They found it!
#11
My neighbor ask me to do some embroidery on a sweatshirt jacket for her mother that is in a nursing home. They wanted her name in big letters so it wouldn't get stolen, since she has a odd name not many would want it. Then we added a pretty hummingbird to it. Sad with the cost of living there that your things are not more secure.
#12
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Crossville, TN
Posts: 1,078
My mothers false teeth disappeared when she was in a nursing home. The staffs reply, 'all valuables are suppose to be kept in the office safe' Now I ask you what would someone want with another persons false teeth and why would one keep their false teeth in a safe when you need them in your mouth all the time except at night?
They never were found.
They never were found.
#13
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Jacksonville, FL
Posts: 374
It didn't matter in the long run and, actually, my father-in-law would have smiled about it; but, my father-in-law was buried without shoes. Someone took them from his room in the nursing home after he died and before his body was transported to the nursing home.
We all hoped they fit.
Pat
We all hoped they fit.
Pat
#14
Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 26
Midnight shoppers
In many cases in assisted living homes it is the residents who are the midnight shoppers. My mothers quilts kept going missing and then showing up. When my mom passed away and we cleaned out her room we found lots of stuff that wasn't hers, just things she liked those things.
The care takers try as they might can't stop it from happening.
Sylvia
#15
My 95 year old Mom is also in a nursing home. Little things have disappeared from her room, too. The strangest one: the wedding photo of her eldest grandson and his wife. Whoever took it...do they want my son and DIL as relatives? I'm sure I can arrange that! LOL Unfortunately, my mom has advanced Alzheimer's and doesn't recognize anyone (including me) anymore, so aside from me being a bit miffed about the missing picture (frame is still there, so I know they didn't want the frame), in the long run, she wouldn't know the people in the photo anyway.
The nursing home Mom is in is better than average care wise, so I count my blessings. A missing photo...oh well.
Anita
The nursing home Mom is in is better than average care wise, so I count my blessings. A missing photo...oh well.
Anita
#16
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Bay Area near San Francisco
Posts: 1,213
Years ago, one of the patients at my mother's nursing home had a couple of nice dresses "adopted". Since she was in a wheelchair, her daughter solved the problem by taking a permanent marker and putting her name on the back of the skirt in large letters. Couldn't see it when she was sitting down, but it sure showed up when someone else put it on and stood up.
#17
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Bay Area near San Francisco
Posts: 1,213
#18
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Bay Area near San Francisco
Posts: 1,213
My 95 year old Mom is also in a nursing home. Little things have disappeared from her room, too. The strangest one: the wedding photo of her eldest grandson and his wife. Whoever took it...do they want my son and DIL as relatives? I'm sure I can arrange that! LOL Unfortunately, my mom has advanced Alzheimer's and doesn't recognize anyone (including me) anymore, so aside from me being a bit miffed about the missing picture (frame is still there, so I know they didn't want the frame), in the long run, she wouldn't know the people in the photo anyway.
The nursing home Mom is in is better than average care wise, so I count my blessings. A missing photo...oh well.
Anita
The nursing home Mom is in is better than average care wise, so I count my blessings. A missing photo...oh well.
Anita
#19
I worked as a Nurse's aide when I was in my 20's (needed timeout from the upholstery business). We had thefts amongst other residents. We had a "kidnapping" of a Lady's baby (one of those real looking baby dolls). I found her in another residents room. When I tried to take the baby home to her ""Mom", the Lady who had her yanked my ponytail
and brought me to my knees. All I could do was scream for help, that lady had a death grip on 4 feet of my hair and wasn't letting go!
There were other small thefts mostly brushes, eyeglasses slippers etc. But I don't ever recall someone stealing teeth.
and brought me to my knees. All I could do was scream for help, that lady had a death grip on 4 feet of my hair and wasn't letting go!
There were other small thefts mostly brushes, eyeglasses slippers etc. But I don't ever recall someone stealing teeth.
#20
Years ago, one of the patients at my mother's nursing home had a couple of nice dresses "adopted". Since she was in a wheelchair, her daughter solved the problem by taking a permanent marker and putting her name on the back of the skirt in large letters. Couldn't see it when she was sitting down, but it sure showed up when someone else put it on and stood up.
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