Growing increasingly concerned about my mother (venting)

Ever since my dad died almost four years ago, my son and I have had growing concerns about my mother. Actually, if I'm absolutely honest, we had been having concerns about her long before my dad died. One of her biggest fears is that she will follow in the footsteps of her grandmother and mother. Her grandmother developed Alzheimer's after suffering a stroke, and her own mother developed Vascular Dementia.

Hopefully, you will understand where I'm going with this, and why.

Despite the fact that my mother actively uses technology, she would be the first to admit that she doesn't understand it. For example, an aunt of mine visited my mother a few years ago, shortly after purchasing a new mobile phone. At the time, my mother had been having issues with her computer. This resulted in her coming up with the theory that my aunt's new mobile phone had somehow been responsible for causing the computer issues. So, that gives you an insight into the way my mother's mind work. Attempting to try to make sense of my mother's logic and bizarre theories often results in my brain feeling like it has been well and truly fried.

Last night, my son visited my mother to deal with some tech-related issues. The TV had been on, and her Virgin Media on-screen TV guide had apparently highlighted that a sports programme was currently being broadcast on one of the BBC channels she often watches. My mother then starts ranting about the fact that she doesn't like watching sports programmes, and that when she had signed up with Virgin Media, she had specifically stated that she wasn't interested in any sports channels.

My son found himself trying to explain to my mother that Virgin Media is not responsible for what the BBC broadcasts, and also that neither Virgin Media nor the BBC was forcing her to watch something she had no interest in. My mother is 67 and has spent years watching TV, so it's not like this is a whole new experience for her. She knows (or at least she used to) that one doesn't get to pick and choose what gets broadcast. Prior to my mother signing up with Virgin Media, she had been with Talk Talk. I remember that we often used to joke about the fact that a large percentage of the channels included in TV packages never get watched. It's as though she has completely forgotten how TV packages work, and how TV broadcasters operate.

If my mother is 'losing her marbles', which is what we now suspect, my son and I are aware that we are the ones who will need to have a difficult conversation with her. At the best of times, we struggle to cope with her. During the months leading up to my dad's death, it was as though she had suddenly aged both physically and mentally overnight. I never previously used to think of her as 'elderly', but now I find myself likening her to someone in their eighties. Quite frankly, it's scary as to just how much my mother has changed. My son and I don't feel ready or capable of stepping up to the plate and becoming my mother's carers, as we have enough problems taking care of ourselves.

  • Thanks Shardovan. I am sorry to hear about your aunt, and fingers crossed that she isn't developing dementia. We frequently tear our hair out with my mother. She likes to take an interest in her local community, which often results in her agreeing to things that she has no understanding of. Things like being in charge of a litter-picking blog, being the moderator of a Facebook Group related to the local litter-picking group, being the moderator of a Laughter Yoga group on Facebook, and being the Leader (main contact) for her neighbourhood on Nextdoor. Thankfully, this is no longer the case now as she realised she had bitten off more than she could chew and was out of her depth.

  • Hi Sparkly.

    It frightens me reading stories like yours Sparkly. I'm here alone and the number of times i can't remember the simplest of things, i forget the word i want to use, and find it hard to concentrate. All the time i'm thinking,..... who'll look after me ? I've been looking on the internet for a few years now at new houses. I like it here, it's a nice house and in a lovely area. I sit sometimes of a night and think, despite feeling so loney, how lucky i am. We've all seen on the news every night the number of   people who don't have a home to live in. But i look on the internet and wonder could i be just as happy in a small over 60s flat. The autism makes me not want to move, The over 60s places may almost force me to socialise with the the other residents. But then i think, if i do go do-lally, help will be there. I can go days or even longer here, without speaking to a single soul.

    My Nan had to go into a care home, it was a lovely place, she was much better off there, but she hated it. I'd visit and take things in, she'd say well don't leave that now, i'll be home in a couple of days. Or  she'd ask ....... Where's your Grandad, he hasn't been in here for a few days now. My Grandad had died years earlier. I cried, i'm crying now just remembering it. I found it so difficult to see the lady who had brought me up, the lady who i loved, the lady who was the life & soul of the party at New Year.  Now she was, feable and not even remembering who she is.

  • Very best of luck to you.  :) I hope to goodness that things improve and work out.

  • Thanks for letting me know that Simon. I will have to see if I can find out if my mother has had her sodium levels checked recently. I know she's on Statins for cholesterol and takes Ramipril for high blood pressure. Not sure if the blood tests she has for those can also detect low sodium levels, but certainly worth looking into.

  • My sisters and me have discussed and are looking in to care support homes. Could you and your son discuss this or a community nurse as a possibility for your mum? Not in a cruel way but for her own safety and so you and your son don't haveto do everything. A community nurse could come in every day to make sure she's ok and help out. We have a nurse currently. She's been a great help to my family. 

  • Thank you Mister. You have my sympathies, and I can only imagine how difficult and stressful it is for you. Whilst it's true that my son and I have each other, I am praying to God that if the suspicions I have about my own mother are right, we won't be left to deal with her single-handedly. Just the thought of it is enough to send us over the edge.

  • Sorry to hear you’re both going through this worry. It actually chimes a lot with some stuff going on for quite a while now with an aunt of mine. I may say more about it later, but let’s just say that that strange hinterland between knowing all about and wanting modern broadband stuff and then the next minute being perplexed and feeling persecuted by it has striking parallels. And I would have my concerns about what’s maybe on the health side of that too. 

  • I saw a post on a forum the other week, written by someone in a similar situation. After blood tests were analysed, their mother turned out to have 'criticallly low sodium levels'.

  • Thanks Simon. When my mother is seeking attention, she has a tendency to phone my son, myself, or other relatives, and then talk the hind legs off a donkey without pausing for breath. What I described in my post is different. Started off as an occasional concern, due to things she would say/do that seemed odd, but then months would pass and she would seem 'normal' (normal to us, that is). It's the fact that these events are occurring more frequently that is causing greater concern.

  • Hi

    Sorry to hear of your concerns. It must be upsetting for you going through this. My mum has dementia and is becoming increasingly hard to look after and care for. It's hard when she doesn't remember the simplest of things, I never thought she would be like this. I'm sorry of your situation. I hope it gets better. You have your son, you can be there for each other.

  • Hi, Sparkly. :)

    I am sorry to read of your concerns. Is it at all possible that such behaviours are a disguised way of seeking attention? I don't mean in the modern sense of 'attention-seeking' but, instead, a way of making sure that family members keep company with her as much as possible? In a way, a kind of fear of potential loneliness?