Follow
Share

I know this may be an unusual question but I am looking for a way to come to terms with things that have happened in my life.
My grandmother became sick when I was 7. I was very close to her and my mom took care of her for many years (off and on for 15 years total). My grandmother had a lot of medical issues that required very painful surgeries and because she was from a small town with limited medical care and we lived three hours away in a larger city, she came to our home to recover after each surgery.
My grandfather helped a little when she would go home but they often did not get along. He was often a hateful man and I can't really blame her but she would never fully leave him.
My uncle lived 1 mile from my mom and he never helped. Nor did his wife or their children. Both my cousins were older than me. They always had excuses from social activities to the situation being "too depressing."
I spent tons of time in various hospitals growing up. Once, my grandmother was hospitalized for 3 months straight. I did my elementary school homework in hospital rooms, high school homework -- and yes, even college assignments. I sat in doctors offices for hours with my parents and grandmother.
I wanted to be there and I loved her, but as I got older I started noticing things I did not like. My mother was not in good health. She was severally visually impaired (glasses like coke bottles), had a ruptured disc, bouts of anemia from heavy periods, and later we discovered renal insufficiency. Her feet would swell like crazy. Yet, all I would ever hear from my grandparents is how they did not want to go into a nursing home.
My mom would ask my grandmother why her son (living just a mile away) would never come and pick her up to take her to his home? Why he couldn't stop in to say, "hello" and my grandmother would go into rages. She would scream and yell and I started wondering, "how can someone this 'sick' that needs all this care have such strength to throw these fits?
Once after a surgery, I helped my mom take care of her and never left the house for 2 weeks straight. It was during the summer, so there wasn't any school.
My mom once got up, cooked a meal and said all my grandmother had to do was warm it up but she was going to take me out shopping. My grandmother had a fit and ended up throwing herself on the floor. We went anyway.
If my mom was sick and didn't say hello soon enough, she had a fit.
She had moments where she was truly a loving, giving kind person but she was always looking for that miracle pill that would make her 16 again.
By the time I got to college, I had to take a leave from my job to help but was still carrying a full college load. I remember she was getting sicker and was in Intensive Care. I begged my mom to just let me stay home because I desperatly needed to study and she had a fit saying how could I not be there? I HAD been there at that time for the last 13 years. I was so mentally and emotionally exhausted that I broke down in the middle of a college class sobbing.
When my grandmother died, my mother had little to do with me or anyone for a year. I was once so mad that I asked her, "do you wish it was me that died instead so you could have your mother back?" She came close to hitting me.
I have told my mother over the years that it was not right what we were put through (my dad and myself were right there through it all and my dad would work a manual labor job and then come in to sit hours in a doctors office because my mom did not drive (eyes).
Mom has told me she has not one regret and would do it all over again. I find that bothersome after she knows how I feel. By the time my grandmother died, I was up to 3 ulcers. I also had health problems and was a nervous wreck.
My husband now is a caregiver for his father who still lives in his own home but has small help from a helper and hospice has been call in but does precious little. My husband is responsible for getting perscriptions, groceries, meals and does an hour commute daily with 3-4 visits to his house. Our 8 year old daughter says she rarely sees daddy. My father-in-law has always been hateful and resentful (wasn't real happy his granddaughter was born a girl and reminds us of such but says now it's okay). He throws food, curses at my husband, threatens him and the list could go on.
My husband says his dad educated him and fed him. I told him he would have had less debt with a long-term student loan. He feels he is "honoring" his father as is commanded in the Bible. My mom took the same approach.
This current situation is reminding me of my childhood and I find myself more angry and wondering, "why do these people even have families if they are going to worship their parents?"
How much do you feel should be taken into consideration when you caregive? Do you feel your spouse or child should endure it with you? If so, how much? Am I just a cold person? Is something wrong with me?

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
Thank you Jinx4740 for your advice. But Mom is way past the assisted living stage. Her knees are very swollen with arthritis and she sits all day in her lift chair and sleeps in it at night. She uses a rollator and cane and it's getting harder and harder for her to get around. She can do nothing for herself but feed herself and thank goodness do her bathroom stuff on her own. I have to get her dressed in the mornings, undressed and ready for bed at night plus take care of any and all of her needs during the day - basically waiting on her hand and foot. And you are right - she will never tell us to make that move to get her in a nursing home no matter how hard it is on the 3 of us to take care of her. I have put her ahead of my husband many times through the years because of the guilt trips she would lay on me like insisting I get up on my day off from work to take her to work because she chose to never learn to drive. I have not figured out how she was able to instill such deep guilt in me feeling like I could not turn her down even when it mad my husband mad. I know that when he retires he does not want to live like this with her here all the time and I feel like it's time I finally step up and put him first. He has been very gracious allowing her to come here in the first place but it's going to be very hard. I have lived with her guilt trips all my life and I know she's not going to stop now. I have told her several times how much it would upset me to have to come in some morning and find she had passed away - she just said well that's how they did it in the old days. It just gets so frustrating. This has just made me more determined than ever that I will not put my kids through this some day if I am no longer able to live alone.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

MLH1967, You've got a problem all right!

You want something, and your mother is NEVER going to tell you it's all right with her. You have to decide that you have done as much as you want to to care for your difficult mother. Then gently but firmly, repeat, "Mother, I think it's time you moved into assisted living. I think you'll like it, but I need you to move because it's getting too hard for us."

"Yes, maybe I am selfish, but I need to think of myself and my husband and children. It's getting too hard for me, and I want you to move into the ALF."

"No, I'm not abandoning you. I will visit you often, and I'll be more rested, so I can give you all my attention. But it's getting to be too hard for me, and I need you to move into the ALF."

You will wait a long time for her to give you permission to do this. But you don't actually need her permission. You will need to use your courage. Get your husband to support you. You can do this.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

This has been so helpful to me to read what others are dealing with too. My 92 year old mother has been living with my husband and me for over a year now. Thankfully I have two sisters who give me breaks by taking her into their homes from time to time but it's mostly on me. She can still get herself to the bathroom and feed herself but we have to do absolutely everything else for her . I am 64 and have arthritis in my fingers and trouble with my back. I know this is hard on her but it's hard for us too. We had to rearrange our home that was not set up for taking care of an older person. She expects us to do this for her and when I have tried to suggest how hard this is becoming on my sisters and me and how my husband wants to retire by next summer and wants to have the freedom to go on trips and just have his privacy back, then she starts guilt tripping me reminding me of "all the things she has done" for me. She never learned to drive because she was "too busy" so we have had to haul her everywhere she ever needed to go. I have had a very hard time this last year dealing with resentment and guilt and am seeing a counselor. He has told me he thinks it's time for us to make the move to get her into a home but we aren't able to insist she do it yet because we know how she would react. She will tell me well you girls tell me when it gets too much. I just did Mom and you're not hearing me. She complained when my dad's mom stayed with us for a short time and said she used to go down in the basement and cry. She was frustrated when my dad was sick for a couple of years before he passed away from doing things for him when she wanted to be on the computer or doing her stuff but now she's perfectly willing to let us knock ourselves out doing everything for her. I feel like it's a nightmare I can't wake up from. I too feel that we are not expected to let parents destroy our health and our lives because they did what parents are supposed to do for their kids. If it means finding the best nursing home available and visiting often then the parents are still being cared for. I feel so angry so much of the time because I just want my life back then I feel the crushing guilt because I feel I am being selfish because I want my life back. I pray every day for God's strength to get us through another day.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I think being offered hope when there is none and ideas to make things better when nothing works after 17 years of trying all of them is cruel and lying.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I think if everyone could set appropriate limits, with compassion but without guilt like michsoph1, caregiving would be a lot more bearable and beneficial. Hers is one of the best, most helpful posts I have read in a long time.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Dear Veronica, You are correct. I should be out of here now. The question is: where to do. I am now incapacitated from a car accident and need help with food shopping, laundry, driving any kind of distances. Worse, my finances have been used up caring for others. I cannot afford a rental. I should have left 10 years ago. I don't care if he wants me back. Of course he will. He needs someone to drive him to dialysis when his kidney transplant quits in a few months. Out of the frying pan into the fire. This is a no win situation. I have known this since lots of counseling over the past three years. My own fault for staying this long and not leaving when she waddled into the door in the first place.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Dear Fedupnow..
I can only say to you consider leaving NOW.
What is there to stay for? You say your marriage is over. If you leave you will find out if this truly is the case. You may be pleasantly suprised to find your husband really wants you back. Think long and hard and do whatever you do on your own terms and MIL has to go. Good luck to you
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I have felt so much pain in these posts. Somedays are not so good for me either, but after reading all of these. I really don't have any complaints. I just pray for strength for all of you to endure and get some sort of peace.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Butterflygirl -- you are 100% correct about the baby boomers (my husband the end of the baby boomer age and I am the beginning of the GenX age). While our age difference is less than 10 years, we do look at things differently and I actually find his generation and my mothers to be very similiar. I have been told my generation is more direct and to be honest, there is much truth to that.
Know what else happened? Many baby boomers worked on their career, married someone younger and had children later. In our case, the generation span is an 8 year old child and an 86 year old grandfather!
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

yeh I hear you. I am thinking that everywhere I turn friends in my generation are facing the sandwich scenario. I guess it's the proliferation of the baby boomers.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Butterflygirl, I honest think many time the responsibility falls to the one child who is susceptible to guilt and being in an emotional mess. Out of 2 children, my mom is the most susceptible to being the first to want to help people, being the first to cook a meal, clean up a mess, etc. That is fine -- until you get to the point you either 1)don't know you are being used or 2)know you are being used but refuse to change.
I have also stepped back and looked at this situation. I have always remarked to my husband, "you know, people say you marry someone like your dad, but I married someone like my mom." I said that even before this situation with my father-in-law. And it is true. My husband is always the first person to jump for a stranger or co-worker (he worked on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day on a work project), is the first to run to his father (no siblings from this particular union even though he has half siblings) and he is the first one who you have to take by the head and rub his nose into the mess after someone had used him.
I have been dropped of at the ER and had to be told the news alone that I had a small tumor in my leg (thankfully begin), he worked on a work project while I was in labor and when I had a hernia operation, he took one day off and was back to work. I sat in a lazy boy by myself with some ice water next to me, a phone and the t.v. remote.
The other day I said to him, "perhaps I should hit you, curse at you, throw food across the room and threaten to kill you and you would treat me as well as you treat your father."
So I have came to the conclusion that there are some people that parents know that can easily manipulate and they do. There are some who want to be manipulated so they have something to complain about (brings to mind the old saying of, "get off the cross and let somebody else have the wood.") and I feel there are some adult children who get an aderline (sp) surge from the constant drama. There are others who get an ego boost from being needed.
I feel in some families like mine, the two play off of each other. I have noticed by comments on here that when the child stands there ground and fights back (verbally) that it is not fun for the parent anymore. There is no game in it. There is no "getting a rise" out of them.
I just really think that there should be more protection of minor children in these homes. There is no safeguard for them. Many adults just say, "I'm bringing in mom, dad or grandma and you better deal with it." Many of these adults are in hospitals prior to them coming home. Often times social workers are brought in to determine if they will go to a short-term, long-term facility or at their home or a family members home. Many times, social workers follow up when a patient is in a nursing home but rarely a follow up is not done in a home setting. As a society, we are so concerned if a child is in a violent household due to spousal abuse but we never take into consideration verbal and physical abuse afflicated by the elderly on their family members.
Our society wants everyone to think that all these situations are just beautiful with multiple generations living under one roof. No one ever asks the minor children what they think. :(
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Dear Butterflygrl, Family doesn't help because no one wants to get involved in the brutal realities of endless caregiving. And we don't complain because, in the beginning, we feel disloyal, then embarrassed, then horrified as it gets worse, and then finally we are too depressed until we get past burned out to incinerated and then I just let it all hang out. I should probably be espousing the Kool-Aid that there IS something you can actually do to make things better when there isn't.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

oh, Joyce, by no means am I talking about abuse. I would NEVER and I repeat never house anyone that was abusive. There is being compassionate to people but if they are abusive then they truly don't belong around the general public. I hope you don't think I meant that in any way. I don't pretend to know your situation at all. and I am not talking only about your situation anyway, I was generalizing since I just don't understand why the entire family doesn't rally around their loved ones. Instead the responsibility falls to one child. I wonder what that stems from. thoughts?
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I got sick of hearing my mother-in-law come to the table for breakfast, DEEP SIGH, and as whatever she wanted to eat was placed in front of her, would intone, "Al, please kill me. I want to die!" I know too many people fighting to take their last breath wanting to live because they have young children. I kept answering, "I will not let you waste one more minute of my time on my way to eternity. If that's how you feel, toddle down the driveway with your walker, lay down in the street and wait for a garbage truck to run over you!" (Now sulking with a puss on, she would repeat her initial statement. I would replay, "I don't care." It took several times before she gave up because, previously, I would remind her how much she would be missed and all the people who love her. No more rewards for bad behavior. Why don't we keep slamming our hand in a car door? Because it hurts!
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

Michsoph1 - I love it.
"Yes, my dad throws tantrums, but I can, too."
My beloved but misbehaving father would straighten up and fly right on the rare occasions that my ladylike mother blew her top at him. She finally learned to fake tantrums when necessary.
Like children, people who are misbehaving are often glad to be shown where the boundaries are. Their fears and desires are too hard for them to control themselves, but part of them is ashamed by their behavior.
I'm sure this isn't true for everyone, but at least when you yell, you feel better for a minute.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Terrim has certainly endured more than I ever could. Thank you for sharing your challenges and how you have dealt with them. I also agree with Joycews who believes, as I do, that we shouldn't tolerate what our parents would never have put up with from us. My father was very cruel as I was growing up. He alienated everyone in my family, including a brother who saw him once in 22 years. These things don't happen by accident. I am having a wicked day with my combative dementia Mother-in-law. I will be staying away from her because she will whale on me if given the chance. It is dangerous to my physical health and emotional well-being. If I had had a choice in living with her, I might not be so bitter but I think I resent being called evil and lacking in character when I told her I did not want her to move in with us at the exact moment she did: right after my husband's kidney transplant. She hardly noticed he had been through hell and back. Her focus was always all about her and her anxiety, narcissism and violence. I think she is taking out on us her anger at the rest of the world. I did not do anything to deserve it except to hold up a mirror to her selfishness. I am in awe of all who come here and share their stories. I don't feel so alone, not that I wish any harm on any of you.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Terim, thank you so much for sharing your story as I know that cannot be easy. Thank you too for the compliment to my mother, yes -- she is a very compassionate woman.
I never wanted all the attention to myself. I'm an only child and was not neglected in that way at all.
I have a young child at home (8) and will not bring a man in who has cut himself with a knife, put a gun to his stomach and threatened harm to others. I will not expose her to herpes and the serious infection he is carrying in his urinary track and on his legs. I know if he got violent and killed her or us, he would walk because he is elderly and can easily turn off and on his "confusion." I cannot justify putting a small child in any danger such as that.
I think it is beautiful you took in your abusers but I would have been visiting them in prison had I been raped. I just could not fathom having a rapist be it my father or grandfather around my children.
I remember a case in the news from a couple of years back about a mother who went to care for her elderly father. He had been in some sort of trouble with the law in the past and had some guy living with him that had been a sex offender. Almost his entire trailer park was filled with sex offenders but this grandfather told his daughter they were all swell guys who would never harm his granddaughter. Sadly, the little girl ended up dead.
I am all for helping family when they have had surgeries, recovering from an illness, etc. but when they have the strength to yell, scream, throw fits, attack people (and yes, that was all done in my house growing up), then they need to be heavily sedated so they don't hurt themselves and others. If that doesn't work, they need to go back home or to a nursing home.
No parent raising their child would ever put up with being cursed at, attacked, threatened or outright bullied in any way. Most likely years ago the child would have been disciplined by spanking or some other punishment. Not every parent has dementia or Alzheizemer's. Neither of my grandparents did. So why is it okay for the elderly to treat their children in such a manor and get a free pass because well...they are elderly and gave birth 50 or 60 years ago? Why should young children see their parents talked to in such a horrible way, threatened, hit and outright abused? If a spouse was doing such a thing to another spouse we would be told to remove a young child from such a situation because it was dangerous to their emotional and physical well-being. Yet when it is an elderly person abusing a mother or father, we are told that is character building so children do not learn to be shelfish.
Yes, children need to be taught the world doesn't always revolve around them but their has to be a better way than seeing someone die in front of them for years, seeing their parents abused or being afraid of the same things being done to you.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Just one more thing to add from my post yesterday morning. At the start of each week, I list my schedule for my dad (his doctor appointments, my trips to his house to clean it out so we can sell it--another story, since all of my mom's stuff--she's been dead for 13 years--was never taken care of, my daughter's schedule, etc. Then, each day, I reiterate the schedule. I tell him that I can run errands, but they have to fit into a certain time frame. (AKA--Don't tell me you "need" Arby's at 2 p.m. when I have to get on the road to pick my daughter up from school.) It's been a little better when I can give my dad specific times that I CAN help him, rather than when I can't. Of course, a true health emergency would call for a fallback plan. However, that hasn't happened yet, thank goodness.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

You ask why people have a family if they are going to worship their parents. Guess what- your grandmother had your mother and after bringing her into the world, she took care of her when she needed it. Your grandmother WAS family, she was part of your mother's family.

When I was growing up, my parents took in relatives and even strangers in need. We had an elderly lady with us who was a hellcat but the rooming house she lived in across the street was sold and she had no family she came to live with us.

Let me introduce my own family. My mother would be so rude to me and say such hurtful things as I grew up. My father beat me with a belt and threatened me with a gun daily. I lived in terror of him. My grandfather molested me from the time I was born and it escalated to intercourse when I was 12. At 13 I feared a late period. He said if anyone found out, he'd kill me, my parents, and himself. My grandmother hated me for his incest and blamed me. I'd trade my childhood for yours in a heartbeat.

Guess what? That very mother and grandmother live with me now. My mother has multiple health problems and my grandmother has Alzheimer's and is violent right now. I have to lock all dishes, bowls, knives, etc in cabinets with key locks as she has cracked me and others with dishes and even tried with a heavy cast iron skillet. I can't nap anywhere but in my husband's and my bedroom with the door locked because she tried to strangle me with my daughter's jump rope.

Prior to this, I took in my abusive dad and grandfather in turn when one had cancer and congestive heart failure and the other was dying of pancreatic cancer. Right now I also have a friend here, my best friend, who has been with us for 4 years and is dying of cancer.

I have a husband who I adore. We also had his mom with us as she was dying and we also cared for his dad when he had cancer. He and I have a family.

So, since we are a married couple with a family, should we just have forgotten those who brought us in the world as if they are no longer family? No. We can't. We're just not that kind of people. I don't know anything about a biblical order as we are Atheists but our moral compass does not include turning away from family and friends in need. Our family is more compassionate for it. Being raised in a family that cares for others is something that can teach patience and compassion to children- at least it did for me, my husband, and our family. In our country, older family members are often deemed unconvenient and disposable. My husband and I and our family just can't be that way.

Your mother sounds like a lovely compassionate woman who has her values straight and wanted to care for the mother who brought her in the world and raised her. I would be proud of her. Sometimes kids feel put out. They want all the attention on themselves. That's natural. We homeschool and have a lot of family time. We have a strong and healthy marriage and make time for each other. It's all about balance. It is fine to bring in a sitter to stay with the ones receiving care so you can go do things.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Yes, I agree with you joycews about other people sharing the load. The one thing I have noticed since I came to this website is the sheer number of caregivers who have siblings that are detached and seemingly could care less. I also have 2 siblings that have nothing to do with my dad because he "wasn't a good father" by my sisters standards. If I told you the things he did you might agree but I don't believe her for one hot minute, I think it's an excuse to not have to interrupt her entitled family and mess up her plans. I think they saying was that it takes a village to raise a family. I think it is so wrong to put all of the burden on one person. It isn't right.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Delbert, frustrated2 gave very thoughtful insight indeed. In fact, I was sharing that insight with my mom earlier during a good talk. I have been a Christian for 38 years and I very much agreed with frustrated2's insight. I don't know what my life would have been like without the Lord. I have encounted many however like frustrated 2 described and to be honest, it is not spiritually uplifiting when people do twist scripture to suit the purpose. She touched on many issues and was very detailed and that was very appreciated.
Everyone's stories on here are very much apprecited because it lets you know you are not alone and that you are not some evil, cold person.
As the years pass (especially in the last two years), my mom is coming around more and more that things that went on were not right. There is still that resistance though.
My husband is slowly getting there about his father. He will not stand up like he should and I had to take some matters in my own hands today. He dad is now in the hospital where he should have been weeks ago.
I have gotten upset today more than I should have and it has taken a toll on my blood pressure. Thank God for my little girl to keep me focused. :)
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Thank you frustrated2 for your thoughtful insight. As a devout, lifetime Athiest, I get a little annoyed at what seems to me like total nonsense and excuses for generally being bad humans.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

I want to thank everyone for sharing their stories because it has helped.
I did want to address a couple of things brought up. One poster had mentioned that perhaps my parents did not explain to me what was happening and I was "looking in" as an outsider and did not understand responsibility. I wasn't an outsider but an active participant. My mother was not well when she was doing all of this and had some very serious medical conditions going on from being legally blind to a ruptured disc in her back and later renal problems. By the time I was 11, I knew how to write a check and balance a checkbook and knew what all the bills that needed to be paid were. By the time I was 12 I could explain to anyone who asked in great detail every surgical procedure that was done to my mom or grandmother. At 15 I was put on my parents lock box account. I helped feed my grandmother, had up to my elbows in adult diapers (at one point we were up to 14 changes a day and sometimes that was with 2 diapers on), I took a leave from my job but I had to maintain full time status in college or I would lose my healthcare insurance.
I sacrificed. I had cousins who would send me postcards from a vacation while I sat at home waiting for the next crises. My dad saw my mom's sibling in a grocery store and said they would like to take me on a small vacation but we had no one to help with my grandmother. He looked at my dad and said, "wow, that sure is a tough spot to be in." I was awared an honor in college but could not attend -- I had a funeral to go to.
I understand it is important to teach children love, sacrifice and responsibility -- but why is this lesson often taught to just one child or one grandchild? I know there are a couple of post from only children and I understand that is totally different but my mom had a sibling who lived one mile away. My cousins were in the same house and older than me (one by almost 6 years). My aunt did not work outside the home. They had time for prayer meetings and church visits and would go out of their way to clean houses for people in the church and help them. My only conclusion is that is something that could be seen by others and receive praise.
My mom also took my grandfather in (for a shorter amount of time) and ended up in the hospital herself.
I have only came across one family that has ever done it right with caregiving and that was a lady with 3 sons. Each one would take her for 4 months each to be fair.
I just cannot wrap my mind around why a parent with two children doesn't sit down and say, "we are going to split the time of caregiving -- it is not fair to my children or grandchildren to live in hospitals, stay in the house for weeks and never leave." I do not understand why my mom did not say, "if I am going to do this...here's the deal."
I know my uncle and aunt didn't want my grandmother and she knew it but it was also not fair to us.
I feel if you can prepare your own meals, have enough energy to throw fits -- then do all that in your own home.
There are news stories about people who have been captured and lived with their perpurtrator for years to only be released into freedom. However it never makes the news when caregivers are in the same situation but held through obligation, guilt and someone who is physically violent toward you but they get a pass because they are elderly.
There are all kinds of government and church programs for children and elderly people but no real help for people in their 20's. 30's, 40's or 50's who are dealing with this. I rarely hear of people caregiving with young children at home. Most are in their late teens or grown.
I did want to also address my FIL -- it is not safe to have him in our home for 2 reasons: 1) he has put a gun to his stomach in the last month and threatend to kill himself as well as 2 weeks ago, he cut himself with a knife repeatedly on the stomach after my husband was 7 minutes late. 2) my husband has been told my FIL has an infection and he must wear gloves when around him. They said it is not to the stage yet of needing a mask. He does not wash his hands, light switches in his house have had to be cleaned from being covered in urine and feces and he also has problems in the past with herpes outbreaks and he infected my husband. The outbreak went from my husband's cheek into his eye and he recently received his second cornea transplant.
My FIL also has gambled away a significant amount of money that could have went to his care. We have had period of 3-6 months without hearing from him. He would not be in contact as much now unless he needed my husband and down deep I know that.
I do know the Bible says to honor your parents but I cannot find in my heart that God wants us to be abused (my husband was abused several ways as a child mainly by his mother and went to his father who called him a liar). I don't feel God wants us to essentially commit suicide by taking care of these people. I do not feel God wants us to expose our children to things that will harm them physically, mentallly, emotionally or spiritually. There is also a scripture about what should be done to people who do not protect children and cause them to stumble and it involves a millstone.
I see caregivers on here that have been doing this for 15, 20 or more years. Ours was 15. My dad once told me that I should move as far away as I could after high school. My mother continues to say she has no regrets and would do it all over again, even after her own mother looked up at her from the bed and said, "you don't love me." If mom didn't love her, she would not have put up with any of it. I once asked my mom, "you said you would do it all over again, but did you ever think of dad and I?" Needless to say, that was met with, "well, sorry you had such a horrible childhood" and more anger. Mom has said she knows she was treated right, but in her mind her parents are still one step from sainthood. I cannot understand that thinking.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

You're NOT cold. And I really don't care what anyone says. My family "dropped" my 35 year old brother off at my house. I had no idea, until I said I would go to the store and pick up some food and be right back. I get back and everyone is gone except my brother, who is dying and may have a year to live. I received NO help from my mother, two other brothers and sister. My daughter lost her bedroom for the weeks he was at my house until I could find him a good facility about an hour away. And during the time at my home I continually missed work because he was going through changes which scared him, so he'd call me at work and ask me to come home. He even yelled and cursed at the receiptionist if she couldn't find me, so I always told her where I'd be. I visited him every weekend, took him places, and my family still couldn't be bothered. When he passed, I called all my family and asked them to help me with his funeral expenses, no one could. Years later my mother in law winds up in a nursing home. We never got to know each other that well because I was continuing with my career in another county, so she didn't care for me. However, I was the only one in my husbands family that visited her every week for two years, NO ONE in her own family ever came. At the 2 year mark my own mother got sick and moved to Reno so my sister could take care of her. (she asked my husband and I to move her, we did.) My mother never had much to do with my sister and I, or the three boys for that matter, after we all left home, but she knew my sister was the only one she could get to care for her and do what she asked. My husband took over going to see his mother every week, and I tried to help my sister as much as I could. Three years later, April of last year, my mother passed, then in September of that same year, my mother in law passed. Neither family ever helped with the funeral expenses except my sister, myself and my husband. It's hard yes, but you need to give yourself "my time", no matter what. It could be any amount of time you need, just let it go, say "Sorry, but I can't be around for X amount of time, period", and then follow through. When I was beside myself working a stressful job and visiting my brother every weekend, I broke down and called my sister and yelled at her, telling her I didn't care what she was doing, she would see our brother just once to give me a break. She visited him once, then he passed. We ALL can only do what is mentally and/or capable of doing before we start to shorten our own lives with the ultimate stress that comes with that part of life. Every single person needs and deserves "my time". Take it.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Joycews Looks like you married a man who does the same thing you were doing growing up and continue to do. You are the one who makes choices for yourself, and only you know how to resolve it. If you don't want your daughter continuing in your footsteps, show her another way to live. You have choices now that you are an adult and you can make different choices for your child. If your husband doesn't appreciate what sacrifices you made in the past then he has every right to choose a caregiver present for himself, but you have every right to say enough is enough for you and your child. No one should be forced to witness caregiving. It is supposed to be given with love, respect and honor, but when it becomes a threat to one's own well-being, then you have to make a choice. My best wishes you take charge of your life and your daughter's.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Just to add a few thoughts. Take them for what you will. First of all I firmly believe in the dominance principal in human relationships. Parents are used to being the alpha's in their relationships with us because they brought us into the world. My father is an especially alpha type and doesn't want anyone to tell him what to do. However, something interesting has occurred since he has gotten into the nursing home. He was very agitated upon going in. He actually scared the staff with his aggressive behavior. My father was an angry and bitchy man his whole life. His wives were submissive and such. Well, they promptly put him on meds that are used for bi-polar depression and the change is amazing. He is laid back, happier, less fussy. I only wish he had been diagnosed earlier in his life. He would never go to a psych on his own but since he is in the NH, he just takes what they give him and it's wonderful! Remember, once we reach a certain age the things we used to produce like dopamines and serotonin decrease and might be altogether missing. Also, this demanding, clinging behavior has got to be a result of nearing the end of life. For some reason people want to feel that they are important and as valuable to their loved ones. However, the demanding father who wants to call the shots sounds like he does need to adhere to boundaries.
I can't understand the way these parents seem so ungrateful for what you are doing for them. It may change but my father is always thanking me for every little thing I am doing for him. It makes a difference. This fit pitching is ridiculous and childish. That would drive me batty.
The other thing I want to add is that I believe our american society has an illness about the elderly......and about attention. It sounds like everyone in families go around worrying about how much attention they are getting from one parent and making a huge deal that one parent is unable to be there all the time for this period of time. Sure I think the OP's and her mother spent an excessive amount of time at hospitals and the like but she was also gaining very important lessons about how you treat someone who took care of you when you were growing up (assuming she did). and even if a parent didn't -such as in my dad's case, I am showing by example to my own kids how treat someone. Even showing my parents how they should have treated me. Also, there is too much emphasis on children demanding from their parents. In fact, it seems more and more that people in our society are only concerned about themselves and don't even understand the experience and value of sacrifice. Sacrifice isn't just for the person you are doing it for- you also gain an experience of what it's like to give. I get so tired of hearing people wanting this and wanting that and using guilt to heap on parents but especially mothers when they don't get what they want(time attention etc.). If kids have to sacrifice a little of their parents time so that they can take care of their parents in a balanced way (not the boundary-less way), then they too are learning to give and that is a valuable lesson as well. It should be framed as such and taught that this is the way we should treat each other and frankly, you are showing them how to love and how to treat YOU when you age. That's what I'm doing with my kids. Of course, as a single mom for many years, my kids know that they traded some lessons for different kinds. I mean no disrespect here. much love. BG
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

My story is as long and painful as yours! I won't go into details because really, as I heard once, it really doesn't matter what people DO. The details aren't that important. It's more WHY they do them. I would say to you that this whole thing, which is common as the sun rising in the east, is about the lack of proper boundaries in a dysfunctional family. I totally agree about living life in the Word, but I know there are so many abusive people who will twist the Bible and take things out of context for their own purpose. That's why it is so important to really get to know the whole Bible - a daunting task - and prayer is important to when reading and digesting God's meanings. The first commandment is also the most important and if we can get this one right, everything else would fall in to place. Love God with all your heart and all your mind. Have NO other gods before him (and that includes your parents). I would urge you to get into a good Christian counselor (I stress the word 'good'. There are many bad ones, Christian and otherwise out there). You can honor your parents in many ways, but giving them your everything to the exclusion of your spouse and his/her needs, your minor children, who God gave to YOU to raise (and He expects you to do that well) is not right. There is a lot of manipulation of God's dictates to His people, including things like 'submission'. (I have a close family member whose sister in law currently is going through a meat grinder emotionally and we all fear for her physical safety because her very fundamentalist Christian pastor has advised her to 'submit' more to her abusive husband, saying that her 'strength' is what's ruining their marriage! He has left out the part in the greater context where Christ tells wives to submit and tells husbands to lift up and honor their wives, loving them as their own bodies as Christ loves His church. So it gets very twisted up in many ways when humans start fitting singular passages or words to their own purpose.
God LOVES us. He doesn't want us to be harmed or abused or mentally at the end of our ropes. If a parent is demanding and pushing an adult child to this extent, this is not Godly behavior and that adult child is NOT obligated to do whatever that parent wants. Honor your parent by holding your tongue when you could really unleash it, by making sure they are safe and have good health care and are well fed and clean. Be as kind as you can be. But you do NOT get 'points' for allowing anybody - ANYBODY - abuse you.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

It is so hard to balance your time. My kids are grown now so at least I don't have any children. But just when it should be my husband and my time it seems it is my time and my mothers. We don't have the time we should, but he understands. He keeps saying to me you are a good daughter. So I guess my job is taking care of mother. When we get together with our grown children I seem to be missing out on the fun as I am usually somewhere in another room caring for mom. I do really miss out on the family fun and don't get to enjoy the times. I don't want my life to go by and feel like I didn't really live. My mom is somewhat demanding and wants to occupy all my time. Right now taking care of mom is my job and I am trying to find a balance between taking care of her and taking care of me.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Dear Clove57, Good luck to you. I have been taking care of my hateful Mother-in-law for 17 years now with no end in sight. I wonder how you will feel after that amount of time. I truly do wish you luck. You are going to need it.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

I believe those, who choose to care for their elderly parents do so, unconditionally. We are only here because our own parents sacrificed and did without so we could go on to become healthy, functioning adults. Parents do not tell us blow by blow, what they had to sacrifice or do without so we had a better childhood, granted noone is perfect. In reference to your grandparents and father in law, their behavior is symptomatic of dementia, it alters their behaviors as does alzheirmers. I have been looking after my father, age 81, for two and a half years, this includes, making breakfast, supper, washing, drying, ironing, dusting, vacuuming, housekeeping on a daily, weekly basis apart from working a full time job. My father repeatedly tells me I do too much, I tell him, he gave me seventeen years of his life laboring in a construction company 40 to 60 hours a weeks so that my siblings (5) and I could have a roof over our head and food to eat and I NEVER heard him complain. One day I won't have to worry about him but for now it is nothing compared to 17 safe, loving years he gave me. God gives me all I need to keep looking after my father. Blessings to you.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter