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 Neuro ICU and Med Surg.

My grandma has Alzheimer's and said to my mom and dad one day in the car "You see that tree right there? It is dead and doesn't know it yet."

She told the ER doc one night my mom, my aunt and I were triplets.

She said Golytely would have been better with vodka in it. (She never has drank at all)

She said that women take off their bras at hockey games and swing them in the air when the home team scores.

She asks me if I have to go to work every day, and what shift I am working. The other night she asked me if I was going to pass dinner trays and I work midnights.

Grandma has asked me who my parents were one night. She thought I was someone else. No idea who, but she was supposedly my aunt.

Had a 95 year old or who would slip in and out of orientation....He was asking when his parents would be there to pick him up one afternoon. Knowing he might be able to work his way back with a few questions I asked his age and got the correct answer...then I asked how old his parents are....that got a string of profanity towards me for being crazy enough to think his parents are still alive!

After that he had a nice conversation about an upcoming football game .... gotta love it when it works!

I worked in LTC for almost 10 years, I work in a doctors office and finding it's really not my cup of tea. I miss my geriatric patients :(

SO many stories!

We loved Johnny. He was an old farmer who was thoroughly demented. He would wheel around slowly being busy. When asked what he was doing he'd tell you that he was doing some sort of farm work. "Cleaning the ditches". "Bringing in the hay". "Planting the wheat", "Fixing the truck."

One day he had taken hold of another resident's walker. I gently backed him away as the gal growled at him in anger, pulling it back. "What is going on, Johnny?" I asked.

"Well, I was loading up the sheep, but I guess that one is hers!" was his innocent reply!

One of my teachers told me this one, and it makes me giggle to this day. They had a little fella in their LTC who was sure he was still back on the farm, and would completely unravel if someone didn't "get the cows in" around sundown, and would try to go get the cows in, despite not being able to walk, not being on a farm, etc. So, everyday, someone would go out one door when he started worrying about the cows, saying, "don't worry, I'll go get them in for the night." And they had to go out one door and come in another for this to work.

Well, they had a two new nurses one night, and one tried to "reorient" the poor guy, and upset him to no end. So, the other new nurse, who was rapidly clued in as to what needed to be done, said, "don't worry, I'll go get them in" and takes off out the door. The guy sits there in his wheelchair, cussing "that fool woman, don't know them cows'll git into mischief if they're out all night..." So the second nurse comes back in, breathless from running from one door to the other, and said, "Okay, Mr. Smith, there's a bunch of gurnseys in the barn."

The guy went completely nuts and started screaming, "You fool, we ain't got gurnseys, you stole somebody's else's cows!" and nothing would calm him. Each nurse, aide and janitor in the place went out in turn, guessing red cows, black cows, spotted cows, and never getting it right, and the poor resident's getting more and more upset. Finally, the charge nurse came on the scene, and said, "Mr. Smith, you stop messing with these girls, you know I get your cows in every night, and they're all just fine." For some reason, that worked, and he settled down, until he looked at the first nurse and said, "How many cows are out there?"

My teacher said the poor thing looked like she was going to cry. Welcome to the world of dementia....the charge nurse said, "all of them" and a second crisis was stopped in its tracts.

I've always remembered that with dementia patients -- if you've got to tell them something, keep the story the same, AND DON'T ADD TO IT.

LOL-what a hilarious story. Yes dementia patients can be interesting,

When my grandmother was in a LTC she tried to convince one of the nurses to kill her husband's mistress (he had been dead for over 20 years). She told the nurse that he was down in florida running around with a woman. She offered to pay her good money to do it and she was serious. She had dementia and was always doing something like that. :uhoh3:

For several months after she first arrived in the nursing home she would roll up to the nurses station and try to convince them to let her go home because she needed to feed her hogs and cows. She thought she was being sneeky and that they would be convinced, lol!

My grandmother was very country and any word that ended in an "a" she pronounced the "a" as an "er". One day, I was walking down the hall next to her and she suddenly stopped and proclamed, "You know what I need? A Fleet's Enemer." She was obsessed with her bowel's. :eek:

There were also multiple times that she would call me (sometimes 30+ times a day) from her cell phone and tell me that she was sitting behind the post office without her car and she needed someone to come pick her up and take her home. I'm not sure what it was about the post office but she was stuck on that story.

Another time I walked in her room and she was going through her dresser drawers. When she noticed I was there she called me by my cousins name and started asking me what truck my daddy would be driving when he came to pick her up (he had been dead for over a year). I stayed for about an hour visiting with her and the entire time she thought I was my cousin.

All the above happened before I was a nurse and helped prepare me for becomming a LTC nurse.

As a nurse, one night I had forgot to remove a Lidoderm patch from a residents knee. I thought I could slip in her room and take it off her knee while she slept. As soon as I removed it she looked at me and started talking.

Our conversation went something like this:

Her: "Do you wear Kotex?"

Me: "Why yes I do"

Her: "Well I don't think we should have to pay for them"

Me: "I don't either"

Her: "Does your husband know about it?"

Me: "Yes he does" (I wasn't married)

Her: "What does he think?"

Me: "Well, he dosn't think we should have to pay for them either. "

Her: "It's not right"

Me: "No, its not"

:D

That is one of the conversations that really stands out during my 3 years in LTC :)

We had an elderly patient for several days, who was drowsy, unresponsive, and didn't move a muscle on his own. No words, sounds, or movements for days. Suddenly, I see him sitting on the side of the bed, trying to stand himself up. I ask him where he's going...his response:

"I GOTTA GO MAKE MONEY!!!"

(at the TOP of his lungs)

...Clearly, he had started feeling a little better.

An older guy I worked with once told me "you know you're getting old when you and your teeth don't sleep in the same room anymore!" Also, "you know you're getting old when you step off the sidewalk and have to look behind you to make sure it's still there!"

I had a patient who was hard of hearing and used one of the store bought amplifiers with a dial control on it . He would sit in the lobby all day and say hello to everyone who passed -every single time- a hundred times a day. Once I was passing him to relay some information to a nurse who was a few feet away from him. He held up a finger and raised his eyebrows to indicate he wanted to speak to me. I held up a finger and mouthed "just a minute." Spoke briefly to the nurse-turned around and said "what can I do for you, Mr. B?". He reached to his shirt pocket-turned the dial up on his amplifier and asked "Can you hear me now?" I burst out laughing-couldn't help it.