Hi RainbowPainter,
Sorry it took me a while to reply. I had trouble with my password and had to have it reset.
To answer your post. Making the choice to move your loved one into assisted living is not easy. Many times, as in our case, the loved one feels as though their independence is being removed and they are losing their sense of identity. The important thing to focus on for your mother is her safety and well being. One of the most important things is to make her surroundings feel more like her home, be sure to use her things (photos, furniture, knick-knacks in her room wherever that is - at your home or in an assisted living environment. You may want to make a photo collage of her family and friends to help her remember special times and special people. We have also filled her photo albums with many special pictures of her family and friends. She spends time reflecting and pondering her special memories.
As far at the time frame for our "mom" to adjust, she's still adjusting. It's been about 10-12 weeks now and she is continually making progress. One of the neatest things that recently happened is she has made a new friend. This lady just moved to assisted living and "mom" has adopted her as her project. They're about the same age and they are going to daily devotions together and many of the activities. The two ladies discovered that they both were experiencing many of the same feelings and that made mom know that she wasn't the exception. The feelings about giving up her independence and her home were "normal" thoughts and feelings. In addition from Mom's participating in the regular activities, she's befriended the Activities Director and has volunteered her services to the AD to do some of the easier tasks to help the AD prepare for the assisted living events. She's even helped the AD get things ready for her children's activities. This has helped our mom be able to realize she could still make a viable contribution. I've had her help me with some of my easier tasks. She's proclaimed herself my assistant. The important part for me is to make sure that I encourage her and praise her quite a bit. For us as the caregivers - encouragement, appreciation and praise is an important aspect of aging - many times, the elders simply don't feel that they can make a contribution anymore.
With your mom, you may want to look for ways to include her in things she has the ability to help with. Can she help with household chores such as folding clothes, setting the table, etc? Sometimes you have to be creative and know that a little time invested will help her self-esteem.
With regard to what it took for us to make the choice of assisted living - our mom was living alone and had been diagnosed with the early stages of dementia. We would get phone calls regularly after we got in from work - mom was more and more agitated. We noticed a theme, if we hadn't spent time with her that day, she would find a way to have a crisis - and we would usually end up having to go over there or endure endless phone calls from a frantic, upset woman. The proverbial "straw" that caused us to say it's time, was the phone call that came at 1:30AM - and mom didn't recognize her surroundings and was asking my husband where his father was. (Note: his father had been deceased for six years). We knew that it was time. After a brief stay in a geri-psych facility for evaluation and medication management, we moved her into assisted living. A couple of things that helped with the transition - 1 - the doctor's diagnosis from the geri-psych - she could no longer live alone and she needed constant supervision. Without these tools, mom would have insisted that she move back home. With the tools, she could no longer fight the inevitable.
I'm here to answer your questions if you have any others. Please let me know.
Rosy