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.
Now, if your parents were good to you then yes, you owe them something. If your parents were good to you then you should take as good of care of them as they did of you when you were little and throughout your childhood. Your parents carried you when you were little, now carry them when they're old.
Something I saw about the laws in China
According to something I saw online about Chinese laws, it's illegal for Chinese grown children to abandon their aging parents. Grown children must frequently visit their aging parents and provide for them. However, I'm not sure if there is a provision for those whose parents abused them, they should never be required to care for their abusers, doing so will only put those surviving children right back in danger.
* Had my particular incident happened in China, I would've fled the country somehow in order to get out from under the law of having to care for my abusers. If fleeing the country wasn't possible, I would've definitely vanished, never to be found again
I am going to be pretty direct here so be prepared. I am reading your story and am looking for a complaint in need of a problem to complain about. There are enough children and everyone is engaged enough that your husband brings dinner just one time per week. So if he stays a weekend it will be once every five or six weeks maybe less often? And this is a problem? There are people whose jobs take them out of town multiple nights a week -every week - and the stay at home spouse is understanding.
You cannot entertain yourself for one night a week? Create girls movie night and go to dinner and a movie. Join a mahjong or pakeeno group, Soak in a fragrance filled tub, make a banana split. Make this night all about your needs and not having to put anyone else first, spoil yourself.
On the weekend he cares for dad, get them to meet you for Saturday breakfast or dinner out, but the day is all yours if you want. If you get lonely go over to FIL house and visit with them a few hours. Challenge them to a game of chicken foot (dominoes) and make it competitive. Then say goodbye you'll see him Sunday at 6:00pm or whatever has been agreed to. Use that weekend for your visit to your parents, sibling, cousin, friend.
This time between your husband and father is precious. This man raised, fed, clothed, and gave life to your husband. He had a major hand in molding your husband into the man you selected to share your life with. The care your husband is extending to his father, he will extend to you when you need him. Thank heavens that this old man was willing to stick by and raise your husband, to grow into the man whose company you clearly enjoy.
In time dad's needs may increase to an unacceptable level. But the level of care you are talking about now is inconvenient, but not so demanding. This is what a loving family does for one another. Open your heart and be charitable to your husband instead of judgmental. He sounds like a pretty special guy, and your the one he chose to spend his life with, that says a lot about you too.
Traditionally, in America, the elder care burden fell onto the shoulders of the oldest daughter. Now that, for most families, women *have* to work in order to make ends meet / afford to raise their families in safe neighborhoods with good schools, the eldest daughter is really squeezed if asked to provide elder care and fulfill her duty both as a mother and a wife.
Your husband's father can afford care. He probably can afford an apartment in Independent Living (with contract assistance) or an Assisted Living facility. Your father in law should be spending his hard earned money on himself, by either paying for help or moving to somewhere where he can get the assistance he needs. This way, he'll have more time to spend with his grandchildren--and time with grandpa is more valuable than money from grandpa. By wanting family care beyond what you can reasonably provide, he is being extremely selfish and not doing right by his grandkids.
It's time for a family meeting between your husband and his siblings. They need to discuss caring for their father--what they are willing to do and how much time they can put toward this. In preparation for this meeting, I would advise your husband to visit all of the independent living and assisted living facilities, ask about bullying (bullying is such a universal problem in these places that I wouldn't even consider letting a relative live in a place that doesn't actively look for bullying and nip in the bud), lifestyle, health care and finances. He should also have information about the local senior support services. He should present to his siblings care options that he can afford.
When talking to grandpa about elder care options, I would use the 'hook', "being able to spend more time with the grandkids..." Should he receive help by someone outside the family, you'll have more time to be family. Being able to spend more time together as a family, where he can be with the grandkids, is much more valuable than any amount of money he can give the grandkids. That's how I would begin approaching him about getting care from an outside source, whether it's a home health care agency or moving to an Independent Living or Assisted Living apartment complex.
I am a fan of elder care coordinators, particularly if they're very experienced advanced practice nurse or social workers. I've had very good luck using one. They're expensive, but can be worth it. They are generally very knowledgable when it comes to the relative merits of local home care agencies and living arrangements, such as Independent Livings and Assisted Livings. You *might* want to pick the brains of one, for it might help narrow down which agencies / service providers or living facilities you might want to consider. An elder care coordinator just might speed up your research, but this sort of help doesn't come cheap, by any means.
When doing research on elder care providers / living arrangements, ask around. Let people know that you are looking for information, that you want the real dope on the services around. You never know who, amongst your acquaintances has been through a similar situation and is more than willing to share experiences. If you are religious--attend regular enough that people have seen your face--talk to the leadership. Many religious leaders are more than familiar with elder care issues and have experience visiting people who live in various settings / using various caregiving services. Another source would be your Council for the Aging / Senior Center. They have social workers who are usually familiar with the caregiving options available where your father in law lives.
How do I know these things? Been there, done that.
Good luck. I hope this helps
DoN
In addition, people become parents when it fits into their lifestyle to do it. My mother was a stay at home mom for most of my childhood - I'm not saying it was easy but it was what she chose to do, and my father earned enough to keep a roof over our heads and food on the table. She started working outside the home when my parents divorced, but by that time the older children (including me) could watch the younger kids, put dinner on, help with the housework, etc.
By the time our parents need help we've all fashioned other lives for ourselves. Families, jobs, homes in other states, etc. Being yanked back into daily contact with our parents usually involves a major disruption of everything we've put together in our adult lives. Assuming we're even well enough to do it and not overburdened by other responsibilities such as a sick spouse. It annoys the he!! out of me when people try to say that we owe our parents this humungous sacrifice because of all the sacrifices they made for us.
One meal a week and an occasional weekend shared by all siblings is not a bad problem, IMO.
Dad's live-in son really needs the time off, too.
In our situation, Dad has always shown a preference for my husband's brother. The favored son. This made me even more resentful of the time my husband spent away from me taking care of a man who had always treated him as an unwanted child.
I gritted my teeth, tried to help out some where I could. But, I put my foot down when my husband's health was becoming compromised from too little sleep and too much stress.
My own parents did not expect in-home care from their kids. Mom had cared in-home for her mom, and she would never have asked that of us!
FIL had his mom in his house for about 2 weeks. She was able to care of herself, but was having dementia. He shipped her off to a sister PDQ.
Yet, he expects his sons to give up their entire lives to take care of him. Literally--to the point of illness and even death.
So....every situation is different. Everyone on here has a story. You write your own.
My advice is same I gave my husband: Determine how many hours per week you are able to devote to Dad's care, explain that to the siblings, and help find hired help for the rest. Sounds like your husband and His siblings are doing that now.
My husband did more than he was able. His brother did even more. Finally, FIL is in a NH now and is better cared for and happier. Go figure.
Support your husband, but remind him that you need some (but not all) of his time, too. And he needs enjoyable time spent with you to help him relax and figure the best plan of action.
My advice is to go look in the mirror and see if you like who is looking back at you. If all your DH is doing is taking dinner over 1 night a week, why the big stink? If you don't want to cook for your FIL, let your DH bring him a plate from the restaurant.
YES, you deserve a life too. If it was you who became incapacitated, what would you want done for you? I married a man who took care of a bedridden wife for 2 years! I recognized that this man would also take care of me if I became incapacitated and I appreciated that thought.
I am one of 4 children, the youngest girl, and it was me who wound up assisting my dad - we moved him onto our property in a new mobile home, right in our front yard.
My DH didn't resent this - he would come in and tell me that my father looked lonely and I should go over and visit. He realized early on that anything I did for my father, I would do for him too when needed. My DH was 2 years older than my dad - and DH is still here but Pop passed on 6 years ago. We are not sorry for the kindnesses we showed to him.
My question to you is: what if this was your mother or dad? would you feel the same way????????????????? I am the only child who takes care of my mom, and dad
24/7. I have four selfish sisters who feel its not their job. I cherish the moments that I have with them everyday as I don't know when the end will be. I take the good and funny of the day and delete in my mind the bad. my parents are still in their own home and 92 years old and I moved in with them. my husband supports me completely as my partner. I also helped care for his mom for a year and a half until she passed. My husband has parkinsons disease and he chips in as much as possible. my children also help out as much as they can. I am sorry but I can not agree with some of the responses given , its how I feel.