Too many elderly parents assume adult children will become responsible for them no matter what their child's life is at. They do not consider the impact it will have on their children's lives. Adult children are not built in safety nets for the elderly parent. Elderly parents must take some responsibility toward their care as they age and not assume their children will do it all for them. In today's economy it is selfish and unrealistic for the elderly to meet their expectations by their children. Have some compassion for your adult children and help yourselves first and in return your children will not hesitate to help you.
My mother and I have never had much in common, she has spent her life ridiculing and criticizing me when I didn't do what she wanted me to do for her. She tried to make me like her, fortunately I was a Contrary and much more like my father.
The past 4 months she has been completely bedridden, and has turned into a stranger who demands I give up my life to serve her needs. I have cried to her asking her to try and understand what she is doing to me, my family but she just looks at me without one drop of empathy and with what appears disgust that I am being weak.
She has a tone of voice that has no love or care in it. If I gag when I'm changing her diaper, she actually ridicules me for being "weak." "My God, are you really that weak?"
I vacillate between anger and determination to stand up for my life and my needs, to thinking that it is better to serve, better to help, and fearing I may become evil like her if I stop caring for her. Will she take my soul by destroying my life or will she take it by destroying my empathy?
I appreciate all the posts, they are helping me but I needed to vent. This might not be the last time I do. Thanks for creating this space...
My dad/stepmom live in a small rural area and my stepmom faces a lot of community and church disapproval because she wants a few hours a week respite. It would be OK if I were there for these few hours a week, but, to PAY the county to have someone come in - that is seen as heartless and cold to my house-bound dad. I go up for a weekend a month - and once when the Lutheran pastor came to give my dad communion I got an earful about how I need to be up more often, that I am a cold and selfish daughter. I asked the Lutheran pastor if he would cover my bills and take care of my son at his school so I could come? Because I did have a full time job and a child in school. No - that is not his responsibility.
I love the critics who don't offer to help. If all of these busy body relatives would help vs scolding my BIL/SIL - problem wouldn't be so bad!!!
So I hope that you aunt in Texas can remain strong, Evermore99, and not take her mother in.
It seems as there is often at least one sibling who lets themselves be taken advantage of by the controlling elder. And then they are mad at the ones who are able to remove themselves from the situation.
FEDUPSISTER and I have elders who refuse to look at alternatives other than living in their own home and will tramp all over the lives of their children to maintain their "independent" lifestyle. Shame on the parents. Also, shame on the kids for not having the balls to say "NO", set boundaries, but yell at the lucky to get away sibling.
We visit my INLAWS once per year, and while there, we do help. That is all we are willing to do. I also help my dad/stepmom caregive, we have full time jobs, we have a young child, and we also have a house of our own that needs cleaning, repairs, etc. So if we are selfish, so be it.
From reading this site - I become firmer in my determination to help, to help with caregiving, but to SET BOUNDARIES no matter who is screaming at me that I need to give up my life to do more. NOPE. My parents & Inlaw's refusal to change their lifestyle does not obligate me to give up mine to enable them.
I am wondering how much care your father actually needs given that he's in a facility. What do your mother and you actually do while you're there? If he has genuine care needs and your parents can afford to pay for help, they should be doing that. If it's a question of providing companionship for your Dad, you should feel free to visit him as often as you feel you want to. Your mother can't expect you to have the same degree of commitment to his happiness and comfort as she has. She married him and lives with him; you didn't and don't.
I think parents can be very overbearing with adult children, especially daughters. You mother may feel free to dispose of your time and energy as freely as if it were her own. You have the right to set boundaries with her. The more you do it, the easier it will get. Draw a limit and stick with it. Tell your Mom "I can only visit Dad x times per week ; I have a job and a household to run and other things to do." Good luck and let us know how it's going!
I've been doing this caregiving thing for a long time - history is important.
First - my dad. He had a stroke and became wheelchair bound and unable to speak for the final 10 years of his life. Dad was the perfect father! I loved and admired him so much. Always wanted to be like my dad. Caring for him was a privilege to the end. He was gracious even with dementia.
Second - my sweet husband who endured an awful cancer battle. Our history was a love story and I adored him. Caregiving was easy as he was my everything.
Third - my MIL who had combative-type dementia. My MIL was an aloof woman who showed little interest in me or Bill or our kids. She was bitter and spiteful and stubborn the whole time I knew her (39 years). Caring for her was yucky. Her language was down to constant curse words. She kicked, bit and it felt like she just flat out refused to die.
My mom - bi-polar, failure to thrive. I know mom loved us but..................her bi-polar illness was really hard on my dad, brother, and me. Caring for her is okay but not great. She remains very, very needy. Our history was rocky. She is nice to me but whiney and needy.
We are creating our own history right now with our loved ones. I really don't think people change all that much when they get old. I love our kids and grandkids so much and give them lots of time and love. I want to!! Even when caregiving an elder...........I focus lots on my kids and grandkids. We have a lot to give to the young too!! Not just to elders.
My mother was always somewhat of a narcissist. I was never nurtured but instead was expected to be the nurturer. When she was younger that meant every "crisis" in her life was to be mine as well. This was to the detriment of my own husband and children. My dad kept his business (farming) going and totally ignored life. As my mom sank into the depths of dementia my sister and I had to step in for everything. Thank God my mom's brother convinced her to get long term care insurance (when it was still easy to get) as that paid for care in the home until she died. Now Dad is 80 and doing just fine but the expectation again is that his grieving, his loneliness is 100% our responsiblity. What is frustrating is that he is "aging in place" so that he can hang out with his own siblings (who he truly prefers to us). Kids and grandkids are just there to be caretakers even though we live 1000 miles away. Recognizing that Dad can't go on forever my sister got a house with a separate apartment just for him but he insists on staying at his current house as he doesn't want to leave "his family" (elderly siblings).
My mother-in-law was eerily similar. Life was always about her and her activities. After father-in-law passed away she soon was wheelchair bound but determined to age in place in a house not conducive to it. When her sons didn't move near her, she did hire help but relied way too much on her neighbors and had a very ungrateful attitude. At one point she would kick her caregivers out of the house and we'd get frantic phone calls that she was not lucid (got frequent UTI's but refused to go to the dr). That's one thing people don't understand, when an elderly person insists on staying in their home there is nothing a care service can do as technically it's the CHILDREN who are legally responsible. So I'd be freaking out that mil was sick and alone and needed care but there was little i could do as we were 1000 miles away. She refused to go into a facility as she would 'never leave her house". She eventually became too ill and brother-in-law put her in a facility. She was furious and died of an untreated UTI a few months later.
It really is true that many elderly are very selfish. Neither my parents nor mother-in-law ever had to deal with this with their own parents. My parents spent all their middle age years doing exactly what they wanted to do with no caretaking responsiblities (my grandparents died young as there wasn't the medical advancements like there are now). I feel like I have lost a lot of time with my own children because of my parents. I know my situation can't be compared as both of our moms are gone now and the caretaking is over but I feel a lot of resentment as I feel like my kids grew up and I had no time for them.
However with all the mobility (that is normal these days) some of the elders have not "caught up" in their mind that they need to downsize, live in senior residence, etc.
And shame on the caseworker who neglected to see that your mother was properly bathed.
I do not have kids and am currently 58 years old - far from retirement age. However, my plan is to put my name on a list for a senior residence as soon as I am of age so that I can maintain an independent and decent lifestyle in a community that supports seniors. This is a realistic outlook for today's living.
As a caveat, some have divorced parents living in different places. Mission Impossible if they are not set up for independent living.
As a note to the woman whose mom wants to make all the Christmas plans, I agree with the responder that suggested she get a ride from someone from the church. When my late grandmother was older and unable to drive, she solicited her parish for a ride to mass. They were very accommodating. When the seniors get older, they can get very set in what they want to do on any given day. They are accustomed to being the boss. It is wise to say "I will think about it and let you know". This way you are not overextending yourself and do not have a knee jerk reaction every time mom asks. Sometimes it is hard to say no to them as they get older. There is often a way to include them without derailing your own life. If not, we all do our best.
I miss my deceased relatives and wish I had spent time with one in particular a bit more, but I did the best I could do at that time.
No one goes into a care giving situation realizing that they will be a captive, their live turned up side down, unable to leave or even take a vacation, all due to the selfishness and stubbornness of an elderly parent. But it comes on gradually. First it's just a visit one or twice a week. Then its cleaning up, then laundry, then mowing the lawn, then doing dishes, then shampooing their hair, then changing the bed, buying groceries. And my God when she got an alarm for falling, she would press it when she wanted someone to come over. And it was never enough. And the criticism and anger.
My mother was abusive towards me and at age 18 I left and our relationship was strained, so I was not going to be her caregiver but it fell to my sister and I only stepped in because she literally was killing my sister. My brother other than borrowing large sums of money to keep his house from foreclosure and live in her basement at age 60 rent free for 2 years, did nothing. He only left when mom became a burden and he had to help out.
When I went down to see my sister (it cost about $800 to fly out) and I am on disability, the first thing I did was disconnect her house phone and block mom's number. Which finally forced my brother to step up. But this was only 2 months ago.
I am angry at the stay in the home case workers because even after my mom was diagnosed with Dementia, they still took her word that she needed no home help. She hadn't bathed in 2 years, was wearing the same outfit for 4 weeks and her kitchen was a disaster and she wasn't eating properly. Even when the nurse at the emergency contacted her and told her our mom was in crisis and need immediate placement, this case worker wriggled out and said it wasn't a real crisis. If they want seniors to stay in their homes, the care should be there even if the senior says no. Dumping everything on the children, who are themselves seniors is wrong. It's done only to save money.
I should have rescued my sister long before and that is my only regret. My sister and I will visit only on a limited basis as my mother is verbally abusive.
Don't wait till you are sick and worn to a frazzle. Cut off ties. The agencies or another sibling will step in and so they should.
A senior parent while they have their facilities must make a care plan that does not include their children. With parents living till 100 these days, it means the children are enslaved to their aging parents for up to 20 years. And if my mom's current situation has taught me anything it's that if you do not make plan for when you are unable to look after yourself, someone else will and you won't like it because it will be what is available.
My mother could have had a nice quality of life had she moved into an independent living center for the past 10 years. Instead she chose to live in a house where she could not move around and not bath and refused delivered meals. Her life was a mess but it was her own choosing. I said to my sister, she is drowning and dragging you down. And someone is drowning, you have to cut them loose or they will kill you.
Something has to change because this situation with senior parents cannot continue this way.
My parents also retired and moved near other retired relatives when their own parents were still active. Having kids at 20 and only have to put 25 years in for a pension will do that. But having kids later as my parents did, and our generation working until 65 or 70...means no one is retiring anytime soon. But the aging parents STILL expect someone to move to their retirement town to care for them! None of their children has ties to their town. My MIL by contrast talks with her children and their spouses about plans. She's planning in advance and is clear minded about all the potential issues. So I KNOW it is possible for aging adults to do this. It is possible for them to show some amount of respect. Some just refuse to let go of what they WANT to have happen! Thanks for letting me vent.
Good luck!
Judge and you shall be judged...
This forum ( in my opinion) is about support and exchange of ideas with a view to finding the strength to cope with each new day and challenge. To feel you are not alone. It is not helpful to face criticism or judgement when you are trying your best on a course you have had no training for nor do you know what chapter is coming next.
I understand that in other countries, other cultures, the tradition has been for elders to remain at home with family. I do wonder, however, if that hasn't been changing as women are working fulltime, smaller families means fewer sibs and families are no longer in a small geographic area (which allows for the whole family to take care of each other.)
As our parents are living into their 90's, it has become difficult to keep them home as was the tradition. We often have multiple parents to care for, with our spouse's parents aging as well. And having parents in their 90's means we are seniors with our own health issues as well. Having our own physical limits, plus our spouse's limits and elderly parents with increasing health needs......it becomes impossible to keep everyone at home and care for them properly.
I used to bristle when someone did the judgemental "I would never do this to my parent". Now, I just quietly think "you don't know what you'll do when it's not a hypothetical thing and you have to live with the real consequences of your decision."
I come from a blended, multicultural family that expect you to take care of your parents until death. However, when I really got to experience how involved care taking really is I realized I couldn't do it all myself. I went to bed one night with my jaw hurting so bad I thought I might not wake up the next morning. I am a Christian and thought well absent from the body present with the Lord, but I really didn't want to die. And I am still fairly young and otherwise in good health. I don't want to die like that anyway.
Sometimes the most kind, loving and merciful thing we can do for a parent or other family member is to get them into the hands of good care they need to ensure the best quality of life at that point in their lives. They need it, but so do we. I'd rather be an advocate in that way than to run myself into the ground and leave this earth before they do. Many, as you have read, come from some horrendous family circumstances that make it even more of a challenge. I commend them for doing so in the face of such pain and hurt many times.
This is not to condemn you at all, so please don't take it that way. It's just to say sometimes we have to step back and see the bigger picture outside of our own world. Believe me, it's a lot going on out there! Be well.