So my mother-in-law moved in in Dec. She is demanding, bossy. Expects all meals to be served to her and snacks. She walks, talks and can do things on her own but refuses to. She says that she deserves to be waited on because she worked so many years and is old. She is 86. Living with me has caused me a lot of stress. My husband is gone all week and only comes home on the weekends. I try to talk to him about my feelings and some of the stuff his mom has done or says. For instance, I said to him, If I leave for 30 mins to get coffee down the road and she says, Where were you? Why did it take so long? He says, she probably thinks you’re cheating on me! What!
When I try to talk to him anything about his mom good or bad he tells me Stop I don’t want to hear it! He spends no time with her and doesn’t call her during the week as he promised. He also promised to take her out to breakfast and shopping on Sunday so I can have some time to myself .
I am at my wits' ends! I have had enough! He will not get anyone to help and he does nothing to help. I feel as if I am in jail.
When she asks where you were, respond: “I was taking care of errands. Thanks for your concern.” When she repeats and makes more comments, reply “Thanks for your concern.” Be a brick wall and keep repeating “Thanks for your concern” and give no more information. Make sure you are very pleasant. When she asks you for snacks, respond: “I’m in the middle of something and will be busy for quite a while. You’ll feel better if you help your self.” Repeat this phrase as she argues with you and, again, be a brick wall with no other information and always pleasant. If she offers advice, say”Thank you for your advice. I’ll give it some consideration.” Repeat as needed. This is called having a backbone and being respectful of the other person at the same time. Once she learns these responses from you, she will stop demanding/asking you to go along with her behavior. You can do this with your husband, too.
As suggested by earlier posters, make some for yourself and give your husband the opportunity to care for his mother by himself.
The 2 of you need to set ground rules for his mother. Put it in writing, if you must, but your husband must be on board.
Then involve your MIL She will object/complain strongly - be willing to make concessions, but don't backslide, either.
It's hard to NOT be bothered by her complaints & attitude, but you really do have to stop being defensive & reacting to them. Stop thinking you need to explain. Refuse to engage when she complains or issues orders. Say something like, "I'm sorry you feel that way, I know it's hard." Then let it be.
I know it's easier said than done, so some professional help for you could help, but without you & your husband working together, the situation won't change, & you'll feel more resentful & trapped.
Good luck.
I know it's a difficult situation.
You are the captain of your own ship.............what behavior is acceptable to you and where do you, "draw the line?
I may be wrong, but here's the plan...
Get up at 5 AM. Get a load of laundry going. (This will make sense in the end).
Exercise 'till 6 AM. (I hate, hate exercising but do it).
Make breakfast, and put MIL's meal very nicely (welcoming setting) on the table, and let it get cold (tough t-tty).
Back to the laundry - switch clothes from washer to drier (or hang undrierable items). Sing play music.
Start small preps for dinner to make it go smoothly in the evening (Use crock pot).
Vacuum. Do light housework.
Take a shower.
Put lunch out at 12 PM or so.
Give MIL a pad to write down things she needs to pick up at a store.
So far you're not doing anything bad, and pretty much as good as an assisted facility.
Now it gets interesting. Read to the end.
Go through closets and stuff daily and get rid of things you don't need. Be focused, calm and dedicated to this unrushed effort. Be cool and natural. (If you're natural is to talk too much, practice peaceful thinking. Be polite and nice. I know it is a tall order). Order is very peace making.
Post on the fridg (make copies for yourself) -
MEALS -
BREAKFAST: 7 AM. One hour
LUNCH: Noon. One hour
DINNER: 6 PM. One hour.
AFTER MEALTIME ENDS: Leftovers or untouched food, desert, as well as snacks will be placed in containers or wrapped for easy access in fridge.
SHOPPING -
WEDNESDAYS: 10 AM 'till 2 PM (to include pizza/Burger/Mac lunch treat out).
SHOPPING NOTE: Anything forgotten once back home please ensure to list for next Wednesday's trip.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Of course you can change the time and days that are good for you. You don't need to include a once a week lunch treat. Don't friggin' bond. Just smile and be pleasant.
And as for shopping you can do yours anytime but for her, don't voice it but think-IT'S THE ARMY BABY! If she blows a gasket remember small pleasant smiles and shrugs, and get out of her range of fire. Go to the park. An extra walk is fantastic. Go visit a friend, or go to the library. Don't (mentally)feed the dragon. Your name is not "hurt me".
Now, (I hope you'll love this because there is nothing that gives life a lift like a plan and something to look forward to), after 2 weeks, a month, whatever time it takes of exercising, learning for yourself how routine, and habit is super important and almost magical, YOU GO GET A JOB AND GET THE FRICK OUT OF THERE.
Sending love and light,
Sabrina
But the OP's situation regarding her MIL is no joke.
Accept nothing less!
He can pay for in home care or move her. His promises already have fallen off.
Sounds like MIL feels entitled and is not that needy. She may do very well in her own senior apartment with some part time caregivers......not you.
You are entitled to your own life!
1. Sending 🌸 👋 and 🤗
2. I hope you’re doing something to spoil you (buy yourself flowers, listen to music or comedy with ear buds, yoga, walk, manicure, massage).
3. Your husband has walked away emotionally. Is he burnt out from work or using work as an excuse to avoid the home life?
4. Have you looked her in the eyes and said “Listen up, old lady, I’m all you got”?
5. As I write what follows, it occurs to me that the short answer is to get a book on parenting difficult children… or hostage negotiation.
These elderly parents remind me of spoiled brats. They pitch a fit to get what they want and because the parent caves, the children learn they have the upper hand and become more and more unmanageable. It seems caregivers need to learn tough love and get ready for all hell to break loose when they impose boundaries and the elder realizes change is a coming. (Get a raincoat and expect stormy times — their behavior will get worse as they dig in to try to win the power struggle and change only when they realize they lost.) I think the hardest part of parenting is staying calm when their brats have mastered how to push the right buttons. And if the child has a stubborn streak, said child may also have the patience to wear down the parent in this winner take all contest of wills.
In your attempt to maintain peace, you cave. Yes? Your MIL pounces on that.
Suppose you say “I left (her favorite) muffin on the kitchen table” and walk away? Countdown 3-2-1. Here comes the order to bring it to her. Don’t. Expect a rant. Reply “This is unacceptable behavior” and walk away. Take a stand; leave the muffin in the kitchen for the day and if she doesn’t get it, eat it yourself or throw it out. “Say obviously you didn’t want it.” If she starts up, don’t defend and counter with “what’s done is done.”
If it gets ugly, put the phone on photo video mode and tell her you’re sure her son who like to see her acting like this. Or offer to post it online.
She baits you with “why were you gone so long?” Don’t take the bait and explain. Try “I’m here now” or “what did you do?”
She refuses to eat. Let her cook for herself. She leaves a mess. Scoop it up in a box and put it on her bed. Stop doing her laundry. You are, aren’t you? Don’t make her bed. Don’t clean her room.
Reward the good behavior (it’s shocking how much we praise children and how little we say thank you or compliment adults).
Be brave. Command respect..
In looking at your profile, it appears that in the past, you had moved your own mother from AL into your home and took care of her. You’ve also shared a lot of good advice on the forum about dealing with incontinence so that must’ve been part of taking care of your mom. That care situation couldn’t have been easy to deal with, for you or your husband. So as maddening as your present situation sounds, it seems like husband has an expectation of you to repeat that care for his mother.
IMHO, what’s needed is to remove MIL from YOUR home into her own IL or AL apartment, because a home can only have one Queen (a lesson I learned the hard way). Clearly MIL now believes she is that Queen and expects servitude from you. If there are other reasons for her to stay, then you must set your limits, communicate those with husband and MIL, and strictly enforce them. Even if they choose not to hear your words, your actions will speak loud enough to get your message across. It could be a real game-changer for you!
Good luck!
My grandmother did next to nothing for herself except doing her own laundry. She never so much as peeled a carrot, complained that my mother served meat that had been frozen, and was under the impression that the government paid my father to take care of her, something she liked to announce on the rare occasion my parents had guests. When she became incontinent it was my mother who got to clean up the mess while my father berated her for not cleaning it up fast enough. She harassed and lied about me to my parents, told my brother to call the police when my mother gave him a mild crack with the wooden spoon, and more. It was a nightmare!
When my grandmother died, my father announced that my mother needed to get a job in a nursing home because she loved taking care of old people. I walked out of the room to keep from slugging him.
Get out now because it won’t get any better.
My beloved mil, her deaf parents voice and caretaker from childhood until her mother’s death at 104, made her four children swear that they would never take her into their homes to live. How I miss that wonderful woman!
Its his mother not yours and his responsibility.
Tell him your going away for weekends to get a break and he can take care of her. If you do this continuously he will have to get someone.
If you think you love him enough to stay in this marriage, then you may have to accept these unpleasant "servant" duties as your "job" for which you are paid by being housed and fed. If that's not enough, you need to leave him and let him arrange care for his mother.
Stand up for yourself because no one else will do it as you know. Be strong and please let us know how things are going. WE care!
I'm sick of men using their spouses, GF, daughter's and sister's to get out of their responsibilities. We've got to make it clear to them we refuse to be used any longer. Once I got back from my vacation, he'd sent her to assisted living. She loved it because she met new people, made friends, had her meals cooked, laundry done etc. It was wonderful. That's when I knew he still loved me and wanted our relationship to work. He just had to prove it. Good luck to you!
Don't do anything for her that she can do for herself.
You mentioned that your MIL moved in with you both in December, but I am curious to know if there was ANY conversation regarding his expectations for her care BEFORE she moved in.
I would NEVER move anyone into our home without having a thorough discussion that covers every 'what if' scenario that we could imagine, and we both need to come to an agreement.
Your MIL stated that she has "worked so many years" so she should have the means to pay for helpers (caregivers/companions), and I would recommend that you present a few options of caregiving agencies to your MIL and husband. After the options are presented (minimum hours, time schedule, days needed, etc.), I would ask MIL which options and schedule she thinks may be a good fit to assist her -- especially since MIL feels she should be served, etc. -- use MIL's funds to make that a reality.
Again, I am interested in what conversation, if any, was had with your husband BEFORE MIL moved in.
This is patently FALSE.
The CDC.gov website on dementia reports “…dementias are not an inevitable part of aging. In fact, up to 40% of dementia cases may be prevented or delayed.”
Why should Scarlettrene roll over and play dead, thinking there is absolutely nothing she can do about the harridan mother-in-law, or as you recommend “Pray for patience.” She doesn’t need to pray for patience. If she is a praying woman, she needs to pray the first four lines of The Serenity Prayer* and then will realize she has options and thus has choices to make, so should pray for the strength to take control of her own household and life, not be enslaved to the ugly duo of a selfish old woman and self-absorbed husband.
The Serenity Prayer first four lines:
God, grant me the serenity
to accept the things I cannot change,
the courage to change the things I can,
and the wisdom to know the difference.
You don't nee to be angry, or to complain to your husband. Just stop.