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I believe that my brother uses my mother to manipulate me. I feel tied to him because I care for my mother. He has been an addict for years and lived with her until her stroke almost 3 years ago. She was his enabler, but did not know how to deal with the situation. I do not want a relationship with him because he refuses to get help. She cannot see him without my being there due to her limitations. I am her POA.

We had to keep visits with psychotic brother very short and VERY supervised, as he would inevitably hit mom up for money. She would give him every cent in her purse, and write him checks--so daddy had it set up so that any check over a certain amount had to be co-signed by the FPOA. I wasn't involved, so I don't know how they worked that, but he stopped being able to get more than $200 in cash from mom, and then only if she had been to the bank that very day.

It was b/c of HIM that mom and dad had to live in an apartment rent free in YB's home. He'd 'borrowed' the equity in their home. And of course, lost it in record time. Parents go to retire and their nest egg is about $200K less than it should have been. There wasn't even enough to pay for the addition to YB's home for the apartment--so we all had to chip in, over the years to help make YB 'whole'.

To the day he died, my OB brought pain and suffering everywhere he went. I think most families have at least one problem child.

As he was mom's 'Golden Boy'--requiring that he had to have supervised visits were diffcult to be a part of. He'd get belligerent and mean--and mom would support him, no matter what.

Sound familiar? These situations do, indeed, just stink.
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NeedHelpWithMom Nov 22, 2023
Oh yes, I agree with that most families have one problem child. The other siblings are usually the polar opposite because they have witnessed so much grief.

I know a woman who is constantly saying that she feels that she has to go after the “lost sheep’ just as Jesus went after the lost sheep.

Oh my gosh, I told her that Jesus also said that if they weren’t received that Jesus instructed others to shake the dust off and walk away.

I despise when people take scripture out of context to support their own beliefs.
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Your home, your rules. Keep doing what you are doing, you must be there when he visits.
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Reply to JoAnn29
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Planned supervised Visits - your Mom willl wonder where He is
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AlvaDeer Nov 22, 2023
Yes.
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I too had a brother who had an (opioid) addiction. He died due to his lifestyle.

You are correct in saying that addicts are manipulative. Manipulation and addiction go hand in hand. My brother was the only addict in the family and all of us siblings had to set strong boundaries with him.

For my own sanity I had to cut my brother out of my life. My mother lived in my home and when I cut off contact with my brother she was sad but understood that I didn’t have any other choice.

Mom spoke to my brother on the phone and I told her that I would bring her to meet him somewhere if she wanted to spend time with him.

She knew that I had valid reasons for not allowing him to be in our home anymore. As her health declined she didn’t get out other than to go to the doctor. So, she wasn’t up to going to meet him anywhere.

When I found out that he was in an end of life hospice facility I didn’t hesitate to bring my mother to see her first born son.

I wasn’t sure if I could emotionally handle seeing him or not. I decided to speak with him in hospice and I chose to forgive him for the grief that he caused our family.

My brother and I had a complex relationship. There were times where he would get clean and we got along well. We were very close before he started using drugs.

He struggled to remain sober. I tried to help him but like many addicts he didn’t want to face his problems. I couldn’t force him enter rehab.

Addiction is an awful disease and I do have compassion for addicts, but we still have to set boundaries in order to protect ourselves.

My brother was a terrific guy when he was clean. He was intelligent, successful and owned his own business. Sadly drugs caused him to lose everything meaningful in his life.

I am so sorry that you are in this situation. I certainly feel your pain and hope things work out as best as they can for you and your family.

Wishing you peace as you go through this difficult time.
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Reply to Calliegirl4124
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Thank you so much for the information. I really appreciate it.
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Hey there, I'm sorry your family is having to deal with this. I have some similarities in my own family. I have a sister in active addiction and I feel similar to her as you do your brother. My mom passed away unexpectedly last year & my father has alzheimers, I am his guardian. I also have a son in active addiction, so I get to see it from a few different ways. Unfortunately.
In my opinion, if you can arrange for someone else to be present when your Mom or brother want to see each other it would probably be best. But I think the 1st step for you is to have your boundaries identified and firmly in place. Know what you will and will not allow. One thing that comes to mind often is that I wish I had shown my mom more grace when it came to my addicted sister.
Sending you healing thoughts, peace, & love.
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Calliegirl4124 Nov 21, 2023
Thank you so much for your response. You will be in my thoughts as we go through similar family issues. Hopefully, I can develop a plan for my mother and brother to visit without me.
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By law a POA has the right and ability to keep people away that cause upset and issues for the principal of a POA,

However, it becomes a sticky widget when the principal has not been deemed incompetent (only a Judge can do this) and Wants/Requests/Demands to see the person in question.

If mom wants to see her son, supervised visitation is probably the best route to avoid problems for you.

Best of luck, these situations just stink.
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