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I agree that more information would be helpful.

You say that your mother was your father's "main" carer at home and that she never tried in-home help. Who were the nonmain carers?

Are there things you could have done to help out while your father was still at home?

How are things going for your father in the nursing home?
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You don't give us any context, nor a direct question you want help with.

From this limited information I would say that you could probably do with counselling sessions to help you deal with your feelings. Resentment eats away at you, as does anger, so it's best to work through them.

Without having any other information, my first thought would be that your mum did what she thought was best and, as she was the main carer, that was her right to do so.

If my mum was tired and worn down, I can imagine that I'd end up resenting my dad for not going into a nursing home and making my mum deal with arranging his care and dealing with the carers and getting up in the night to deal with issues and having the worry on her shoulders 24/7, etc.

I'm not saying this was exactly your mum's situation, but trying to show you that there's different ways of looking at this. There is no perfect solution to caring for someone who will never get better but will continue to decline bit by bit. Every which way you look, someone will be unhappy with the arrangements.

It's physically, mentally and emotionally exhausting to be a carer, even with carers coming in to help. So, seeing this from a different perspective - your mum's - might help you deal with those negative emotions.

Ask yourself if your mum's wellbeing is as important as your dad's.
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