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Oh I can identify with the "bag-o-meds" too!
Me: "What's this little yellow pill?"
Mum: "That's my morning pill."
Me: "But whats in it?"
Mum: "No idea."
Me: "We'll what's it FOR then???"
Mum: "It's for taking in the morning!"
I took the "bag-o-meds" to a very nice helpful pharmacist who explained every one to me then put them in orderly day by day boxes.
I took over my mom's care when my dad passed away. Oh I miss that man!!!


I even love the dementia and ALZ patients that ask you a million times a day what time it is, what should I be doing, what day it is, and why can't I go home? Heartbreaking to hear and watch, but also such a feeling of love and nurturing comes up in me when they do these things that they cannot help. A lot of nurses get angry or frustrated over it and those folks are in the wrong profession or wrong job, because that's the whole job....laughter through tears, but you have to do it quietly on the inside.
Ruh roh! Guilty!
I have been known to do Exactly That. Because for a while there "they" were throwing so much stuff at me "they" couldn't keep it straight, and I felt like they shouldn't expect me, the sicky, to straighten it out for them. I tried the lists, but my lists were never complete enough ... always some detail missing that they could then scald me with their eyes about before they turned slowly back to the little computer chart thingy to tap, tap, tippity-tap into.
Also, the doctor writes one thing on the prescription, the pharmacy asks the insurance company for "permission" to dispense it, the insurance company counters with a different item, and then the pharmacy interprets that according to what they have "on hand," then the pharmacy puts something cryptic and confusing on the label to justify what ever random thing is in the bottle. So ... it is nice to have the actual meds in hand so they can be examined.
ALSO ... there are "how to go to the doctor" advice columns out there that advise patients to do this.
BUT ... I think there are now apps for this ... medication trackers. I think they even have apps that coordinate with your pharmacy. Seems like a wonderful liability lawsuit waiting to happen. Maybe even class-action. "If you or a loved one became sick or died after using the _____ product, you may be entitled to cash payments. Call now. Lawyers are waiting."
Eventually, I thought it was all super stupid. Not one medication made me feel better ... they all make me feel worse in one or more ways ... so now when they ask I can honestly say, "Nothing except LOTS of coffee."
They always tell me to quit drinking the coffee. Le sigh.

My mother just asked me if she took Aricept if it would help her memory because someone else she was talking to was taking it and it really helped her memory. So, I said, "Well, let's look up the side effects of Aricept." Sure enough, all the side effects were things we are already trying to overcome in her life anyway....lack of appetite, slow heartbeat, more stomach acid, not sleeping well, feeling tired, muscle cramps, etc.
ME: "Now what do you want to accomplish here? Maybe have less memory issues when you are 79 years old, but add to a lot of physical issues we are already dealing with~or~just accept you are 79 and are allowed to be forgetful on things and that the natural progression of your life is going to continue to contribute to that problem...and that's okay. You are allowed to forget things. That's why you have me here to help you as you age gracefully and naturally."
SHE: "Nope...not taking Aricept."
Last year she went to a doctor for the first time in many a long year and only because she had been in a car accident and broke her ribs. She's in pain and they take her blood pressure..it's slightly elevated. And I do mean slightly. The doc immediately says she wants to put her on blood pressure medicine "just a low dose" for this. So, again I had to explain that the blood pressure will be elevated when one is in pain, one reading does not indicate a pattern of high BP and that we should hold off on this and just see how her BP does when she is not in pain.
Sure enough....no BP problems. Never has had any and when the pain was managed, never had it again. Thank God she has me here to help her.
She is of the generation that obeys doctors as an authority but, thankfully, she also has grown suspicious enough of their quackery to take responsibility for her own health and it has really paid off. Now that she is slowing down some and age related issues have come around more frequently, she is now more vulnerable and open to their suggestions....which is why I believe God has placed me here to help her navigate these dangerous waters.