Coping when Both Parents Have Dementia
“My mom and dad both have dementia. I am all alone taking care of them since. I have no one to help me. I get sad and frustrated with them both. How do I deal with my feelings?”
These are powerful words from one Caregiver Forum participant. It is a cry that is all too familiar for many family caregivers and one which will touch the hearts of most readers. Many of us feel alone when we are trying to care for our aging parents and there are no siblings to help, or our siblings won’t help. When we have one parent who has this disease, it is hard. When we have two, it is often nearly unbearable.
The Impact of Dementia Care on a Caregiver: There are many different kinds of dementia. My dad’s condition resulted from surgery, while Mom’s developed more subtly – the type they used to call “senile dementia.” Now it is called “organic brain disease.” Whatever the type, Alzheimer’s disease, vascular, Pick’s disease, Parkinson’s related, or just plain “organic brain syndrome,” it is painful for the caregiver. Sometimes the pain is so raw and isolating that the caregivers become more ill than those they are caring for.
Minding Our Elders: Caregivers Share Their Personal Stories. “For anyone having to walk the last segments of life with a loved one, read this.” …Delores
Discover the Difference. EGOSAN: The premium incontinence brand caregivers love – Now Available on Amazon.