend from

> Fri till Mon since 1994 up until January of 2002. She also drank

during on the

> weekends with her BF. When she was at home with me, she never had

anything

> around. During the fall of 2001, she was coming home from her

weekends with BF

> and began telling me bizarre stories of machines attached to

people's heads,

> nurses climbing in bed with them at night, among various other

hallucinations.

> As she was suffering these toward the end of the weekend drinking

bouts, the

> research I found lead me to believe she was having alcoholic

delirious

> tremens. This continued for several months until her BF asked that

she take care of

> her problem before spending anymore time at his house. At the time

of onset

> of these symptoms, he had just had his son with MS move into his

home, coming

> from Wyoming, giving up his independence. It also was the same

time Mom lost

> the last of her 4 cats (within one year), all living to be 18-19

years old.

> January 2002 I took Mom to the doctor, had MRI done, found low

thyroid and

> high cholesterol. With the advice of the Dr. to stop drinking, Mom

did so for

> about 7 months and then started again a month before I went to

Texas to see my

> dad in mid-September of last year. By the time I was to leave, she

was going

> downhill fast and when I returned, she was in a full blown

psychosis. For a

> month my home was the twilight zone with my mom as central

character. By the

> end of October, I had her admitted into a Gero-psychiatric ward in

a hospital

> in Seattle, about 90 miles from our home. She was briefly in

another gero-psyc

> ward before Seattle, a voluntary one, but she tried to escape the

first night

> and became violent with her hands and throwing chairs. Hence the

transfer to

> an involuntary unit. All the tests were run, she was placed on

medication,

> risperidone and Trazodone, and after two weeks, I was told she

should go into

> 24 hour care. I brought her home.

>

> Fortunately, I had scheduled surgery for the beginning of October

on both my

> feet. I knew I would be off work for several months so I had time

to decide

> what to do with Mom. He motor symptoms became progressively worse

with her use

> of risperidone.

> She needed help dressing, bathing, etc. In December, she had

cataract

> surgery. I definitely helped the visual hallucinations, but the

auditory ones have

> been with her constantly since the beginning. This could be due to

the fact

> she has severe hearing loss, hearing aids for both ears, (she'll

only wear one)

> and has isolated herself from social events as she cannot follow

> conversations well.

>

> My feet healed slower than anticipated and I didn't return to work

until

> March of this year. Then I only worked part-time in the afternoons

and evenings

> when someone would be there for Mom. I had given up a full time

management

> position to part-time sales at minimum wage. With my SO

(significant other)

> contributing and the meager contributions of the several young

adults living here,

> I figured we could make it work.

>

> I found this group on Feb 22 this year, Mom's 79th BD. It was a

gift from

> heaven for both her and myself. I need that gift again. My world

is crumbling.

> It has taken me three days to get this far on this post. Up until

about 6

> weeks ago, I was quite a regular on this site. My enthusiasm has

not waned

> since then; life has just been happening to fast. On a stress

test, I'm off the

> scale. There is not one situation that has happened, that hasn't

been

> followed closely by another. I barely adjust and find I have to

adjust again. There

> is a meaning to all this, it is not real obvious to me right now.

The one

> thing that is for certain, I've been cutting myself off from the

support I have

> needed so badly. No longer can I " do it all myself " if there is

any self left

> at this point.

>

> In May I had the honor of going to Sacramento, CA to a caregiver's

> conference. The highlight was meeting three fellow LBDCaregivers

there, Jan, Jim and

> . Before I left, my mom was at a very low point, sleeping a

lot and barely

> eating. It is so hard to know what is LBD and what could be signs

of

> something worse. While at the conference, my mom was taken to

emergency and

> discovered she had had a heart attack, in addition to having

extremely low blood

> pressure, pneumonia, and a firm diagnosis of emphysema. I changed

my tickets and

> took an earlier flight home. That goodbye hug from Jan has

sustained me for a

> long time.

>

> Mom was in the hospital for 8 days. When she came home, so did the

oxygen

> tanks and all the related trimmings. We had to use a nebulizer

with Albuterol

> for 4-5 times a day. The best thing that happened in the hospital

was Mom

> being taken off her previous meds, to be put on Exelon, what I had

been badgering

> her Dr. to try as it has taken a long time to get appt with

neurologist and

> with heart attack, had to be delayed again. It is scheduled in

another few

> weeks.

>

> Three weeks after being home, Mom took herself off the oxygen. She

had been

> doing it secretly for several nights. An appointment at the Dr.

later that

> week showed her oxygen saturation a 96% at rest and 94% after

walking up and

> down the hall. He said as long as she doesn't have any angina or

shortness of

> breath, she could stay off. All the equipment is still here, just

in case. The

> same day she stopped the oxygen, she started smoking. It has been

downhill

> since. At first, I tried limiting the number of cigarettes she had

per day.

> This got to be a real drag.

> no pun intended. Mom has been a smoker for 65 years and I am now

learning

> that it is her only true love. When given a full pack, she will

smoke one after

> another. The loss of oxygen has only served to increase her

auditory

> hallucinations. I quit giving her a full pack. Now she

constantly, and I mean

> constantly goes to everyone in the house, and who comes to the

house, asking for

> cigarettes. Last week she told me she wasn't going to eat what I

made her for

> meals as I was poisoning her. Then she quit taking her Exelon and

Synthroid.

> So, I quit giving her cigarettes. She didn't get dressed for two

days, and

> wouldn't eat. Last night my son brought over some hamburgers and

got her to eat

> one. Then she took her pills. Then she got a cigarette. This

morning she

> was up at her usual early time, (she had been sleeping in until

11am and after.

> She had breakfast and I coaxed her with a cigarette to get

dressed. I hate

> this! The very thing that makes her worse, she craves the most.

>

> So much for life with Mom and on to the imprisonment of Betty. So

much has

> happened around me that I have no control over, yet the effects

have been

> profound. I quit my job in May as the paperwork was complete for

me to be an

> independent provider of care for my mom. I began on June 2nd and

have yet to get

> my first paycheck. My SO (significant other) left at the end of

May, with no

> explanation, and eliminated the major financial resource this house

has

> depended on. My youngest son and his girlfriend moved out also in

June. That leaves

> me with my oldest son who works sometimes 14 hrs a day in

construction and

> his friend who works odd hours with the tides at his father's clam

& oyster

> company. There is virtually no assistance for me now when I need

to get away for

> any reason. Several weeks ago, I had cousins come to visit from

CA. One

> drove up with her son and the other I picked up at the airport in

Seattle. On the

> way home, the transmission went out in my car. It has been over

two weeks

> and the repair still hasn't been authorized by the warranty company

so that I

> can get a rental for a few days. Life has been difficult to say

the least.

>

> To top it all off, I have been in a deep depression. I increased

my

> antidepressant as I was only taking half the 200 mg dosage, up to

150 mg now. I'm not

> feeling much better, but not any worse either. I'm just waiting

for the next

> bomb to drop. I have to start finding ways to cut the budget

severely and

> part of that is giving up my health insurance. I was only paying

$75 a month

> for full medical, dental, & vision. The copay was nil as I was in

a preferred

> network. Now, after giving up full-time, I can pick up Cobra

coverage at $220

> a month. The is no question I can afford it when I don't know if I

can even

> maintain my mortgage payment. The loss of my SO was something that

had been

> occurring for years. It was my ex-husband of 23 years that had

been living

> here. To be honest, it was the final chapter of a story we've been

trying to end

> for several years. Although the stress of that relationship has

finally

> begun the healing process, but all the other consequences of that

finality have

> taken their toll. Wow, talk about rambling.....guess it all needed

to come out

> cuz, guess what? I already feel better after writing this. Hope

it didn't

> bore you to much.

>

> I could go on....but will save for other posts. This one is behind

me and I

> feel maybe it will be less of a battle from here on...with the help

of this

> group. I know I can't do it alone. Don't know why I tried. So

I'm back,

> perhaps a bit more humble, but like they say, it takes what it

takes.

>

> Love & Prayers to All

> Betty

>

>

>

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Guest guest

---Betty, I had to laugh about the atlas as I did the same thing

about a week ago. Beth(NY) and I were talking a few weeks ago about

how we quite often would find a Canadian coin mixed in with our

change growing up. The stores would gladly give it to you as change

but if you tried to pay them with Canadian coin they would quite

often catch it. Some soda machines would take them and some

wouldn't. It is nice to have someone admit that extra " sense " that

some of us are blessed/cursed with. My mom is slowly admitting that

there is " something " that seems to run in the family. She always

brushed us off before. Well, it's my youngests bday today so I

better not ramble long. Keep in touch with us and make sure you watch

out for you! Love and prayers,

In LBDcaregivers , elswittnbrg53@c... wrote:

> ,

>

> It was so nice to hear from you. I have followed both your and

Beth's posts.

> There were so many things I could relate to. The knowing without

really

> knowing. Those moments in time that are such blessings but beyond

human

> explanation, these I have experienced all too often and in many

different modes. I

> speak little of them, there are too few who really understand. The

secret is to

> remain open and teachable. And it is wonderful when the spirit

communicates

> with messages unspoken. The subtle signs often come and go so

quickly. I am

> not surprised at what is going on in my life. It has been relayed

to me in so

> many different ways what my tasks would be and that I would be

doing them

> alone. OK, now what!!

> Just taking it day by day and listening and watching and waiting

and praying,

> praying praying.

>

> A trip to Canada sounds like a lot of fun. I even got out the

atlas to see

> exactly where Toronto was located. Just a hop, skip and jump

across North

> America.

> I haven't raised any hell for a long, long time. Maybe it's just

about time.

>

> Glad to see you posting too. Take care of you and yours.

>

> Love & Prayers

> Betty

>

>

>

>

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Betty,

I'm so glad you shared what is happening in your life with us - you have

been through quite a lot lately. My heart goes out to you and I wish I were

there personally to help you and give you support. I'm also glad that you

felt better having written and hope some of the stress lifted.

We concentrate so much on our LO's that we often forget about us and taking

care of them means taking care of us too. Please let me (us) know how you

are doing.

I am sending you positive energy, strength and you are in my thoughts.

Courage

Long time, no post...

>Hi All,

>

>So much has gone on since my last post, it is difficult to find a starting

>point. What brought me back (there are many reasons) was a website I found

>while browsing the AARP website. It is called Fathom and is an online

learning

>source. One particular article caught my attention and thought you all

might

>find it helpful. It is about stress and a " Quick Calm " way to dissolve it.

The

>lesson is also on audio. I'll list the link below. On the left side of

the

>Fathom home page, click on Health & Medicine. If you click on either the

>Physiology and Human Biology or Mental Health link, it will bring up the

" Quick

>Calm " lesson. Hope you get some time to check out the other online

lessons.

>

> AARP: Fathom Archives

> http://www.aarp.org/tools/partner?url=http://www.fathom.com

>

>I took a break on posting just after my mom had a heart attack in mid-May.

I

>have managed to finally catch up with all the posts. Lots of newcomers in

>the last six weeks. It is great to see Russ continuing his participation.

This

>group has also been blessed by another generous & knowledgeable soul, Geri.

>Thought I'd start at the beginning, some for the newcomers, and some as I

need

>the release.

>

>My mom, Marjory (79) was diagnosed with the general term 'dementia' during

>the fall of last year. She has lived in my home since 1994, with a two

year

>break from '98 to 2000 when she went to live with my brother after we had

our

>first major mother-daughter argument. It was during this time when she was

>drinking quite regularly that she had the first symptoms of visual

hallucinations.

>I found this out from her boyfriend who she stayed with every weekend from

>Fri till Mon since 1994 up until January of 2002. She also drank during on

the

>weekends with her BF. When she was at home with me, she never had anything

>around. During the fall of 2001, she was coming home from her weekends

with BF

>and began telling me bizarre stories of machines attached to people's

heads,

>nurses climbing in bed with them at night, among various other

hallucinations.

>As she was suffering these toward the end of the weekend drinking bouts,

the

>research I found lead me to believe she was having alcoholic delirious

>tremens. This continued for several months until her BF asked that she

take care of

>her problem before spending anymore time at his house. At the time of

onset

>of these symptoms, he had just had his son with MS move into his home,

coming

>from Wyoming, giving up his independence. It also was the same time Mom

lost

>the last of her 4 cats (within one year), all living to be 18-19 years old.

>January 2002 I took Mom to the doctor, had MRI done, found low thyroid and

>high cholesterol. With the advice of the Dr. to stop drinking, Mom did so

for

>about 7 months and then started again a month before I went to Texas to see

my

>dad in mid-September of last year. By the time I was to leave, she was

going

>downhill fast and when I returned, she was in a full blown psychosis. For

a

>month my home was the twilight zone with my mom as central character. By

the

>end of October, I had her admitted into a Gero-psychiatric ward in a

hospital

>in Seattle, about 90 miles from our home. She was briefly in another

gero-psyc

>ward before Seattle, a voluntary one, but she tried to escape the first

night

>and became violent with her hands and throwing chairs. Hence the transfer

to

>an involuntary unit. All the tests were run, she was placed on medication,

>risperidone and Trazodone, and after two weeks, I was told she should go

into

>24 hour care. I brought her home.

>

>Fortunately, I had scheduled surgery for the beginning of October on both

my

>feet. I knew I would be off work for several months so I had time to

decide

>what to do with Mom. He motor symptoms became progressively worse with her

use

>of risperidone.

>She needed help dressing, bathing, etc. In December, she had cataract

>surgery. I definitely helped the visual hallucinations, but the auditory

ones have

>been with her constantly since the beginning. This could be due to the

fact

>she has severe hearing loss, hearing aids for both ears, (she'll only wear

one)

>and has isolated herself from social events as she cannot follow

>conversations well.

>

>My feet healed slower than anticipated and I didn't return to work until

>March of this year. Then I only worked part-time in the afternoons and

evenings

>when someone would be there for Mom. I had given up a full time management

>position to part-time sales at minimum wage. With my SO (significant

other)

>contributing and the meager contributions of the several young adults

living here,

>I figured we could make it work.

>

>I found this group on Feb 22 this year, Mom's 79th BD. It was a gift from

>heaven for both her and myself. I need that gift again. My world is

crumbling.

> It has taken me three days to get this far on this post. Up until about 6

>weeks ago, I was quite a regular on this site. My enthusiasm has not waned

>since then; life has just been happening to fast. On a stress test, I'm

off the

>scale. There is not one situation that has happened, that hasn't been

>followed closely by another. I barely adjust and find I have to adjust

again. There

>is a meaning to all this, it is not real obvious to me right now. The one

>thing that is for certain, I've been cutting myself off from the support I

have

>needed so badly. No longer can I " do it all myself " if there is any self

left

>at this point.

>

>In May I had the honor of going to Sacramento, CA to a caregiver's

>conference. The highlight was meeting three fellow LBDCaregivers there,

Jan, Jim and

>. Before I left, my mom was at a very low point, sleeping a lot and

barely

>eating. It is so hard to know what is LBD and what could be signs of

>something worse. While at the conference, my mom was taken to emergency

and

>discovered she had had a heart attack, in addition to having extremely low

blood

>pressure, pneumonia, and a firm diagnosis of emphysema. I changed my

tickets and

>took an earlier flight home. That goodbye hug from Jan has sustained me

for a

>long time.

>

>Mom was in the hospital for 8 days. When she came home, so did the oxygen

>tanks and all the related trimmings. We had to use a nebulizer with

Albuterol

>for 4-5 times a day. The best thing that happened in the hospital was Mom

>being taken off her previous meds, to be put on Exelon, what I had been

badgering

>her Dr. to try as it has taken a long time to get appt with neurologist and

>with heart attack, had to be delayed again. It is scheduled in another few

>weeks.

>

>Three weeks after being home, Mom took herself off the oxygen. She had

been

>doing it secretly for several nights. An appointment at the Dr. later that

>week showed her oxygen saturation a 96% at rest and 94% after walking up

and

>down the hall. He said as long as she doesn't have any angina or shortness

of

>breath, she could stay off. All the equipment is still here, just in case.

The

>same day she stopped the oxygen, she started smoking. It has been downhill

>since. At first, I tried limiting the number of cigarettes she had per

day.

>This got to be a real drag.

>no pun intended. Mom has been a smoker for 65 years and I am now learning

>that it is her only true love. When given a full pack, she will smoke one

after

>another. The loss of oxygen has only served to increase her auditory

>hallucinations. I quit giving her a full pack. Now she constantly, and I

mean

>constantly goes to everyone in the house, and who comes to the house,

asking for

>cigarettes. Last week she told me she wasn't going to eat what I made her

for

>meals as I was poisoning her. Then she quit taking her Exelon and

Synthroid.

>So, I quit giving her cigarettes. She didn't get dressed for two days, and

>wouldn't eat. Last night my son brought over some hamburgers and got her

to eat

>one. Then she took her pills. Then she got a cigarette. This morning she

>was up at her usual early time, (she had been sleeping in until 11am and

after.

> She had breakfast and I coaxed her with a cigarette to get dressed. I

hate

>this! The very thing that makes her worse, she craves the most.

>

>So much for life with Mom and on to the imprisonment of Betty. So much has

>happened around me that I have no control over, yet the effects have been

>profound. I quit my job in May as the paperwork was complete for me to be

an

>independent provider of care for my mom. I began on June 2nd and have yet

to get

>my first paycheck. My SO (significant other) left at the end of May, with

no

>explanation, and eliminated the major financial resource this house has

>depended on. My youngest son and his girlfriend moved out also in June.

That leaves

>me with my oldest son who works sometimes 14 hrs a day in construction and

>his friend who works odd hours with the tides at his father's clam & oyster

>company. There is virtually no assistance for me now when I need to get

away for

>any reason. Several weeks ago, I had cousins come to visit from CA. One

>drove up with her son and the other I picked up at the airport in Seattle.

On the

>way home, the transmission went out in my car. It has been over two weeks

>and the repair still hasn't been authorized by the warranty company so that

I

>can get a rental for a few days. Life has been difficult to say the least.

>

>To top it all off, I have been in a deep depression. I increased my

>antidepressant as I was only taking half the 200 mg dosage, up to 150 mg

now. I'm not

>feeling much better, but not any worse either. I'm just waiting for the

next

>bomb to drop. I have to start finding ways to cut the budget severely and

>part of that is giving up my health insurance. I was only paying $75 a

month

>for full medical, dental, & vision. The copay was nil as I was in a

preferred

>network. Now, after giving up full-time, I can pick up Cobra coverage at

$220

>a month. The is no question I can afford it when I don't know if I can

even

>maintain my mortgage payment. The loss of my SO was something that had

been

>occurring for years. It was my ex-husband of 23 years that had been living

>here. To be honest, it was the final chapter of a story we've been trying

to end

>for several years. Although the stress of that relationship has finally

>begun the healing process, but all the other consequences of that finality

have

>taken their toll. Wow, talk about rambling.....guess it all needed to come

out

>cuz, guess what? I already feel better after writing this. Hope it didn't

>bore you to much.

>

>I could go on....but will save for other posts. This one is behind me and

I

>feel maybe it will be less of a battle from here on...with the help of this

>group. I know I can't do it alone. Don't know why I tried. So I'm back,

>perhaps a bit more humble, but like they say, it takes what it takes.

>

>Love & Prayers to All

>Betty

>

>

>

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Jan,

Did I thank you for your never-ending support? If not, here's a big hug

right back at ya....

(((((((((((((((((((((JAN))))))))))))))))))))

Slowly coming out of my dark space into some sunny skies. Things haven't

changed much, but as they say, 90% is attitude. So, most of the time, I make an

attempt to " act as if.'' It is working too. I have been sleeping better,

getting up earlier, and have a bit more energy to push me through the daily

challenges.

I am also keeping a positive attitude about LaCrosse. At this stage in my

finances, it looks like I will be driving. Even though I can't tell my left

from my right, I know if I get on I-90 in Seattle, it will take my all the way

to

LaCrosse. I had it mapped out four years ago. With no left or right to

take, I just might make it.

I will be in touch more often. Look forward to another hug. The last ones

from the CCC have thus far sustained me but I really could use another hug fix.

Love & Prayers & Hugs,

Betty

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Courage,

Thank you for your kind words of support. Sounds like you've got your hands

full also with that neighbor. I had a Nasty in my life about ten years ago

and had to do the restraining order against her. It took all I had to not laugh

outloud when she said in court with such a sweet, innocent voice, " I just

wish they'd leave me alone. " This one was so good at putting on the victim role

around anyone who didn't know her. The tape I played for the judge told

different. This was one tough cookie to get rid of, in my mind, I mean. My

brain

used to go into what I call " monkey mind " where the same scenario plays itself

again and again. What power I was giving to that woman.

It took time to learn that I could give it to her or take it away from her,

all in my own mind. Today, I hope you take back all power you have given her

to make your life a living hell. Keep up with the legalities, but when she

pops into your brain, make a mental garbage can and toss her in head first!!

Thanks again for your support and encouragement. You hang in there too.

Can't imagine raising hell without you and I'm really looking forward to it. By

the way, what are Canadian jails like? :-) :-)

Love & Prayers,

Betty

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Hahahahahahahahha...thanks Betty for the laugh (I hear that Canadian jails

are too easy but thankfully don't have first hand experience...though you

never know what Nasty will lead me to!!!!).

You are right that I am giving my power to this woman. Because she only

lives one house away I hear her voice and I just want to throw up!!!!!!!! I

will be getting a break from her today as I will be going to care for mom -

took a day off because my tummy was on the blink. Feeling much better now.

I'm tryng to keep everything on an even keel but I have to admit that it's

been very hard lately. Just seems like the last 3 months have been filled

with trouble and just when I get one thing sorted here comes

another...again, thank God I'm not a drinker! :)

Courage

Re: Long time, no post...

>Courage,

>

>Thank you for your kind words of support. Sounds like you've got your

hands

>full also with that neighbor. I had a Nasty in my life about ten years ago

>and had to do the restraining order against her. It took all I had to not

laugh

>outloud when she said in court with such a sweet, innocent voice, " I just

>wish they'd leave me alone. " This one was so good at putting on the victim

role

>around anyone who didn't know her. The tape I played for the judge told

>different. This was one tough cookie to get rid of, in my mind, I mean.

My brain

>used to go into what I call " monkey mind " where the same scenario plays

itself

>again and again. What power I was giving to that woman.

>It took time to learn that I could give it to her or take it away from her,

>all in my own mind. Today, I hope you take back all power you have given

her

>to make your life a living hell. Keep up with the legalities, but when she

>pops into your brain, make a mental garbage can and toss her in head

first!!

>

>Thanks again for your support and encouragement. You hang in there too.

>Can't imagine raising hell without you and I'm really looking forward to

it. By

>the way, what are Canadian jails like? :-) :-)

>

>Love & Prayers,

>Betty

>

>

>

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