however - having had an older partial replacement
it is completely painless, I have a mobile joint
and the patient acceptability/satisfaction score for hip replacement is 97%
just about everyone says it is life changing
i agree PP and sandy....but if you choose to do it yourself then whatever happens, you chose it....but how will she feel if you persuade her and it goes wrong? How will you feel?
The situation I'm in, of being a carer, is grinding me down. She was dumped on me by her daughters and I'm mug enough to put up with it. It's made me depressed and recently I think that depression has taken a darker hue. Over the last month or so I've had 'flashbacks'. These aren't the traumatic things I've seen but more the kind of wince making memory that comes after a hard nights drinking when you remember what you've done.
To use a line from Estragon: I can't go on.
sandy, im so sorry to hear about ' the flashbacks' must be very distressing. I wonder if they may put you in a '' fragile'' position.? ( I hope that makes sense ) are you now her sole carer ?
Sandy - looking on the bright side, you've got us.
I can fully empathise with your quote, I have arrived at that point by a different route.
From snippets of your situation that you have mentioned in other posts it is clear to an outsider that you have to put your own health and happiness to the fore.
CAB, GP or Social Work depts are some of your options.
Oh sandy.......but getting her through a hip replacement won't change your circumstances you know.......I agree with what wolf and others have said, that its time to shift some of the burden before you sink entirely and are no use to her, yourself, or anyone else.
Pixie, I didn't read your posts as being bossy or critical. I know the hip replacement won't change everything but at least if she had her mobility back we could get out for a walk.