Elders Say the Darnedest Things!

As anyone who's ever worked with the elderly knows, every care facility has its "characters": the curmudgeon, the hothouse flower, the Church Lady. And the best-kept secret in the business is the hilarity that ensues whenever one of these folks offers his or her commentaries on everyday events. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

Take Ed, our resident Oscar the Grouch. He's a World War II vet who also worked as a train conductor; his manner is gruff, and his language is often as colorful as the Oregon Ducks cap he wears. He enjoys nothing more than to wheel himself about the facility, advertising his presence by periodically calling out his own name, "Ed-DEEEEEEEEE!" or whatever occurs to him at the time.

So one night when he complained to me about "not bein' able to hear as good as I usedta", I checked his ears with the otoscope. Sure enough, he had a heavy buildup of cerumen in both ears, and I informed him of this as I put away the instrument and washed my hands. Next thing I knew, he was cruising down the hall announcing "Ear WAX!" to everyone he met along the way.........and grinning like the cat that ate the canary!

This is the same guy who once made a late-stage Parkinson's patient, who never even cracks a smile, break into hysterical laughter by hollering "STOP!! Yer mashin' m' boys!" at a CNA who was trying to straighten him up in his chair. He is also the same resident who made a humorously clumsy pass at me one evening when I was checking his blood sugar:

Ed: "Y' know, I need ta find me a woman."

Me: "Well, there are a lot of single ladies here......."

Ed (looking me up and down): "Nah......I think you'd do, though."

Me (chuckling): "I think my husband might have a problem with that, Ed. Besides, you don't want this old bag---you want a pretty young thing."

Ed (eyes twinkling madly): "Honey, I'll take any bag I can git!"

Then there's Elaine, who's well into her eighties, wildly demented, and as funny as they come. She is cheerfully profane, and she will bless you and curse you.......sometimes in the same breath. I was working with her roommate one late afternoon when she called out to me: "Hey, Mary!" (Elaine calls everyone either Mary or Philip, and to this day NOBODY, including her family, knows who Mary or Philip really are.)

Me: "What is it, Elaine?"

Elaine: "Why do you think I keep itching all the time? This itch is driving me crazy!"

Me: "I think it's because when we get older, our skin dries out a lot, and when it's dry, it itches sometimes."

Elaine (quizzically): "How do you know that? How old are you?"

Me: "I'm fifty, Elaine."

Elaine: "Oh, well, that explains it---you've got some years on me."

Me: "Oh, really? How old are you?"

Elaine: "I'm forty-three........and I'm PREGNANT! Can you believe that (stuff)?"

And there's Carol, Heaven bless her. She is seventy, looks fifty-five, and acts like she's nine. She's as full of mischief as any two-hundred-pound hemiplegic "kid" can be; having suffered two serious strokes, her impulse control is non-existent, and her dry wit and her barbed tongue, on top of her physical challenges, are too much for some staff members.........hence, I handle most of the day-to-day interactions with her. It's OK with me; I think she's got great comedic timing, and her one-liners are priceless.

It was late in the evening; Carol's roommate, who is only about three times more demented than Carol herself, was having a conversation with..........nobody. This drives Carol up the wall, especially when it goes on all day and half the night as it did that time. I went in to give her the bedtime dose of Lantus insulin, and she pantomimed "talks too much" with her good hand, rolled her eyes, and mouthed the words, "Quack, quack, quack!" This immediately struck me funny, and I snorted, which made her giggle, and then we both broke up, cackling madly while the roommate continued gabbling to herself. It wasn't very nice, and I made myself stop........but only as long as it took to get out of the room entirely!

Another time, I'd been off for a four-day stretch when Carol wheeled herself up to the nurses' station and announced loudly that she thought she'd hurt the feelings of the nurse who'd taken my place. "I TOLD HER YOU WERE A BETTER NURSE THAN HER BECAUSE YOU DON'T HURT ME WHEN YOU GIVE ME MY SHOTS!" she bellowed, obviously enjoying the effect her words were having on the same nurse, who was easily within earshot as she was standing at the neighboring nurses' station at that moment.......

She also has a fascination with Las Vegas and believes that she and her boyfriend, who lives in an assisted living facility a few miles away, will someday go there and get married. One day I went in and caught her halfway out of bed, having disengaged her personal alarm so that it wouldn't go off and spoil her plans to sneak out. I looked down at her, trying to be serious, and asked, "Carol, wherever in the world do you think you are going?"

Her eyes danced merrily as she responded: "Vegas. You wanna be my matron of honor?"

Specializes in geriatric & childrens psych, rehab, woun.

I had a dear little happily confused lady, my Ruthie planned the most fantastic parties, I have ever heard. I really would have loved to attend one if they were real.:yeah:

She spoke with her husband all the time :redbeatheand he had been gone for some years and to her dog and her nephew.

She frequently brought up her publishers clearing house "checks" as well as the lottery tickets to be cashed. When ever she requested money, we told her it was an all inclusive resort and it was not needed all she needed to do was give her room number and it would be taken care of. She would often try to check in her "fur coat" (ratty bathrobe) at the nurses station. If you told her it was a nurses station she'd have a fit. I usually just took it and put it on a hanger in the med room and gave her a piece if paper with a claim number. and she was happy as could be wandering in her merry walker. One Saturday morning she told me to go get out of my jammies (She thought our scrubs were pajamas) and put something nice on, we were going to AC, she Booked a limo. she hit it big with the lottery and mad money was to be spent. I yessed her to death and went about my business. While on break I watched as a stretch limo pulled into the parting lot, Occasionally Ruthie would make a call and order stuff like Pizza's but usually it was headed off before they were made. I went out to talk with the limo driver but luckily he was there to visit his mom.

Ruthie was always happy, never upset or angry, she was in a 4 bed room, one contankorus room mate was being perticullary nasty to another of the room mates. Ruthie stated to her, You know it's no wonder no one visits you here at the college, you're a misrable thing you really should smile or your face will freeze like that and you'll never get a feller.

Ruthie never attended college. She did work for the uso during ww2, so perhaps that is were she thought she was. she loved music and danced when ever it was played, Ruthie loved life I pray daily if i have to be senile let me be happily confused, not misrable, i want life to be a neverending party,

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

What a treasure Ruthie must've been!!

I love these stories.......please keep 'em coming:up:

Stumbled upon this because I couldn't sleep. My grandmother worked LTC and would sometimes take me along to visit with the residents when I was a child. One of the ladies would sit in a corner and jab passers by with her cane whenever she was bored. :) When my grandmother cought her, all she did was sheepishly lower the cane and give a huge grin. :D I'd totally forgotten about those days. Great stories! Keep 'em coming.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

You know, I did the same thing with my youngest when he was little.......my other kids didn't like coming into the facilities where I worked, but this one made friends with the staff and the residents.

He is now a CNA and works in the same nursing home where I'm employed.:D

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

And then there was this conversation I had with Elaine the other night when I was giving her roommate a bolus feeding and knocked over an empty can, waking her up:

Elaine: "Who's that over there?"

Me: "It's just me, Elaine." (She can't remember my name, but knows my voice......or so I thought.)

Elaine: "Oh, is that the cat?"

(Roommate starts snickering. I can't help myself.)

Me: "Yes, Elaine, it is. MEOW!"

(Roommate is giggling madly. I'm trying not to, but failing miserably.)

Elaine: "Oh, OK, good to know. I'll go back to sleep now." :rotfl:

Specializes in Oncology, Corrections.

VivalasViejas you should write a book!

Great stories.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.
VivalasViejas you should write a book!

Actually, I'm working on one as we speak.:D Not sure whether a general audience would want to read it, but I imagine there are a few nurses who might pick up a copy if I ever publish the darned thing.:chuckle

Specializes in LTC, Hospice, Tele, ICU.

I miss working in long term care. There was a lady, on a closed dementia unit, and sometimes I'd go there through my agency. Every single time I was there she would laugh and point and say "Look at the big lady with the big boobs!"....too funny! Another lady, at the same facility, was trying to get my attention once and I was reading a doctors order and not paying attention to her so she screams "Hey fat ass"....also funny but that lady was bigger than me which made it even funnier.

As a HH nurse, I had a patient who needed a sponge bath. She was 89 years old with the most angelic face and so, so deaf. Her daughter was an elegant woman who was happy to have Mom living with her. One good thing about home health is that it is OK to use my outside voice when I am doing a nursing assessment. I was trying to ask my little angel when she had her last BM. After she didn't get it the third time, her daughter came to the rescue, shouting, "Mother, have you ****?" (I almost aspirated trying not to laugh.)

Then it was time for the bath. She didn't like to get in the shower so I washed her while she sat on the commode. As I was washing her back, she told me to make sure to 'wash underneath those tits.' When I had washed as far as possible, she told me to make sure and wash her '******.' So then I washed possible.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

:roll:roll:roll

I looove these stories!!! I have worked at a LTC faclility for the past 6 years and we have one LOL who is just the cutest thing ever. She is very tiny and fragile,weighs maybe 80lbs soaking wet & very soft spoken. She always seems to have her eyes half open and is rarely caught with out a smile on her face. We usually have a hard time getting her to eat (at lunch she demands sweetly of course that her salad consist of " 3-4 small pieces of lettuce and 1 drop of dressing") but she has a sweet tooth and loves to snack on sweets at night. One night, during one of her cravings she was really chowing down on a sweet roll and just clearly enjoying it. I said to her "that must be one good roll, you usually eat like a bird" She replyed without looking away from her treat, with frosting on her nose and chin, " chirp chirp..... not tonight" and dove back into it. :lol2: