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Who all has dealt with elder parent care? I figure a lot of people here now
Posted on 3/27/26 at 5:57 pm
Posted on 3/27/26 at 5:57 pm
with all of us OT OG's aging.
Man this is some complex stuff and will only become a bigger issue with the aging population. When to take over financials, living arrangements, sitters, dealing with unhelpful siblings, etc.
The list and dilemmas are endless.
Let's hear your stories of how all you have dealt with an aging parent.
Man this is some complex stuff and will only become a bigger issue with the aging population. When to take over financials, living arrangements, sitters, dealing with unhelpful siblings, etc.
The list and dilemmas are endless.
Let's hear your stories of how all you have dealt with an aging parent.
This post was edited on 3/27/26 at 5:58 pm
Posted on 3/27/26 at 6:02 pm to tigerskin
My mother’s epiglottis failed.
She became double pneumonia and septic.
She survived. Seven more years. Because of doctors and the Gods and me and my two younger sisters.
Pneumonia after pneumonia. Feeding tube. Tracheotomy. Neck breather. No voice box.
It was the most pain I’ve ever felt.
I went to grief counseling for six years until I realized that I was still the author of my own story.
This pen is mine.
She became double pneumonia and septic.
She survived. Seven more years. Because of doctors and the Gods and me and my two younger sisters.
Pneumonia after pneumonia. Feeding tube. Tracheotomy. Neck breather. No voice box.
It was the most pain I’ve ever felt.
I went to grief counseling for six years until I realized that I was still the author of my own story.
This pen is mine.
Posted on 3/27/26 at 6:03 pm to tigerskin
My FIL died 2 weeks ago after almost 3 years in a nursing home. Luckily he had some long term care insurance and had saved enough money that outlasted him.
There are no easy answers. If you csn keep them home, that is great, but it's round the clock care. If you can't find the cleanest place you can. I hope they saved a lot of money for this.
There are no easy answers. If you csn keep them home, that is great, but it's round the clock care. If you can't find the cleanest place you can. I hope they saved a lot of money for this.
Posted on 3/27/26 at 6:06 pm to tigerskin
I am extremely thankful, my mom(82yo) can still drive, still lives in her & my deceased father’s home, and STILL works(judicial office) 5 days a week. Just like the energizer bunny, she keeps going, & going, & going…
Posted on 3/27/26 at 6:10 pm to kywildcatfanone
We are already at the 12 hour a day sitter part. Alzheimer's just beginning. Pricey indeed. Mom wants to stay at home
Definitely no easy answers and learning about a whole other world that I had previously been shielded from.
Definitely no easy answers and learning about a whole other world that I had previously been shielded from.
This post was edited on 3/27/26 at 6:32 pm
Posted on 3/27/26 at 6:11 pm to tigerskin
Lost my mom to alzheimers two years ago this May. Currently helping my dad deal with congestive heart failure. Thankfully he is still cognitively fine. as bad as it is to have your body fail, having your mind fail is worse.
Posted on 3/27/26 at 6:11 pm to tigerskin
It’s incredibly difficult on every possible level. We had my father going out in one city and my MIL going out in another. Both were very difficult and long term situations. There’s about a decade of my life that I don’t recall aside from the exhaustion we experienced.
Posted on 3/27/26 at 6:12 pm to tigerskin
My folks are aging but they're rich and extremely prideful people who will never ask for their children's help in any capacity except being there for them and spending time which I do a lot like a good son.
Posted on 3/27/26 at 6:12 pm to tigerskin
I've seen enough to have almost decided that when the time comes (for me to get old and unable) I'll just do as the Natives used to do and just wander off into the woods never to be seen again. Or, the modern equivalent......into the depths of a Costco and let Nature take its course.
This post was edited on 3/27/26 at 6:13 pm
Posted on 3/27/26 at 6:23 pm to tigerskin
Well at least I don't have to worry about unhelpful siblings since I'm an only child. It'll all be on me and the wife.
Posted on 3/27/26 at 6:40 pm to tigerskin
Had a guest house at our previous place, always figured my MIL would be there. Nope, wife's dad ending up living in it. As dementia got more serious made it really tough on her. No help from siblings who lived within 1/2 hour.
Just some stories, tried recharging batteries in the microwave. Reheat a cup of coffee on a gas burner stove. Was smoking in bed, she took his smokes and said he had to sit at the dining room table. 3 o'clock in the morning cops knocking on the door asking where Mr XXX was. Said out in the guest house. They went out, said he called that we were starving him. Cupboards full, fridge full. Told us if they kept getting these calls we would be charged.
She couldn't take it, had to put him in a locked facility. Would go every morning to visit, nurses told her quit beating yourself up he doesn't recognize you.
First time she didn't show he dies in his sleep.
Just some stories, tried recharging batteries in the microwave. Reheat a cup of coffee on a gas burner stove. Was smoking in bed, she took his smokes and said he had to sit at the dining room table. 3 o'clock in the morning cops knocking on the door asking where Mr XXX was. Said out in the guest house. They went out, said he called that we were starving him. Cupboards full, fridge full. Told us if they kept getting these calls we would be charged.
She couldn't take it, had to put him in a locked facility. Would go every morning to visit, nurses told her quit beating yourself up he doesn't recognize you.
First time she didn't show he dies in his sleep.
Posted on 3/27/26 at 6:43 pm to dblwall
Wow, that's some crazy stuff.
Did y'all develop resentment to nearby siblings that didn't help?
Did y'all develop resentment to nearby siblings that didn't help?
This post was edited on 3/27/26 at 7:10 pm
Posted on 3/27/26 at 6:43 pm to dblwall
quote:
Told us if they kept getting these calls we would be charged.
What would be the charge?
Posted on 3/27/26 at 7:11 pm to tigerskin
Moved my mother in law in with us 7 months ago. She lived in CA; tried a nursing home that lasted 2 days. Her 4 daughters were there and they said it was terrible.
Wife called crying and I just told her to pack her up and bring her to Arkansas.
It’s been an adjustment but so far so good. We work a few half days, have a friend that comes for a few hours one day and make her lunch. Another day wife’s sister drives 45 min and able to say lot of the day.
We have our routine but can’t take off for any overnight trip without lot of planning. Recent empty nesters and was looking forward the freedom of weekend trips etc but you do what you have to do.
Wife called crying and I just told her to pack her up and bring her to Arkansas.
It’s been an adjustment but so far so good. We work a few half days, have a friend that comes for a few hours one day and make her lunch. Another day wife’s sister drives 45 min and able to say lot of the day.
We have our routine but can’t take off for any overnight trip without lot of planning. Recent empty nesters and was looking forward the freedom of weekend trips etc but you do what you have to do.
Posted on 3/27/26 at 7:13 pm to One72
Get a pneumonia vaccine. Very common ailment caused by other issues.
This post was edited on 3/27/26 at 7:13 pm
Posted on 3/27/26 at 7:17 pm to tigerskin
As another posted 'there are no easy answers'.
My mom passed away earlier this month from dementia. Not fair that such a wonderful caring person had to have her life end this way. On the bright side, she didn't seem to suffer long.
As they say 'hug'em and tell them you love them while you can'. Take care!
My mom passed away earlier this month from dementia. Not fair that such a wonderful caring person had to have her life end this way. On the bright side, she didn't seem to suffer long.
As they say 'hug'em and tell them you love them while you can'. Take care!
Posted on 3/27/26 at 7:31 pm to tigerskin
I have so many folks at work taking care of aging parents. Some have had to go remote. It doesn’t seem when my grandparents were of this age, there were these issues. So many now getting dementia/alzheimers. Back then, they just died of old age and lived long lives. Now it seems dementia sets in and they go on another 10 years or so.
Posted on 3/27/26 at 7:47 pm to tigerskin
I'm an only child. My mom was diagnosed with Parkinson's in 2017, she is was 79. Wife and I had been married 6 years, in our new house (with a first floor suite for mom when she needed it) less than a year. We moved her in with us because she was 45 minutes to an hour away and we couldn't risk something happening and not being able to get to her.
It was a struggle at first. Mom was very independent and wasn't happy she had to get rid of a lot of her "stuff." Eventually she adjusted fairly well. When our son came along she loved being in the house with him and being able to play with him. I worked from home so she was never alone with him but she could rock him, let him nap on her, play with him, etc.
She had a couple of blackout spells, was diagnosed with aortic stenosis and had a valve replacement in the spring of 2023, everything went well. The Parkinson's tremors were fairly well controlled with medicine. It did impact her voice and the dementia piece was certainly there but not all of the time.
Day after Christmas that year she started acting funny, went to the urgent care and was told she had a UTI. A couple of days later she complains of chest pain so we go to the ER. UTI has gone septic, she has pneumonia and has developed a-fib. She's in the hospital a week or so and is sent home on oxygen, blood thinners, and antibiotics. She recovered but not to the level she was before. A couple of months later we are back in the ER and they say she has some internal bleeding from the blood thinner. A few days and she's back home. In the meantime our daughter has been born.
End of May she falls getting out of bed and hits her head on her nightstand, gives herself a pretty good gash. Call 911, ambulance takes her to the ER, she checks out ok, but is highly agitated. Yells at a doctor and basically says "why don't you just let me die." We talk to a couple of doctors there and agree that her health and quality of life is slowly getting worse. She may rally and plateau but the general trend is down. We move her to palliative care in the hospital and look for someplace to move her when she is discharged. I hate it, but I know she needs more care than we can give with a 2 year old, newborn, and jobs.
We find a small senior care facility located in a converted house less than 15 minutes away from us. Cost is insane - $8,000/month - but mom can afford it. We move her from the hospital to the facility on a Monday. I go see her Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. When I leave Friday I tell her we have to go to our family lake house too meet with a new landscaper on Saturday, but we plan to bring the kids to see her on Sunday.
Not 10 minutes after we get home Saturday night the facility called. They were getting her in bed and she had either a massive stroke or seizure and was gone.
It was a struggle at first. Mom was very independent and wasn't happy she had to get rid of a lot of her "stuff." Eventually she adjusted fairly well. When our son came along she loved being in the house with him and being able to play with him. I worked from home so she was never alone with him but she could rock him, let him nap on her, play with him, etc.
She had a couple of blackout spells, was diagnosed with aortic stenosis and had a valve replacement in the spring of 2023, everything went well. The Parkinson's tremors were fairly well controlled with medicine. It did impact her voice and the dementia piece was certainly there but not all of the time.
Day after Christmas that year she started acting funny, went to the urgent care and was told she had a UTI. A couple of days later she complains of chest pain so we go to the ER. UTI has gone septic, she has pneumonia and has developed a-fib. She's in the hospital a week or so and is sent home on oxygen, blood thinners, and antibiotics. She recovered but not to the level she was before. A couple of months later we are back in the ER and they say she has some internal bleeding from the blood thinner. A few days and she's back home. In the meantime our daughter has been born.
End of May she falls getting out of bed and hits her head on her nightstand, gives herself a pretty good gash. Call 911, ambulance takes her to the ER, she checks out ok, but is highly agitated. Yells at a doctor and basically says "why don't you just let me die." We talk to a couple of doctors there and agree that her health and quality of life is slowly getting worse. She may rally and plateau but the general trend is down. We move her to palliative care in the hospital and look for someplace to move her when she is discharged. I hate it, but I know she needs more care than we can give with a 2 year old, newborn, and jobs.
We find a small senior care facility located in a converted house less than 15 minutes away from us. Cost is insane - $8,000/month - but mom can afford it. We move her from the hospital to the facility on a Monday. I go see her Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. When I leave Friday I tell her we have to go to our family lake house too meet with a new landscaper on Saturday, but we plan to bring the kids to see her on Sunday.
Not 10 minutes after we get home Saturday night the facility called. They were getting her in bed and she had either a massive stroke or seizure and was gone.
Posted on 3/27/26 at 8:02 pm to PJinAtl
I'm a caregiver right now for my mom. She has lung cancer and has trouble getting around some. My entire family is back in WV 7 hours away. Honestly, it's a lot. But I'm glad I brought her here to VA as I feel strongly she has gotten better medical care here than she would have in WV. She has lived with me now for about 4 years. During that time there's been numerous nights I've had to call 911 or take her to the ER for various reasons. She had respiratory failure in October 2024, and I thought I was going to lose her. It's a difficult thing knowing something could happen at any moment, but we make the best of it as much as we can.
Edit to add: I lost my dad in April 2024 from dementia. It was absolutely tricking brutal watching him go through that. He had went into a care facility in February 2024 and didn't get great care IMO. It still burns me up to think about it.
Edit to add: I lost my dad in April 2024 from dementia. It was absolutely tricking brutal watching him go through that. He had went into a care facility in February 2024 and didn't get great care IMO. It still burns me up to think about it.
This post was edited on 3/27/26 at 8:05 pm
Posted on 3/27/26 at 8:05 pm to tigerskin
My mom's in a dementia care facility. It's the most depressing place I have ever been to in my life.
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