We moved my elderly parent in with us after relocating to a new state, thinking this was an ideal plan. It meant my parent wouldn’t have to be alone, and we could help out. Fast forward several months, and we are to the point that we want to help my parent find a new place. This parent refuses to do anything to help out unless specifically asked, and when confronted about the issues, excuses are made. I feel like I’m running an assisted living facility. We have 3 kids to take care of and their grandparent refuses to lift a finger. We provide all groceries and everything else, including driving to appointments. My elderly parent is afraid to drive despite never having an accident.
at the expense of them.
if they won't help then they are taking advantage of you sadly.
Set out a discussion of your burdens when they do not help you yet require your help. Give them a month to improve-keep a chart to check off when they help and when you do for them. If you have more checks for helping them then they do helping you, then the deal is they move. Begin now to look at places and have that option ready.
Seriously move some of their things into the garage so they see you are serious, and the ball is in their court to help you.
My mom left my house twice because she didn't like what I was layin' down for her. Pissed, pissed as all get out she was. Both times she left while I was at work and left a note.
However she did finally move in with me and gave in to my rule. She lived with me for several years. She died last October.
Other than losing my mom, I like the way it all went.
burnout to set in. Get your parent into a facility, and don't feel guilty about what's in the best interest of the both of you, (speaking from experience).
Find parent a nice assisted living facility..not independent living. I don’t think he or she is ready for nursing home or memory care? Does elderly parent having trouble walking or remembering? Any incontinence? Falling a lot? Start touring places & getting pricing. Hugs 🤗
"We moved my elderly parent in with us.... wouldn't have to be alone, and we could help out." Your wording shows you have gone from YOU could help out, to now wanting PARENT to help out. Did you make that clear before the move? Did the parent easily agree to this, or "pushed" into doing this? Did you discuss what you wanted to happen after moving in?
I am an "elderly 67 y.o.", elderly according to my kids in their 30's and 40's. Mom, 96, and I and a 39 y.o. daughter live together in my home. I'll tell you what my mom and I do have in common, despite a 30 yr. age difference; we like peace and quiet and not a lot of drama. We each raised our children and enjoy not having to do a lot. Maybe your parent feels the same. What kind of life was your parent living before moving in with you? Perhaps, he/she would be happier in a home by his/herself. Have you talked with your parent about this?
If you really want everyone's best advice on here, please provide more information. Right now, there is so little, it seems like everyone is taking sides.... yours vs. elderly parent, and that is not helpful.
You have a set-up that works for you, your mother, and adult daughter, and you all like ‘peace and quiet’. My guess is that you would not have agreed to move into a family house with 3 children, let alone have expected it to give you the benefits of the ‘assisted living facility’ that OP has found her self running.
You are quite right that more information would have avoided the unpleasant conclusions that seem to be jumped at, but why jump at all?
You went from "my parent wouldn't have to be alone, and we could help out" to "this parent refuses to do anything to help out" and "we have 3 kids to take care of and their grandparent refuses to lift a finger".
There was a point in your life when you were provided "all the groceries and everything else" etc., perhaps......from this parent?
There's everything right with specifically, verbally asking for help every time you need it and being specific in the instruction. Then praise generously when goals are met. After all your parents idea of this gig was to "have company and be helped out".
With aging, fear of driving is not uncommon no matter how many accidents didn't happen.
You can make this work if you tweak some stuff. Make some changes, then make other changes. Keep the stuff that works change what doesn't. And then do it all over again.
Relax. Take a deep breath. You can make this work if you change some stuff.
It doesn't sound as if he was expecting to chauffeur kids around (which is sort of inferred by the complaint that he is able to drive but is too fearful).
What I saw in my own family was that my siblings seemed to be in denial much of the time about my parents increasing infirmities. It wasn't intentional. But they still wanted to have holiday meals at my parents home, just to keep the "tradition". And nobody makes better gravy than my mom!
I lived closest to my parents and saw their struggles with stiffness and pain due to arthritis. I feared for their safety when driving. They both had vision problems. They both had falls (fortunately not requiring hospitalization). To plan and serve a large family meal was becoming difficult, especially with grandchildren running around, interrupting, never helping.
Brothers' wives helped some after their arrival when much of the planning and much of the work had already been done. Neither they, nor my brothers, seemed to notice the increasing frailties of my parents. I think they only thought of it as a welcome break from their own hectic life and everyday responsibilities.
My parents never did, nor would they, complain. They enjoyed seeing the family. We did finally settle on having "pot-luck" dinners on holidays at my parents home. This was only slightly less chaotic.
When my parents decided, on their own, to sell their country home and move into a senior's Independent Living apartment, the rest of the family worried that they wouldn't be happy there. In fact, mom and dad enjoyed it! My mother said that, with meals served and housekeeping help, it it was almost as good as taking a "cruise"!
Had your parent lived a long time in their previous home? I have heard it suggested that elders can appear to be adept at caring for themselves in their own environment but be surrounded in confusion when moved whether that’s to an adult child’s home or into an ALF etc.
It’s like muscle memory they can’t call on to function in a new space.
Plus many elders can’t function as well around the confusion of children. It can be exhausting for them.
We seem to think that being physically able to do something equates with being emotionally able.
My dh aunt, 95 and with dementia, has stopped walking. She is/was physically able but seems to not remember that.
She told me when she was about 90 that she believed she could still drive. Yes, she had the physical strength and muscle memory at that time but not the mental acuity needed.
Those silver alerts we see where a senior has driven away from home demonstrates this point. The are able to drive but don’t remember how to get home.
Your elder might feel she would be lost in new surroundings or may fear being asked to chauffeur children? The parent may not know why they don’t want to drive, they just know they are afraid to.
One very frightening thing that elders do when driving in unfamiliar surroundings is they look for the place they are trying to find as they are driving, going slower and slower and sometimes coming to a stop in the street trying to decide if this is the right turn. Yikes.
I believe the elders know on some level when they are slipping. Regardless, what might have been possible a few years ago with them helping out, may be too late now.
When my MIL first had dementia, I remember her saying things like, I will put those groceries in the pantry. Then later. I will do that tomorrow. She was too confused in my home to put groceries away.
Many people on this forum have brought their parent into their home not realizing their true mental status. Even the parent doesn’t realize their own decline until they are in the new environment and find it not so easy. They will agree to things and then when it’s time to actually perform the job, they have difficulty getting started if they even remember they volunteered.
For now, while you are regrouping on the best living arrangements, try giving the parent small tasks like you might give your children. Clearing or setting the table. Folding or sorting laundry. Snapping beans. See if you can find their comfort level,
if there are routine chores they can do, maybe make a list they can refer to.
If they are on meds, check to make sure they are taking them. That was one of DH aunts first issues. She had taken her thyroid pill first thing every morning for years. She couldn’t believe she had quit taking it until we counted the pills left over when it was time to refill. She understood the math and realized that she had truly not been taking the meds when she had all the facts in front of her. That was about 8 or 9 years ago.
Having said all that, you just may not be able to function with four dependents. No shame in that. Reset your expectations and drop the notion that the elder is being difficult on purpose. See if that helps your stress level. Then start looking for a better solution. A housekeeper might really help. Each layer of help is beneficial.
And your parent probably would be better off to move sooner rather than later if a move is in their future in order to become familiar with their surroundings while they are better able to absorb them and be more independent.
Maybe you are.
"We have 3 kids to take care of.."
Grandparent may not want/or cannot raise more children.
Maybe some clear thinking on this *social contract* will help. It may or may not have been implied or discussed. In many families it is sort of assumed... but sounds like the current elder care for child care arrangement isn't working too well. That's ok.
A new arrangement that suits you all better can be next. Ideally before resentment grows.
Depending on how your mom's cognitive abilities really are, that'll depend on what you can really expect. Sometimes what we think of as being difficult or stubborn really is MCI or dementia.
My mom makes excuses for EVERYTHING. It's annoying but it's the dementia talking.
If she is able to do things around the house, then you will have to specifically ask since she is not doing things unasked. You need to change your mindset a bit so your expectations are more in line with her reality. You could make a list of things you'd like her to do. We do communal laundry in my home so mom helps with that. She used to do it all and is now basically down to transferring clothes from washer to dryer then folding everything. I used to have her help cut stuff up but not so much anymore as it's too hard and she's too slow when I'm finally ready to make dinner I need it done now. I also don't trust her hygiene and she gets mad every time I ask her to wash her hands. So, that one's not worth it for me.
My mom walks down our short driveway to get the mail.
Can she do dusting? Sweeping? Dishes? If you get her to do a few simple tasks every day she will be helpful and will feel useful.
Things are never how we envision they will be.
Is she paying somehow to live there? You say you provide all groceries so hopefully she is doing something else to pitch in. Don't give her a free ride unless you're loaded. She should be paying something.
Do you go into her appointments with her? Are there any bus/taxi/uber services in your area? In our area, there's a city "bus" that you call and make an appointment the day before. They pick you and drop you off. Then you call when you're done and they come get you. Something like that could work.
If she has a car, sell it. If she's afraid then she should just be permanently done.
Does she play with the kids at all? How old are they? Maybe you can start fostering a better relationship between them? Set up something fun for her to do with them? Or if the ages and interests are too varied, do it on a one by one basis.
If you're really 100% done and don't want to try to better the situation, assess whether she fits in independent living or assisted living and find a place.
And ThomasY, your unsupportive posts make little sense eg ‘The Elephant in the room is still in hiding. But we know the reason why’. Oh really?
You have enough on your plate with three kids at home. You don't need to add an elderly person behaving like a toddler.
OP, I’m sure that you are concerned about privacy, but a fuller profile (and more information about what you would like P to do) is important if you want more helpful responses. Best wishes in sorting out a situation that has made life worse, not better. We all make mistakes!
Expecting a person to pull their own weight or contribute in some way when you let them move into your house is not an unreasonable expectation.
If the poster moved in her mom who was still indeoendent and capable then asking her to pull her own weight in the householdby helping out with childcare isn't asking all that much. If she's unable to, then contribute financially.
Bottom line. The poster and the elderly parent worked out an arrangement before anyone was moved in that would be beneficial to them both.
The poster lets the parent move into her family's home so she would not have to live alone. In exchange for giving the parent houseroom and room and board expects the parent to help out with the kids.
The elderly parent interprets the mutally beneficial arrangement to mean that they move into their adult kid's home and everyone in that home becomes a slave waiting on them hand and foot while they do and contribute absolutely nothing.
These kinds of arrangements made with an elderly person are never beneficial to both parties.
I hope the poster can find a new place for her parent to go to.
If your parent says they don't feel safe driving, listen to them. Why do they have to have an accident for your to understand that they have slowed down while everything else has sped up. You have made an error in judgement. Fix it by helping them find an assisted living facility or senior housing of some sort.
If you need help with the three kids, hire someone.
it seems that many times people move in their parents to just be live in babysitters without acknowledging the needs of their parents.
Which often leads to elder abuse.
Have a talk with your parent about what's expected, and if needed, write down your wishes and post them. Explain that you need help and are asking only for things he/she is capable of doing. Explain that if he/she were to move out, he/she would have to do all these things and more - unless they want to live in a nursing home.
It's always hard when dealing with our parents, and your family seems to have reached your saturation point. This seems to be a matter of your acceptance of things as they are - or repercussions unless they change. Establish a plan in your mind, then be willing to carry it out. I know whatever your decision you will do it in a loving, caring way.
If your current arrangement is not working, help find your parent an apartment or senior living facility. Do not base your decision on what other people think of you. If you make decisions for honest reasons, you will not feel the need to make excuses for them.