I am so upset, my husband just told me my mother cannot live with us anymore or he will be the one to leave. He told me me that my mother living with us is just not working out and we have to tell her that she has to leave? I have to choose my mom or him.
Your own situation sound so ideal with so much balance, teamwork and communication which is what I see lacking in these stories where someone like has blinders one and thus casts all others (spouse, children, etc.) to go care for mom because they only have one mom with a compulsive obsession that almost rings of religious devotion. But how does breaking one religious instruction concerning marriage become justifiable on the religious teaching about honoring one's father and mother when exactly how that honoring is done lacks a detailed definition which is also true of the religious teaching concerning a family showing their Christian faith must first take care of their own widows, but it says nothing about having to take them into your own home which for many reasons other than having a bad childhood just does not always fit.
So, I remain confused on this point of spouses come and go, but you only have one mother strikes me as an easy come easy go view of marriage. To break one Christian teaching to fulfill a narrowly self-defined application of another Christian teaching is in effect to have broken the entire Christian teaching concerning family relationships. Like I've said and written many times before, ya an't married to mommy or daddy and no where does any Bible say that when mommy or daddy get back off you shall leave, abandon your spouse and cleave unto mommy or daddy until death do you part. There are far too many people with terrible weak marriages in their 40ties and 50ties whose whole reason for being weak is one spouse is still more connected with mommy or daddy than with their wife or husband.
One thing care taking of an elderly parent will show among others is how strong and healthy one's marriage is by showing how much of an adult child a spouse is vs still being the adult little girl or the adult little boy.
Another thing care taking really shows as I'm dealing with is any unresolved baggage with that parent will come to the top. Today a friend said all of his flashbacks about his mother's abusiveness of him as a little boys took place during those months when he and his family were taking care of his mother in their home. My mother's not living in my home but like my friend I'm also an only child of a very possessive mom like my friends and I'm having my own flashbacks His mom was married but mine was a single mom for many years and in many ways kept living like a single mom even after she got married again. However, as I'm working on these things in therapy my wife and I are having these wonderful spontaneous, deep conversations from which we feel so much closer to each other which is great because we are one year away from the empty nest!!!!!!!!! Yeah! We will get the last one launched. :)
I'm sorry but the above story hits me as a prime example of a man who was still connected to his mommy at the hip.
Lord, Lady!!! Your situation is beyond rational!
Husband or Mother?
Glad you're back.
Being able to vent & share is is lifesaving form me.
Please stay with us?!
Where are you?
I just noticed your post was July 19th ...
I'm not sure who I am replying to ...
@ This is kinnella about my husband telling me mom has to go or he will. We spoke last night and the three of us are going to work things out.
I'm glad that this did not become another one of those throw away marriages!! :) Regardless of what label is given, it an't right making your spouse feel like they are married to more than just you.
The Bible specifically says you LEAVE your father and mother when marry and you become one with your spouse.
Honor does not mean to " take care of". That is a crock.
I think parents who really love their children think ahead and plan so their children are not forced to become their "parents". I know this is not always possible and I know that MANY people do not plan anything past the current day.
I think if a parent gets ill and there is a chance of them improving (like from a stroke) then OK take them into your home and care for them as long as you can and hope they improve. If they do not improve but you find that you enjoy taking care of them and can handle it all then do it..
Parents have children and have the joy of watching them grow, forming their lives, they take the actions and decide to have kids and take care of them for whatever reason. They are watching a human grow. They have CONTROL of the situation when they are raising kids.
When a child is forced to take care of a parent they have very little control and did not create the situation.
to me that is not an equal bargain to what we "OWE " our parents. We get to care in a hopeless situation which only gets worse and has no reward, we are not helping we are only sustaining a bad situation we cannot control.
The parents that we "Owe" had a good situation they created, where they were caring for a growing human, watching them learn new things, and living thru them.
So the care they gave us as children was not nearly the burden that caring for someone going downhill is. It is even harder if you really love them and if they were really good parents.
Choose your Husband if you have a marriage to begin with. Unless he is just using this as an excuse to move on.
You are right, people learn what they live. It is an interesting note that so many people here care for people who in their own childhoods did so little for them and in some cases were overtly abusive. We all make choices in life, pass it on or pass it back or leave it be is an issue with abuse. I do not see my self ever choosing to treat other s how I was treated as a child but you have to keep up with it, stay aware remember you are an adult and decide to be a decent person.
Adults are role models to the younger generation for how we want/expect the elderly, frail to be treated.
Imagine your husband in your shoes, and how you would "honestly" feel after a time. It's not easy being the one left behind, no matter how hard we try to compensate. I would definitely try to get your mom into some kind of daycare or find someone to come in and relieve you a few hours a week. If you are like the rest of us, you have invested a lot of time and effort into your marriage, and should make your decision carefully. Good luck!
From my own experience, I will share that I spent years being very patient (10 years) with how overly attached my wife was to her mother which got worse after both children were born and I got left holding the bag feeling like a single parent. I saw both what this was doing to my marriage and to our children who were growing up with a mom who was not really present at home although we all lived in the same house. In therapy, learned that I was being too nice and for the sake of my own sanity, our boys' well being and our marriage that I needed some boundaries which my wife with her then diagnosed 'issues' could either live with or not live with but we were not going to drown. In the process, we learned that her mother had programmed her to view herself as her mother's mom and when asked about her role as a mom all she could talk about was her mom. We ended up talking about boundaries in therapy and we agreed to some new boundaries in our life which she soon broke. The consequence for that my therapist and her therapist agreed was reasonable was my taking the boys and leaving the house for as long at that particular situation was going on. One would think that would be enough, but no it took one more time of that being broken with a different consequences and that got the ball rolling. Two year later, she finally saw the need and found the strength to set boundaries with her intrusive 'mommy dearest' mom for the sake of the children, herself and our marriage. Since 2005, I've had my wife back, the children have their mom back and we are all in better health for it.
I just don't buy this easy come easy go view of marriage because you only have one mom or one dad for there is not anywhere in the Bible where it says when your parents get old and need you that you shall leave your spouse and cleave to your parent(s) till death do you part. Honoring and being respectful of one's aging parents plus the NT verse about people taking care of the elderly in their families do not automatically mean doing it personally yourself or making yourself or your marriage, or your children, or your health a martyr like sacrifice when the level of care is over your head or for other reasons is no longer sustainable.
I'm not a person who likes to confront and I was raised to let others needs come completely first and be ok with people being very intrusive into my life, but I reached the point in 2002 where I said enough, I want my life back but I don't even know that that means or how to get there.
Yes, we each only have one mom and one dad, but we also have one God to whom we must answer how we balanced the challenges of being married and being the adult child of an aging parent. I don't believe that means abandoning the parent anymore than I believe it means abandoning ones spouse and children which I've read many times here that people have regretted. BTW, my grandmother told my mom when she got old, __ it's time for you to leave your current husband and come home to take care of me and she was a good Christian woman and an outstanding member of both her community and her church.
Again, if K.'s hub was ailing you bet he would want her to be there helping him recover. I believe in protecting the sanctity of marriage but I also take for "better or worse" seriously...sounds like K's hub has not.
I know NONE of this is easy, believe me I know, I lived it and I am not living with the decisions I made.
I am not a 'momma's girl' but I do know the three R's"
RESPECT
RESPONSIBILITY
REPERCUSSION
Each situation is different, each person is different, but one thing is common, we will face situations that require us to make very difficult decisions, and all we can offer honestly is OUR experiences.
"In sickness and in health" shouldn't just refer to our OWN health. Humans should help one another, family should stick together, but we all know that is not always the case.
Kinella is facing some very hard decisions here, and since none of us can be there in person to actually help her, perhaps getting someone involved that can be impartial will help. Kinella, my heart goes out to you. Talk to your husband, make decisions together if you can, and get some outside help for your mother and your relationship.
That said, I have a hard time accepting that a win-lose proposition such as your husband has demanded of you comes from a place of being supportive of one's spouse. I do understand if he is clear that it is not working out as he has already told you. That happens. What is hard is for a spouse to place his marriage partner between a rock and a hard place with no further support or effort to help you sort through where and how you want to go with this situation. He is your husband and your marriage has a place of priority in your life, and your parent will always be the one who gave you birth and to whom you have some degree of emotional relationship.
Think about your feelings within your marriage. Only you know whether the demand was unreasonable or not. A rigid ultimatum from a spouse is stress-inducing. I'm with Daniel Romero's reply. Is your husband otherwise someone who communicates and thinks all-or-nothing every time life throws a curve ball into his life?
Ultimatums like you described might signal an imbalance in how the couple makes decisions and communicate with each other even after you move your Mom out to meet the heavy-handed demand. When life becomes stressful for both of you on something else, will your spouse think that all or nothing ultimatums are the way to force you into making other decisions before you figure out how you may want to proceed? In addition to thinking about your Mom’s needs and your husband’s demands during a difficult period in your life, take some time to think about yourself – how you feel, what you want, what sort of support you need from your husband, whether you have ever told him that, what’s working or not in your life right now, and more. Doesn’t sound like anyone else is thinking about you in the story you have shared, so be sure to put yourself first. God bless your sister who took your Mom in when her own health is not the best. Wishing you the very best outcomes for you and your Mom and husband.