I know the answer, write him off because im not going to change it but its frustrating. I've aslready assumed all financial and medical responsibility for my mom. I even supervise the aid. but when I ask him for small anything he's busy, procrastinates and then over-engineers solutions to make it seem like he's doing more than he is.
When I first got my mom an aid it was because he would turn off his phone so the police had no one to call but me. He said he needs his rest. When I asked him to change one lock on a door it took six months and he then insisted every door needed to be changed. He runs to the store to buy my mom vitamin water but when I asked him to buy her a pill crusher and water thickine going to cvs was too annoying so he went on amazon and she still doesn't have it. He then tells me he couldn't buy her an inferior product at cvs. I usuallly solve this by not asking him
He lives far from us and visits her once a year or so, and calls her maybe twice a month. I do all the financial and practical stuff and visit her 3 times per week and it’s been that way for 4 years.
A year ago he offered to come visit her this summer for a week when my husband and I will be on vacation, but I am making plans for someone to cover for me other than him because he has made so many promises and then dropped the ball at the last minute before.
Stop planning for how you wish things were— how you think they SHOULD be — and plan for how they actually ARE. It’s less frustrating.
I'm hoping your Mom has some financial resources so that you can hire in-home help so you get a break and can find someone to perform other maintenance tasks for pay. Keep all the receipts and do good recordkeeping so he can never come back and accuse you of anything, like happens so often.
I'm hoping you are your Mom's actual PoA. If not, is there any way to get this done? You don't give many details about your Mom for context, but if she needs thickener, she has a pretty progressed health issue. Maybe consider getting her assessed for LTC so you can stop being the only solution and thus avoid burnout. Medicaid can cover her LTC in combination with her SS income if she qualifies when she applies. I would start looking into this now, even if it's not something you are thinking of currently. There's lots to know and if you're in charge of her finances you need to be aware that it's easy to seem like you're "mismanaging" her funds and prevent or delay her from qualifying financially.
Caregiving happens on the caregiver's terms or else burnout is pretty much guaranteed. Please make yourself the #1 priority has your Mom would not want your life to devolve for her sake (and I'm saying this as a parent to 3 men). I wish you clarity, wisdom and peace in your heart as you search for relief.
My mom was ill, and brother didn't visit nor help. Everything fell on me and my sister. Ironically, he came out looking like the hero at mom's funeral.
Years later, now my aunt, mom's sister is with dementia. She had moved out of state to be nearer to my cousins and her brother. My uncle. All was well until she got dementia. Now I was expected to do everything. My cousin was calling and texting left and right. I began to resent her. I felt I was doing all I could.
Point is, you can't change anyone or force them or get them to do something they're not willing to do. I suggested we all get together and get aunt to a facility where she belongs, as she's beyond family care. They (cousins) balked at the idea, but wanted me to wear myself out, which was a no can do
You can get your mom more help so that you don't burn yourself out, but expecting your brother to do more isn't going to happen. He's an adult with his own mind. Yes, it's going to cause feelings of resentment, but nothing you can do there.