You all have it I know or you wont be here. This is year 2 for me and he's not a bad guy it is just we are different in many ways. It is starting to grate on me and I am becoming a very grumpy person. My wife and I are stressed, she has a lot of stress at work. I work at home so I am in it 24/7. We don't have a lot of money to travel and I can't leave him for very long. I can but not sure what the house would be like after. I cook, shop, repair and do all the things around the house, My wife cleans and keep an immaculate house even with 2 dogs.
Dad can come and go as he wishes. It is just he is complaining to relatives ow so I am looking like the bad guy. If I say anything I am really in trouble. It has always been this way. I learned from my mom to keep my ears open and mouth shut. If I tell a relative they tell him. if I tell him he tells a relative. If I say anything to my sister she tells him so I am screwed.
I cant post a message on social media he finds it (sneaky ways he uses the computer). So I am apparently blackballed from the family per sea. It is my assumption but since no one calls now I can only figure that. How do I get info to family that he is not being as forth rite as he portrays? We are all over the country, one sibling and I do not talk (damage done years ago). The other its all about her. Its the aunts and cousins who I guess I don't care but it does sting that I bust my ass and he has to look like the spoiled child.
Losing my cool way too much (it is in check just inside my head).
Do I ask my sibling to take him for a month this summer? If I do she will make it seem like I am asking a favor and will tell him I asked then I look like I am booting him out.
Because once you've supposed, the options for him that then present themselves may develop into actual possibilities.
As for the rest of the family... My mother always told me 'if you can't say anything nice, don't say anything at all.'
Good news tho my son in law got his start date for his job Monday (fingers crossed).
Just having so many people in the house and what seems to be an open check book.......
Vacation is in 2 days..... yea! me and the Mrs. time! Problem is Dad will be home during the day by himself. All he has to do is let 3 dogs out at noon and 3. Put them on a leash and let them to their business and bring them back in. I know that is a lot to ask of someone who is living in your home and when one of the dogs is his.... I just don't feel I have to hire someone to do simple tasks for 3 days.... He will still have his meals made for him...... (Daughter will be here). So Saturday I have to have a sit down with him and explain how important this is..... He has never had to be responsible because everyone will do rather than wait.
The subject came up in my thoughts because a newspaper story referred to that very famous study from a few years back, when twelve elders were moved into supported living and split into two groups. They were told different things about the level of care they would receive, even though the assistance available was identical for both groups. All of them were given a living, potted plant in their bedrooms. One group was made responsible for watering and caring for their plants, the other had it all done for them.
Anyway, blah blah blah, no surprise: the group who were encouraged to do things for themselves (including plant care) at the end of the study reported better levels for every single aspect of physical, mental and emotional wellbeing.
But between concern for the cat and my personal inability to stand the sight and smell of my mother flicking Kitty Yums or whatever it was all round the utility room, or the gunge left in the cat's dish after she'd 'washed' it, I just took over. Not really so much as a by your leave, looking back. Outcome: I made mother feel useless and irrelevant, and I stole at least 20% of the cat's attention from her, and this for the sake of improving catering hygiene for a creature that licked its own bottom.
Not my finest caregiving hour, really.
So. Since Daughter is there in case of any serious shortcomings or emergencies, encourage her to leave all canine care to your father. She will have qualms, and so will you; but assuming that these are able-bodied adult dogs there is comparatively little harm he can do them, and the responsibility will do him a power of good.
Deep breaths... Innnnnnn..... Ooooouuuuuttt....
We, like you, are unable to leave him for more than a couple of hours, as he is a serious fall risk, since he does Nothing but watch TV all day long. A few months ago, I brought in PT and OT to help him gain back some strength from years of inactivity, despite our trying to get him up and out of the house, but at 86, he has and has always had zero interest in going or doing anything! , so we made some safety adjustments, he went through rigorous PT, 3 X a week, X 8 weeks, and we definitely saw improvement, but since they stopped coming, he has stopped his exercise program, and has wasted away even furtherand I wasn't going to be the one who nagged him to exercise 3 X a day. He is now barely able to walk unassisted, and must use his rollator walker, even room to room to steady him. So we are stuck and do everything for him, but we allowed this to happen, as seeing him struggle to do antything, we just took over, task by task.
Becauseof this, and we did make it clear, that he needed to improve, and begin doing simple things for himself again, we have decided to make serious changes, just to save our marriage and our sanity, so in the next 10 months, we are preparing our house to sell, mainly because my husband who has a back injury, can no longer physically handle the outdoor maintenance upkeep, which used to be his sanctuary and passion. And now we intend to find FIL a senior living situation and begin our lives after this 13 year servitude.
This would have been a completely different scenario, had it been my own Dad, as he was joyful, outgoing and appreciative, but my FIL is none of these things. He believes his biggest hold over us is the modest amount of money that he constantly holds over my husband's head, his "inheritance", but there is no amount of money that would make even one more year worth the hell he is to live with, so we are happy to have him spend that on living elsewhere, where he can watch TV all day, never go out, and continue holding us hostage. Bitter, yes, I'm very bitter, as his Narcissistic behavior has only worsened over the years.
I hope you truly enjoy your vacation with your wife, but make just a little bit of time to discuss other possibilities for your future! Good luck, I truly feel for you guys!
I never thought things would be this crazy. The down side is I run my business from home and everyone thinks I have all day to do stuff and all the money to do so.Dad still does not integrate with the grand kids except for diner. He tells stories but does not engage in conversation unless it is about him which makes it tough. On some level I feel sorry for him but on the other level he could help out a little more other than wait to be waited on.
That your wife hasn't lost her patience with your dad after the way he treats her home is frankly amazing to me.
You - as a husband and a man - must do something different because what you have been doing for two years is not working. You must change because your father will not change.
If you yourself must drive your father and his dog to a sibling's doorstep, do it. How much longer can you go on like this? Perhaps the better question is how much longer do you want things to go on like this?
You mentioned your dad goes to church. Perhaps you should go see his pastor/priest and unload on someone who knows him and can start giving you some much needed help and spiritual relief. You are holding too much inside!
TG I don't like the sound of your Dad's withdrawing like this. Ask your sister to look carefully for any changes in his behaviour or conversation - sometimes it's much more obvious when there's been a longer gap since you last saw him. When is he off?
Lovely AM, kids all up, he's up, I'm trying to get work done, and the dogs get put in my office so others can go get showers or go outside and yet the dog in my office pees on the carpet in front of me....... so I have to break out the carpet cleaner... as I am cleaning the SIL says "did he do something bad?"..... At least he is working on my yard right now.
One of those days...... Time to enjoy my daughters who are both home together for one more day!
Trying to get paperwork out the door today so I can enjoy the weekend...... My guess is 5 days and dad will be home........ Enjoy it while I have it.
This is I think an ingrained attitude, one that's hard to break, and it wouldn't be any easier if he was living alone. I really don't know what the solution is; perhaps others do.
And there's the added issue that you're his son; father and son disagreements and conflicts are possible - as others have written elsewhere, he still thinks he's the boss and you're the (adult) child who needs to accept his dominance.
I wonder how this dynamic will play out in decades as men who are stay-at-home fathers segue into old age and need care.
If your sibling has enough money to wine and dine your dad, then it seems to me that sibling has the means to contribute financially to the upkeep of his/her dad. From what you've said about your relationship with your siblings, it seems like you do not come right out and ask for help and they just do whatever they want.
Is there any chance that while your father is away you and your wife can brainstorm alternative living arrangements for your dad? For example, seniors sharing housing is becoming very popular ever since the economy tanked in 2008. It's like real life Golden Girls and it's not just widows doing it anymore.
How much longer do you think you and your wife can go on without any meaningful respite from your dad? I cannot imagine how it must feel to think you're going to get two weeks respite only to have your dad land on your doorstep after five days. I think that's a terrible way for your siblings to be treating you and your wife. Setting aside for a moment how they feel about you, their brother, what do they have against your wife that they would treat her so unkindly as to dump *their* dad on her doorstep whenever it suits them?
You break out the carpet cleaner. You then take SIL by SIL's collar, lead him to the puddle, and hand HIM the bottle and the rags. Don't rub his nose in it, though. Not this time, anyway.
One point made on this forum is frustration at parents treating adult children like kids when they live together. But the other part of this is that adult children aren't allowed to revert to children and expecting their parents to take responsibility for them ( and their kids and their dogs.) So...you should look at you and your wife handling the family the way you did with your teenagers. Logical consequences.
My other sibling has the money and has helped a little but what ever I say will be wrong. In the beginning it was we can split time but the day I inherited dad that train left the station. even if I did bring up the dialog I would be wrong so...... Dad wouldn't last long with them anyway, (does not get along with BIL). I am the last resort and the only one to put up with the BS. He has no money to live on his own so that is not an option. It has to be little changes. I am being a little more tough love than anyone else. Like we don't vacuum his living room or bedroom but he doesn't care.... there gets a point where we have to (it is my house and we keep a very clean home). His living room is the first room guests see (even with a french door). The bathroom is shared withe the kids or guests so it has to be clean, thus we have to do it or in a week it would be filth. So we lose. Of course while he is away we will have to clean... as much as it pains me. When mom died he left others to come in and clean. My grandfather (his dad) used to clean the house and shop and work second shift when I was a kid. Dad will shop but only for himself (fruit, his milk, pickled pig something.) My mom taught me to clean, cook, do laundry, iron, shop etc.... I took his dry cleaning bag away so he has to iron his own shirts vs me PAY for his to be done. it is the little things that grate.
Good news SIL did the lawn today! Yea.... little steps......
Upon dad's return call a family meeting. Be clear that things have changed. Be clear about how what he does makes you feel. Be clear about your expectations of him going forward. Be clear that you won't tolerate him disrespecting your wife or your home anymore.
One small change you can make is hire a maid. If you're not the one cleaning up after him maybe you won't feel so bad.
I think you said he still drives so another small change you can make is take him to the senior center and find him an activity and enroll him. Letting him sit around your house all day is not doing any of you any good.
Another small change you can make is teaching him how to care for his own dog. Being a responsible dog owner means walking them three times a day or every 8 hours, feeding them on a schedule, grooming them regularly, taking them to the vet for vaccinations, and cleaning up after them if they have an accident.
Have you seen the movie What About Bob?