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Endless Patience and Frustration

  • Posted on September 19, 2010 at 8:15 am

I was never known for being a patient man, but over this last year, I’ve had to learn how. I mean all those baby steps, make for an endless parade to the bedroom, for a simple change of nightgown and depends.

By 10pm it is frustrating as hell, because it signals the end of the day’s duty, and the beginning of the free time.  Most evenings that is for about an hour and a half, so the endless parade, just drags on.  And yet, it is really her own way of protecting herself.

Smaller steps, lets her focus a bit more. It avoids falls, from her foot being caught on something. It makes sense, really, yet it also makes for a very long day.  The balancing one has to do, with their own emotions, is huge.  You never really get a break, because your mind has to stay sharp, to catch subtle changes, to insure the pathway is clear.

Yet all you can think of, is trying to get away, to get as much of that free time as you can snare.

It is a pitfall of caring, but one you have to be mindful of.  It doesn’t feel good, inside, to be so impatient, to think the thoughts one does, when one is anxious to get away.  Yet you know, when the time comes, you will regret every one of those thoughts.

What a life.

Trying to Understand

  • Posted on February 19, 2010 at 11:15 am

This whole caregiving job has no guidelines, no books that explain what you will go through, or how to adapt to the changes, to the frustrations. There is no magic course to take, that will teach you how to be a loving, compassionate, caregiver.

Either it is in you, or it isn’t.

You can talk and discuss all about how to lift a person, how to wash them and even how to speak to them, but there is no way you can teach compassion, caring.  Even as a family member, a son, I find it hard to not get angry, to not feel put upon, at the simplest of requests. And it impacts my own self confidence, self evaluation.

Am I a bad son, for being impatient with the routine?

Like when I take her to go  lay down in the afternoon, and she stands there, with that blank look, it makes me cringe.

Or walking behind her, and the odor from her makes me feel, well, sick to my stomach. I know she can’t help it, but has she lost that much control over her bodily functions, that she can’t even control her flatulence?

Like why does it happen, just as I am bending down to pull up the depends? Is it deliberate, or co-incidence?

It is those thoughts, that make me question myself, that make me wonder, what am I doing wrong? Are those feelings natural, is the impatience of following behind, as she shuffles, unless she’s gotta go the bathroom, when it is almost like running a short distance sprint, normal?

You sit awake at night, wondering if somehow, you are deliberately making yourself angry, so that when the ‘eventuality of death’ does arrive, you will have closed your emotions off? Is it a defence mechanism, to try and mitigate the upcoming emotional upheaval, or is it selfishness?

It is the frustration, daily or hourly at times, when she drinks, and gulps the juice, making herself choke. Thoughts that she does it on purpose, to get attention race through the head, while worry gnaws at me, wondering what to do, if she doesn’t catch her breath.

In short, it is a vicious cycle, that draws energy, strength from a guy, and really, it is no wonder that by the end of the day, I am feeling short tempered, irritable, & just downright snarky. It is a long day, from 6am till midnight, and no wonder the blood pressure is up and down like a yo yo.

It does make me question myself, and when David says things will be different, I am pissed at him, because I know he is meaning ‘when she is dead’ and I don’t want that. Or do I? Is that why I am so stressed, so nervous? Am I that bad, for even thinking it could be that?

Bottom line is this, the job of caring for an older parent is a lonely task, that tests your true mettle. It isn’t filled with accolades, or even compassion from those you expect to provide that for you, it is a job that beats you up, wears you down.

This is my life, it sucks, but it is the only one I got.

Lacking Patience

  • Posted on February 4, 2010 at 12:15 pm

I think one of the main problems is the wearing down of one’s own patience, for normal things. It sounds wrong to say, but really, I find myself being impatient, at least in my own mind. I try to keep it level, to not show my impatience, but it seems to just get harder with each passing day.

It is strange, because I notice how I am slowing down myself, yet I feel so wronged, so hard done by, when Mom needs to go to the bathroom, or just wants to lay down for a few hours. I keep wishing she’d move faster, or not just sit and stare at me, until I ask what she wants. It grates on my nerves, which it shouldn’t.

Hell, she is 92 and naturally not going to move as fast, and with the arthritis in her hands, can’t really do a lot of things I take for granted, like holding my coffee cup or a fork to eat with. Yet it bugs me, it irritates me, when in the past it wasn’t even a flicker of a thought. Now it seems to consume me, and I wonder, what is going on in my head.

I shouldn’t be feeling this way, this frustrated by it all, and yet I do.

Little things gnaw at me, make me even more irritable than ever. I control it, in front of Mom, but I find I am taking it out on David, on my dog, and myself too. I hate it, and yet it seems to be what it is, these days. I suppose it could be worse, which is maybe what is eating at me.

Am I somehow, looking ahead to when her condition becomes worse, when I am religated to doing more than I am now? Is the concerns of others, who keep pushing for sending her to a home, for a few weeks, merely a prelude to the pressure I’ll be under, when her abilities to function become worse?

There is so much to do in life, that I wonder at times, if I can manage any more. I know, deep down, that I can, but I spend so much time worrying about the ‘what if’s’ that it becomes part of the daily routine, and it shouldn’t. Yet, I don’t know how to turn off the brain, to ignore the worries, the stress. Little things get blown out of proportion, including the dog’s barking, David’s lack of picking up after himself, or cleaning up after himself. Yet before, it didn’t seem to matter much, didn’t seem to grate so harshly on the nerves.

Is this really what the future holds?

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