My Mother Versus A Flight Of Stairs

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I recently took my 83-year old mother to visit a dear friend whom she had not seen for 20 years. On our way to see our friend, I had a moment of panic, because I hadn’t factored in the flight of stairs which we had to ascend in order to enter our friend’s apartment. Even getting my mom out of my car was quite a process, since her severe arthritis and lack of strength in her lower extremities always makes getting out of a seat a major challenge.

Once we reached the stairs to our friend’s place, I asked my mom which side she felt stronger on (her right), and had her take hold of the stair rail on the right. She lifted her left foot and planted it on the first step, and we made our slow climb. At step number eight, my mom blurted out, “I can’t do it”, in a voice filled with desperation and fear. I told her, “Mom, just rest for a second. You’re almost halfway there!” But there was no beast mode, no dogged determination in my mom. She just stood there, clinging to the stair rail for dear life, and I could see that she had given up. Thankfully, a male neighbor offered to help, and essentially hoisted her up each step until they reached the top.

After we settled into our friend’s place, we had a nice lunch and wonderful conversation, and my mom forgot about the stair-climbing incident. When we were ready to leave, another very nice man helped my mother descend the stairs, a task which was much easier since gravity was on her side, and also since it didn’t require the lower body strength that going up the stairs did.

It was pretty agonizing for me to watch my mom go up those stairs. I know she has slowed down a lot, and I know that physical challenges like stairs are massive for her. For this reason, I unfortunately cannot bring her to my place for a visit, because there are stairs everywhere in my residence. I also find the idea of decreased strength and mobility completely terrifying.

If only we could all enjoy sprightly motion throughout our twilight years! This is even more motivation for me to keep training every day like I do.

Those Darned Machines! Technology And The Elderly

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Many elderly individuals are completely baffled by electronics devices like cell phones, DVR’s, and microwaves. My mom will stop using her microwave when the power goes out and the clock resets, even though I have told her numerous times that the function of the microwave is not affected by the clock’s function. I bought her a pre-paid cell phone (her very first cell phone, by the way) for her birthday in November, and am scratching my head trying to figure out why she won’t use it. She keeps it turned off during the day, then when I visit her, she complains that no one calls her on her new cell phone! I have made sure to tell her numerous times that there is no way that anyone can reach her on the cell phone if it is turned off.

There are times when I go to visit my mom when she asks me to help her dial numbers which I have already programmed into quick-dial. This is sort of pointless, since I prefer to use my phone to make those calls when I visit. I keep trying to encourage my mom to use her cell phone when I am not visiting, and honestly don’t know why she isn’t excited about having a means to communicate with her friends. I know that her macular degeneration is robbing her of her vision, and that her arthritis is so bad that it can be a challenge to hold things, but my mom exhibits a complete refusal to accept gadgets from the modern age, and has done so for as long as I can remember.

I remember when my mom got a Mac computer in 1991, and was so afraid to use it that she never turned it on. She would wait until I came over, then would ask me to turn it on and show her how to perform the same basic functions that I would show her every single time. When she got a VCR, she asked me to show her how to use it every single time she wanted to use it, despite the fact that I wrote down detailed instructions on an index card and taped them to the front of the VCR!

Recently I came across an interesting article, which was featured on theguardian.com and which discusses the difficulties which elderly folk have with modern technology. The original link can be found here: http://www.theguardian.com/science/2007/aug/21/technology.news

What I find totally fascinating is that there is research which backs the claim that frontal lobe changes and degeneration occur in the elderly, and that those changes render older people helpless and confused when it comes to figuring out how new tools and gadgets work.

Does that mean that younger generations will also exhibit the same confusion regarding new technology when they become much older? Are we all doomed to scratch our heads in confusion when the iPhone 35 comes out in thirty years?

My Mom Gets Her First Cell Phone Today

My mom’s 83rd birthday is today. She recently began asking for a personal phone line since the assisted living facility she resides at is very stingy about phone privileges. In response to her request, I plan to surprise her today with her own phone line. Instead of purchasing a land line, I thought it made more sense to get her a cell phone which had a large number pad, and was mobile so that she could make calls while she is in her wheelchair. It will be her very first cell phone!

Big Easy Plus Phone
Since my mom is pretty challenged when it comes to lots of technological bells and whistles, I opted for the Big Easy Plus Phone, with a prepaid cellular plan. She will get 800 minutes to start out with, which I honestly think will take her a while to burn through. I will help her with getting a list of the people she would be likely to call, and hopefully she will enjoy her birthday gift!

Driving Is A Privilege…Enjoy It While You Can Do It

Many teenagers cannot wait until they learn to drive, because it is a rite of passage and a means to a certain amount of freedom and movement which they never had before. I remember being excited to drive, but that feeling dissipated very quickly when I found out how tedious it could be to navigate through Los Angeles traffic. I guess it’s a small price to pay for the flexibility I get from having a reliable car and all the necessary faculties to drive it. I have become so dependent on being able to drive wherever I need to that taking the car in for servicing is a major test of patience. It seems ridiculous that I can’t sit still for one hour while my car is serviced, but I simply can’t stand it. I also do not enjoy riding with other people to events which I may want to make an escape from earlier than my friends do. Even when I travel, I prefer to drive to the destination in my own car or rent a car while there.

I have seen elderly loved ones lose the ability to drive over the past few years, and it breaks my heart. My favorite aunt, my mother and now my father have lost the ability to drive as a result of progressive weakness, arthritis, loss of vision and cognitive decline. Both of my parents initially exhibited a stubborn refusal to accept their diminishing ability to drive, and kept talking about how they were going to resume driving soon. Sadly, they are both ambulating with great difficulty and only with the use of assistive devices. It is especially difficult to see this when I used to rely on them to drive me around when I was a child.

Even getting my parents into a vehicle is a major task, because flexing both at the knees and hips is no longer rapid or automatic. It terrifies me to think that I might ever get to that point in my later years. I don’t ever want to lose the freedom to jump in a car and go whenever I need to. I would hate having to rely on others to cart me around all the time. I hope and pray that my body remains nimble and that my distance vision remains sharp (thanks to Lasik). Driving is definitely a privilege and one which I value greatly.

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Being a Parent To a Parent

In yesterday’s post I talked about my mother’s aneurysm rupture and eventual placement in a skilled nursing facility.  Before I delve into today’s topic I want to mention that my mother has progressed so well during her time at the skilled nursing facility that she is one of the highest functioning residents there. At this point in time she would be more well suited for an assisted living environment which would encourage her to develop some level of independence.  We are currently in the process of applying for placement in assisted living and hope that she qualifies very soon.

It has been exceedingly difficult being the only child to an elderly parent who is unable to care for herself.  Granted, my mother is in a facility which provides 24-hour care.  However, before she was placed in skilled nursing, I took on the role of caregiver and did my best to help her hold onto the independent lifestyle to which she had become so accustomed.  I purchased her groceries, cleaned her apartment, did her laundry, cleaned out the cat box, set her hair and nail appointments, and spoke with her employer when her behavior became erratic.

One day, several months before her fall, she got into a car accident and totaled her car.  Her report was that she hit a car, but I discovered that she had hit FOUR cars.  Despite my queries, my mother insisted that she had only hit one car.  She was taken by police escort home and neglected to call her employer, so I had to deal with her boss when she called asking where the hell my mom was.  My mom also stated that she did not know where the car was, so I had to track it down, pay the impound fees, contact the insurance company and file a report.  I also had to tell her employer that I saw no way that my mother could continue to work.

My mother fell into such a depression that when her friends would call her to ask how she was doing, she would ask them to bring her a gun so she could kill herself.  Naturally this prompted a call from Adult Protective Services which I had to deal with as well.  In some sense my mother’s eventual fall was a blessing because it prompted her placement into an environment which would be able to assist her with everything from meals to bathing, dressing, toileting, medication management and physical therapy.    With this placement, however, came the responsibility of taking over her financial affairs, closing accounts, making pre-need burial arrangements, applying for Medicaid assistance, and coordinating her care with the physician on staff at the skilled nursing facility.

The task of emptying out my mother’s apartment also fell upon me.  I cannot tell you how wracked with guilt I was while going through all of my mother’s belongings and determining what could be kept, as I knew full well that whatever was kept would be stored at my place.  It was such an overwhelming task that if I did not have my dear friend Dana and a professional estate liquidating team assisting me, I would have lost my mind during the process.  It was also an extremely emotional experience sorting through items that chronicled my mother’s entire existence and one which I would never want to repeat.

For the past six years my mother has been very stable and I am very thankful for this.  However, I write the checks for all the bills she receives, and I submit all applications on her behalf for aid.  I visit her weekly, bringing prunes for her constipation, fresh fruit if I get a chance to pick some  up, snacks and treats, magazines, and our trusty chinese checkers set which we use every week.  Lest you think I beat her at chinese checkers, she actually beats me more than half the time, which is something I find amusing and encouraging.  I listen to my mother’s complaints about the other residents and the staff, and do my best to keep her updated on my life with pictures and stories.  Honestly, though, I never feel like I do enough, and I think this has everything to do with my desire to always be a good daughter in my mother’s eyes.  I can never be entirely sure.

There are moments when I look into my mom’s eyes  and can detect the feisty spirit that she used to exude on a consistent and daily basis.  For a moment I forget that my now eighty-year old mom spends most of her days in a wheelchair, her body run down by arthritis and failing eyesight, a mere shadow of the beautiful, willful, strong woman who raised me.  And in that moment I am truly happy.

My Mother’s Aneurysm

I love my mom dearly and never believed that the determined, independent, fashionable lady who raised me would at some point become so ill that she would become unable to care for herself.  As her only child I wish I had the foresight to anticipate such a thing, but it is very true that you can never be fully prepared for the time that your parent becomes sick.

In August of 2004 my mother had a brain aneurysm rupture from which she almost died.  It was a terrifying experience which forced me to see my mother completely incapacitated, head partially shaven, tubes and wires from the ventriculostomy tube and EEG surrounding her head, and her awareness of what was occurring wavering between minimal recognition to absolutely no clue as to what had occurred.  I spent three weeks in the Neurosurgical ICU at UCLA Medical Center essentially living there, wondering if my mom would pull through this monstrous event.  It was almost worse processing this as a physician, because I was well aware of the severity of the incident and how it would impact her if she were to survive.

My mother had two coil embolization procedures which stabilized the weak blood vessel in her brain and she was discharged to my home, where I spent the next month providing 24 hour care for her.  It was exhausting and I was overwhelmed with emotion.  After a month with me, my mother stubbornly insisted on going back to her apartment and returning to work.  At work, she was no longer the detail-oriented fact checker she used to be.  She forgot phone numbers that she used to take pride in rattling off with no hesitation.  Her behavior became extremely erratic and unpredictable, and she would fly into rages which were in complete opposition to the calm, reserved woman I knew as my mother.  I began to lose my cool as my anger over what had occurred and the realization that my mother would never, ever be the same fully set in.

My mother’s behavior continued to meander all over the place and she began to neglect the cat that she loved so much and was unable to clean up after herself.  I would purchase groceries which she would binge on, then call me in a rage later that day insisting that I buy more immediately.  She hoarded toilet paper and boxes of tissue.  One time I discovered pants in the garbage and when I asked her why on earth she would throw away a pair of pants, she admitted ashamedly that she had soiled them.

Finally, one day in January of 2006 I had gone to pick my mother up for her hair appointment.  She was not in the living room, but the bathroom light was on and the door was open a crack.  I called out to her to let her know I was there, but heard nothing.  I waited for a few minutes, then opened the door.  She was not in the bathroom.  Puzzled, I walked into her bedroom, looked to the floor, and saw her crumpled on the floor.  When I rushed over to pick her up, she cried out in pain.  I immediately called 911 and waited for the paramedics to arrive.

Once my mother was in the hospital, we determined from the BUN and creatinine levels that she had been lying there for two days.  She told me she was getting out of bed and simply did not have the strength to stand and slumped to the floor, where she remained until I had found her.  She had soiled herself and because she had been lying on her shoulder the entire time, she sustained a rotator cuff tear that had caused the pain which made her cry out.

By February of 2006 my mother was placed in the skilled nursing facility where she now resides.  I am so thankful that the majority of her memory and personality have been restored over the years, but she has absolutely no concern over her physical appearance which is such a bizarre thing for me to grasp.  This woman used to insist on putting on earrings and heels when she visited the grocery store, so to see her in sweatpants, a zipped up hooded sweatshirt and no makeup still breaks my heart.

All in all, though, I still have my mother and I hope that the experience which changed her life is one she doesn’t remember.