So tonight after speaking, in a Gray Rock Mode, to my elderly mother on the phone, I am running out of things to say to her. She lives an hour away from me. I am 62 and work with a 17 year old student daughter at home. Now that my mother can't drive, all she wants to know is when I have days off so she can ask me to drive to her town and chauffeur her around. Tonight she asked me if I have tomorrow off because she needs a litre of milk. Then she proceeds to tell me how she just got home from the hairdressers with a friend and how she had done enough cooking for about a dozen meals for herself. Duh. Could have got that milk somewhere I think. I live in a gated community for over 55s myself in a small home. I can walk to everything I need. I actually do not need a car. In 12 months my daughter will take my car when she goes to university. Hooray. I will be CAR FREE. I have explained this to my mother in the past. She has a second chance to get her licence next week but I feel she might fail again. She has refused to move either in with me or even to my town. So I went ahead and looked after my own and my daughters comfort and bought into this retirement community. She is so nice and polite in front of her friends but over the phone she runs everyone down to me. I am sick and tired of her complaining and denial of her own problems. I am not going to be driving for much longer as I hate driving now and it leaves me nervous and exhausted. She has no regard for my health or feelings. I am determined to be car free. Anyone got advice for the words to use to get through to her that if she fails her licence a second time she is STUCK? And needs to make some grown-up choices about what to do next. No other family live near her and two of her offspring do not see her. She has never been a scholar or a thinker and its got worse with age. p. s. she does not have dementia.
Apparently, not having a car of her own and not having you on hand as her chauffeur are not such a problem for her after all. It didn't stop her getting to the hairdresser or having enough supplies to cook a dozen meals. So... what are the problems she is complaining about and denying (presumably not both at the same time)?
Is it that:
a) you want your mother to live within walking distance. She won't budge.
b) you are looking forward to hanging up your car keys and don't want that new freedom to be spoiled?
So that, adding those together:
Your mother wants you to drive to her town to see her and take her out. You don't want to. And then? What about it? When you have no car I don't see how you can fail to win the argument.
Yes...THIS! Better get used to start setting boundaries NOW. If you have 2 sibs who are already uninvolved, your mother is going to look to YOU as she gets older and needs more help.
You will need to set limits and boundaries with your mother. We are expected to do what we agree to do, and , more importantly, what we DO do.
It doesn't matter her regard or lack of for your "feelings". It matters what you say yes to. Tell your mother in a very nice manner that you will not be able to do these things for her. That she can get a place to live where she is taken care of, or avail herself of your offer to move more near, but that other options are out.
As to hoping she passes her license, when it is more than likely better that she no longer drive I will just tell you that it took my brother lying bleeding in the arms of his neighbor having smashed up his head, one palm tree and one refuse container to admit "I knew I shouldn't be driving; I knew something was wrong". Two months later, one month of rehab and one month of selling and moving to ALF, his life was quite changed.
Do let Mom know that you understand that she has problems, but that you do also, and that she should call you when she has good things to say, or the calls will be very short. Then see to it that you stick to it. There is no sense walking about with a "kick me" sign on post-its stuck to our forehead and then complain when the kick is delivered. You need to let people know what you will accept from them and what you will not. That is how life works.
This running out of a litre of milk thing often comes down to beginnings of fear, loneliness, neediness, because as we all know, it's easy to lean across the fence and say "Elmira, are you by any chance heading to the store today? I forgot my milk". Do know also that your Mom moving near you or worse yet in with you is not going to make anything even slightly better, but will be the beginning of an awful, likely decades long, slow slide downward. Reconsider that offer.
I sure wish you luck and hope you'll update us, but you will have to take this in hand before it gets quite OUT of hand.
Shops deliver, there is long-life milk, neighbours to borrow a cup. But the I need milk being code for 'I am lonely or scared'. Yes! Or the manipulative 'While you get the milk, I need *insert here* the week's groceries, booze, chores, this fixed, that done".
Milk. The beginning of the slippery slope 😭
I am assuming ur from the UK. We have Office of Aging here that has senior bussing to appts and shopping. I would think England has stores that deliver groceries. Pharmacies that deliver meds. Mom is going to need to learn to use the resources at her disposal. Yes. set those boundries now.
Your profile also states:
" i am happy but feel guilty because my old mother is not."
BE happy. Don't feel guilty if she isn't. Happiness comes from within. WE can't make someone else happy, so WE shouldn't feel guilt if they can't make their own happiness.
"She has refused to move either in with me or even to my town. So I went ahead and looked after my own and my daughters comfort and bought into this retirement community."
THAT was probably one of the BEST decisions you have ever made! See next quote.
"She is so nice and polite in front of her friends but over the phone she runs everyone down to me. I am sick and tired of her complaining and denial of her own problems."
THAT'S what you would have been living with, 24/7. BTW, I KNOW the type. My mother was like that - friends, neighbors, family. I was getting really fed up with that nonsense, esp in regards to one former SIL. I often thought what her friends and family members would think if they ever heard all the back-handed comments she made about them! I was also taking up space in my head - I didn't feel it right to go blabbing what she was saying to those she talked smack about. Last time she started on the SIL I swore the next would be cut off and the last. Not only was SIL divorced and didn't cause issues with OB, she also died in the hospital after some kind of surgery. Geeze Louise mom, the woman is dead, give it a fricking rest! Dementia came along and took care of that. She still did, now and then, go on about one or another of her sisters, but not to the same extent and the only thing that can be attempted is to redirect the discussion.
Anyway. Your mother managed to get out and get her hair done and get some necessities. Good for her. Back off, don't help, and she'll manage to figure out how to do for herself. Not sure where you're located (litre of milk says not likely US), but many shops will deliver. Yes, there will be a charge, and some require a minimum purchase, but anything they charge would be less than what you have to do to pick up a stupid gal of milk!
Are there methods of transport in her area (bus, taxi, etc)? If so, she can take those. She has friends and neighbors that she's nice to (excluding behind their backs!), she can catch a ride or ask them to get some little items when they are out.
Even if you DID like driving and kept a car, making a 2 hour round trip for a gal of milk is asinine! Plenty of legit responses, since you say she doesn't have dementia. Since she's asking for it now, not when you get a chance, then:
I'm working mom, I can't get out to do this.
I have appointment after work, I can't do this.
The car is in the shop, I can't do this.
I'm tired mom, I can't do this.
The local shops can deliver it to you mom, quicker than I can. Call them and have it delivered. I'm NOT driving TWO hours because you need milk.
(some above are fudging, personally I would probably use the last one.)
Keep pushing back, refuse to drop everything for something so silly. I can understand maybe taking her grocery shopping weekly or so, but not driving an hour each way because she needs milk. REMIND her each and every time that the car will soon be no more, so she will need to find alternative ways to get what she needs. When the car is not there anymore, the answer is just NO. I don't have a car mom.
If she continues to harangue you, find out what the local shops would charge for delivery of the milk, or whatever, and then triple it, or more. Figure the cost on what you get paid hourly x 2 hrs, plus mileage and gas. Add in an annoyance fee on top of all that! Tell her what your fee would be vs what the store would charge!
My mother sometimes ran out of milk or OJ between my trips (1.5 hours each way!), so she'd ask a neighbor. The 1HR aides we hired to keep her in her condo longer had no real tasks, so they'd go get these too, but that plan didn't work - refused to let them in.
Wants the OP as chauffeur - won't listen to no.
WON'T listen to reason or CAN'T reason?
Time will tell...
Say no.
Suggest Taxi, Uber, senior services. Then drop it.
See what she does.
Has she the grace to change her mind & the confidence to try a taxi?
Or are there more & more 'emergencies' cropping up?
Do not offer or let her move in with you. That would be a disaster.
If she doesn't get her license, she'll have to depend on her friends and Uber for her going outs and she can order her groceries No worries for you as you will be Car Free soon so mom will know you can't come over because you don't have a car.
Many options to choose from and the way to get started is signing up and trying them out, one by one. See what suits. She doesn't have a smart phone to order? She should get one. It should be a part of her plan to stay in her home as long as possible without you running errands that you haven't scheduled. Now is a good time to set ground rules and discuss future strategies.
The second best piece of advice is learning to say no. Since you talk by phone, you have the ultimate control over that receiver in your ear and can hang up at any time. All the good techniques can work. Therapeutic fibs (for your benefit) like, “sorry, the car’s in the shop,” are perfectly fine. Redirection and asking questions work too. Since she just got home from the beauty shop, ask who took her, and wasn’t that nice of them. Nice, neutral stuff but you also learn who is helping as you might need to contact that person later to be an extra set of eyes on your mother’s health. Mention POAs and living wills, etc. If she’s been to the doctor, weave in a question about what medication she takes. She may not answer but it is useful to know. Anything but letting her focus on you.
You say she doesn’t have dementia, but you might want to do a little research on who to call in an emergency. Just knowing who to call in her area will help your peace of mind if an emergency happens.
Sorry, I think that ordering everything in is not a good solution, it just further isolates our seniors and very often, the trip to the grocery store is the only socialization many of them have.
I would find her an option besides getting behind the wheel of a lethal weapon if she is having issues and refuses to acknowledge them. Maybe giving up driving is the acknowledgment that all is not well. But putting her on the roads is not a viable solution.
If you are not willing to help her figure any of her options out, tell her to go through someone else and change your number or block her. That way she is forced to find answers besides calling you.
She played this game until I put my foot down and handed her to paperwork to get free grocery delivery. I only lived 2 miles away, but had 2 young children and I did not want to be at her back and call any day of the week. Neither of her sons stepped up to the plate.
She was lonely , but made no effort at all to get out of the house to meet anyone. There is a vibrant seniors centre in town, there are welcoming churches, but she wanted to stay home and have people come to her.
OP as your Mum is capable of getting out and about when it suits her, even without a driver's license, she is capable of getting milk.
You can do some research on seniors transportation options in her community and pass that along to her. Here in BC, we have Handidart, a bookable public transit with door to door service for seniors and those with disabilities, in Vancouver, some are eligible for 50% off cab fare vouchers.
One thing in your plan to be car free that I question. I fully understand your desire to live car free, but will you also stop all visits with Mum at that time? Could she be fearing that day?
* You need to ask yourself why you allow yourself to be entangled in this web - her web, when you have a daughter who needs her mother? Have you asked yourself Why?
* Why are you afraid of her / reactions to you, i.e., :
1. saying No.
2. saying you are busy now.
3. saying you need to make other arrangements, I cannot do this 'now.'
4. I'll let you know when I am returning. It might be (a) on Wednesday, in a few days, etc.
5. You'll need to ask ____ to help you this time. I am busy with my daughter right now.
If she doesn't have dementia, then she is repeating patterns of behavior in how she's interacted with you, likely for your lifetime. You need to go deep inside and ask why you allow her to control you and your behavior. So what if she's mad and having temper tantrums? She obviously will once you set boundaries. Does this frighten YOU to be on the receiving end of this behavior?
As I say "you teach others how to treat you" -
You must consider your own (quality of) life and that of your daughter, and, of course, your peace of mind and health . . . now and as time moves on. She certainly is not going to change. Whether she drives or not or wants a carton of milk or not, you need to regroup, take a few or many deep breaths and learn that it is OKAY, more than OKAY, for you to set boundaries with her requests / outbursts - whatever you want to call it.
Tough Love is Loving Kindness to Yourself.
Truly insightful information, beautifully written. I wish I had read this a few years ago. for me, it sums up exactly the bravery needed to shine a light on ourselves and why saying no can be so painful. But so worth it.
For her complaints, just offer your original offer - you could move here and be in closer proximity to shopping like I do it. (Although, as she ages, walking to stores may not be possible - so consider that before moving her into your home). If she is tech savvy, tell her to use uber/car rides. You could tell her to keep grocery list and call you weekly - order online and have delivered to her. Most stores have a minimum amt, but there are all kinds of delivery services now that could bring her nearly anything she needs. Just remind her you can't help on short notice.
She is going to have to rely on friends until the point she wears them out or they have to give up driving, too. If she wants to stay where she is and you want to stay where you are, not much you can offer unless you want to. When she talks about scheduling you for a trip to help, defer to a week or two away. Or tell her your own car not running well and waiting on repairs. Maybe there will come a time she is willing to move closer.
pram, tricycle, bicycle, car, taxi, wheeler, wheelchair
Please don't fight to your death (or anyone else's!) for your car - just call a taxi. Otherwise the hearse wheels will be your last ride.