My husband and I have been having this fight for the last three years. His elderly father can't take care of himself yet wants to stay in his home. He can afford to hire live-in help but won't because he wants to leave the money to his grandchildren. Therefore, he expects his adult children to take care of him. All of them work and have their own families. They all take turns bringing him dinner one night a week and the unmarried son moved in with him several months ago. The son now has a girlfriend and wants to be with her over the weekend. The other children decided that when the live-in son decides to leave someone will stay with the Dad over the weekend. I resent my husband because I don't think it's his responsibility to be his father's caretaker and he does. Thanks in advance for any insight you can provide.
Her half-brother sits her down and says "You've been away all these years; it is now your turn to assume the filial responsibility for the support of our mother." She was offered the option of taking the mother back to America to live with her or sending money every month for support. She left Viet Nam heartbroken, and eventually cut off all connection with her Vietnamese relatives because all the letters contained requests for money.
There were cases where the only child had died as a young adult, thus his/her parents were left without family care. No one had siblings to help out. Even the parents didn't have siblings except maybe one cousin.
I acknowledge there are cultural differences and national traditions for children for parental/elderly care. When there aren't those cultural norms in place, for a parent to just flick a hand and state, "my kids will care for me" without a consideration for the kids' lives and their needs and personal situation is bluntly lazy, selfish, and domineering.
That said, many of us choose to put our lives on hold to care for our parents. Our reasons for doing so are varied: duty, caring, compassion, and love. However, there are many children who care for their parents because there's just no choice such as lack of resources or the mental abuse by the parents that compels the adult child to submit.
Thank you for your perspective. I have been thinking about this more and more since my father passed. And now with my mom, I wonder what path my siblings and I will take. I still help where I can but like you said the past does make a difference.
As for myself, I'm like you and I am making plans and hopefully that will alleviate any burden to my family.
Let's keep in mind that not everyone had Ward and June Cleaver for parents. Many of us were born into dysfunctional, abusive families. Caring for the parents who caused you misery, pain and severe emotional/physical trauma for most of your life may not be high on the list for some of us. I cared for my parents in their final years because it needed to be done, and because I had compassion for them as human beings - not because I wanted to do it.
And on the topic of expecting my kids to take care of me someday -- that's not going to happen. I am setting a plan in place that will take care of my needs, up to and including placement in a nursing home when the time comes. But it won't be my kids in charge of the arrangements. My children will not be my caregivers.
But you owe it to your husband that he wants to take care of his father. You married for better or worse. When the time comes he passes, you'll want him to take charge then because there may be the possibility of some money due to you both.
I tell my dad and mom both that I'll have to be making these choices for them someday. If you have kids, remember you'll be expecting them to take care of you someday.
You are absolutely in the right with your answer. Too bad that everyone was not raised this way.
My wife has had als for eight years and I took care of her for the first 5 years but then I had to have help and we as a family decided that we would do it at home. All four of our children pitch in and help out with her care. We have always been a close family and they are all proving it now, and it is out of love and caring not an obligation to them. Some of the grandchildren are also very involved as well. I might add that we are both 85 years old. Thank God for our family.
Ps. If you want to message me, I'd be more than happy to talk.
So, you would assume that if someone loves their parents that they would want to take care of them when they need it but we all know what assuming does. I'll never be able to wrap my head around this one. And I certainly won't assume that when I might need them that they will be there for me cause they certainly proved that theory wrong.
I think best case scenario, make your own arrangements, just on the offhand chance that the people who profess to love you decide it's too much to handle when the time comes.
I think a close family will be able to work through caregiving decisions with little trouble. Actually, JanetPh's in-laws may be doing just that -- hard to know without knowing them. If a family is not close, however, it is too late by the time a parent is elderly to try to assemble a close family. That train left the station when the children were young.
I guess we can say that the children are responsible if they want to be, and if the family is close all of the children will want to be there if possible.
I think it's when people have this "okay if I have to" attitude that the lines get skewed between need vs. obligation vs. love. I'd hate to feel like I am a burden on anyone and if the person caring for me was gritting their teeth every day and feeling resentful then I can honestly say "don't do me any favors" I'd rather pay someone to do it.
I'm not saying that you should whistle happily while you clean your loved ones nether regions. Obviously not................but try to put yourself in the shoes of the person you are helping. If you never liked them, let alone loved them then don't do it. Don't be a martyr. Just my opinion.
I stand by what I wrote. People worried over cleaning up urine and just throwing people in NH just because, is disgusting. You must not be a true caregiver, to have so much time on your hands to call people out Out for thier opinions. It's a free country! We all have the right to speak our mind. I dont have to be nice or sugarcoat nothing, to get my point across...............Just saying!!😂
Family land (in his name), and our little piece connected to his property is in our name...family land was promised years ago to end up in our kids names. It will probably be getting seized by Medicaid since he didn't report that he had property when he first signed up, he did this intentionally. His beloved Indian arrowhead collection which was huge, is now in the hands of a con artist who bought it at a very cheap price, that too was promised to our kids. Oh well, just stuff.
My husband and I have enabled him to keep living however he wanted and sat back and watched and now we are paying for it in many ways. Now he wants to give his truck away to his help at home "woman" and all of his expensive tools to a "friend".
I made the decision this week to let it go.
I love him but I don't like him.
I have helped him the best I could.
I have reached out to a social worker from the hospital and he is in their hands now. I am emotionally and physically drained but I have also made sure that he will be cared for....it will be just by someone else.
My dad did not plan for his future, he never carried any insurance of any kind, no savings no plans nothing and is still spending what Social Security he does have on outside people that are mooching off of him. We have been paying for all the extras that he has needed, I'm done.
Done cleaning up his messes from years and years of bad choices Pre-stroke!
Everyone story is different! My husband and I refuse to put our children through this!
I'm sure some people in our little town will think I'm terrible...don't care about that worry anymore either!
More than happy to take off my shoes and let them wear 'em!!!
He has the money he can provide for himself..that is what you should do...this is the best solution for all...let him take the money and spend it on his care...and the two of you continue to live your life...
I am saddened that on what should be a support group...some take to shaming, blaming and guilting other people who post here.