If they ignore you? That happens all the time. You tried. Now you try again, perhaps with a letter or e-mail stating that if they can't help they can write a check so you can hire help. If you still get nowhere, then you can go further, depending on what you want to risk. You can hire a family mediator to figure out how to cope with siblings dumping the caregiving on your shoulders. You can get counseling for the same reasons. Or you can just accept the situation and move on.
If the denial is about say, mom's increasing dementia symptoms, then you may need to get a doctor involved. Get Mom's medical records and say bluntly, "This is the report from Mom's doctor. She is showing signs of mid-stage Alzheimer's and there are drugs that can help. You need to talk to the doctor since you keep fighting me on getting her on medication. She does need it."
I say it often, but I can't overstate this: A third party is your best resort if siblings won't listen to reason. So often, family dynamics are the stumbling block. When a professional, whether it's a doctor, a social worker or a mediator comes into the picture, the sibling in denial may listen. They know it's not just "little sister" being whiny. Mom is, indeed, declining. She needs care. Little sister needs help.
The third party – a faith community leader, old family friend or doctor – can often make great headway with the sibling because of that very fact that this person is not part of the family. Give it a shot. Maybe your siblings will pull their heads out of the sand long enough to "get it."
Elder care author, columnist and speaker Carol Bradley Bursack is an AgingCare.com contributing editor and moderator of the
AgingCare.com community
forum.
Read her full biography