Caregiving and Sleep
I have a feeling many other caretakers also have trouble getting enough sleep for various reasons. I'm wondering what kind kind of situations you've run into. How has being a caretaker changed your sleep schedule and how have you dealt with this?
Comments
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Hello and welcome to our
Hello and welcome to our caregivers family. My mom and I were caregivers for my dad. He passed away in March from esophageal cancer. Mom was his main caregiver. She had to actually put herself on his schedule. It kinda reminds me of taking care of a baby. Sleep when they sleep, get up when they get up. This sounds like it is the only plan that will work for you. If you are being her full time caregiver, this should work, if not, and you also have to work at a job, it will not. Hope this helps.
Tina0 -
roll with it
Tina's right, you get where you just roll with it. But I totally understand the need to relax / scream / stomp or watch something really stupid on TV without having to talk to anyone. Doesn't mean you get to do it, but we understand...
You must also tactfully try to set some limits so that your life has some degree of predictability from one hour to the next. Set up your partner with everything she needs, and go to another room where you can rest up or take a nap. If my 79-year old mother can learn to do this, anyone can.
I do stick around and provide diversion while we wait for pain pills to kick in, though. Good luck!0 -
I Must SleepBarbara53 said:roll with it
Tina's right, you get where you just roll with it. But I totally understand the need to relax / scream / stomp or watch something really stupid on TV without having to talk to anyone. Doesn't mean you get to do it, but we understand...
You must also tactfully try to set some limits so that your life has some degree of predictability from one hour to the next. Set up your partner with everything she needs, and go to another room where you can rest up or take a nap. If my 79-year old mother can learn to do this, anyone can.
I do stick around and provide diversion while we wait for pain pills to kick in, though. Good luck!
I am one of those people who needs a good night's sleep most nights or I am useless. When Bob was going through chemo/rads and taking meds, etc. in the night, I would set everything up before I went to bed - put meds out, what time he could take it, etc. He never once woke me up in the night. I found good planning was the key. I also slept in a different room during that time because he was up and down so much. Not ideal, but it worked for us.0 -
family friendly
My best friend and matron of honor is a gay male that I've known for a long time. He is my brother and my husband I luv him to death. He is also HIV. We came up with assumption about his caretaking. I am Only assumming that your partners family is not available to help, but his was not. He said "you either have to get help from the family, your community or pay for it.". No one can do this thing alone. You may need to call in reinforcements in order to sleep. Is there someone that you can call tO sit with your partner in order for you to go to another room and rest? There was also a previous post for time saving tips for caregivers.
Ktz0 -
get some help
During chemo weeks my husband sleeps in the guest room because our schedules are off too. I also work full time and I have had to lean on help to get things done, there is just now way for me to do it all. I was finding that I was falling asleep very late because like you I needed the time to myself and stayed up worrying. My doctor gave me some sleeping pills, that has helped getting to bed at a normal hour.0 -
Me TooBarbara53 said:roll with it
Tina's right, you get where you just roll with it. But I totally understand the need to relax / scream / stomp or watch something really stupid on TV without having to talk to anyone. Doesn't mean you get to do it, but we understand...
You must also tactfully try to set some limits so that your life has some degree of predictability from one hour to the next. Set up your partner with everything she needs, and go to another room where you can rest up or take a nap. If my 79-year old mother can learn to do this, anyone can.
I do stick around and provide diversion while we wait for pain pills to kick in, though. Good luck!
I'm glad this thread came up. I have been struggling with this too. My poor hubby waits for me to come home from work in order to have outside contact, and I am in sales so I talk to people all day. Sometimes I just don't feel like conversating! We sleep in separate rooms too, because his sleep schedule is so irratic. Finding down time to be alone ususally involves me staying up too late to watch tv, which makes me tired for work the next day and the cycle continues.0
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