History of my mother's behaviour: She is always right and if my Dad who has passed away or myself or brothers disagreed she would make life miserable for us. Example slamming doors giving dirty childish looks, stomping around or just ignoring you. We all have the experience of walking around on eggs shells we could never have fun with Dad and just say and do what normal people do when together she was a nasty women towards my Dad and he was liked and loved by all. She never treats her friends this way so they are surprised when I have told them . I really do not know what to do. She wants me there for company but I do not enjoy being there she cooks for her self and still drives please help what should I do
If her behavior is truly intolerable when you visit, tell her you’ll come back when she can be civil and if she isn’t, you will leave. At this point, you are two adults. You would not tolerate this behavior from anyone else and you needn’t tolerate it from her.
You mention that you help with housework she can't do. A bit of advice - this sort of thing grows slowly until one day, you're spinning around trying to do it all. You're at the point where you can be careful about what you add to your plate, and what you say no to. Don't let making her mad stop you - that's just an unfortunate part of setting boundaires.
My mother was much the same. My sweet dad----he put up with so much!
Now 88, Mother lives with brother in an apt attached to his home. We have 3 other living sibs, but only he and I take care of mother. They are 100% MIA. For quite a few years after daddy passed, Mother was angry and mean to me a lot. It was a carry over from my childhood, when she was angry all the time. I mean, ALL THE TIME. I barely have any memories of her being sweet to me.
I did have to pull the "Mother, you have to at least FAKE acting like you like me or I just can't some here to help you. I'm done. Treat me with respect!" (And I was about 58 or so when I said this. I took a long break from her, checking in with brother on her, and after a while, began to go back and help, a little. I never do more than I WANT to and if she gets nasty, I walk out. Actually, dementia has been a blessing. She has become quite sweet.
DON'T let feelings of guilt drive you to do what you can't handle emotionally. People generally reap exactly what they sow.
Sometimes, nasty behavior can get magnified as people age. And they may do it with their own adult children, since they think that's safe. I mean, your kids will always love you, right?
I might talk it out with her, but, if she's thinking clearly and refused to be nice.....I wouldn't be around it. IF she needs help, I'd let her or her POA find professional help.
Don't deminish the affect rude behavior has on you. If your hand were in a fire would you leave it there if it made mother feel better? You can't hope to change behavior that has been going on a lifetime in a short time. I doubt she is aware of how painful it is even when you tell her. Perhaps it was how she was treated as a child?
Do try to have an agenda when you visit to help distract yourself from the remarks. Not a tit for tat. But perhaps a conversation with a purpose. A story of her life perhaps. Where were you born? How old were your parents when you were born? Figure it out right then if she doesn't know. Were your grandparents living? Did they all live in the same community? What was your relationship like with your grandparents? Did you have aunts and uncles? What was your favorite time of the year? Write down the questions and let her talk. Notice if it makes her angry. Happy. Sad.
If this is not a good topic pick another and when you leave the visit check in with yourself and see how you feel. See if it helped or not. New behaviors don't happen without effort. Perhaps take a trip to where she lived as a child. Where she went to school. Where your grandparents were buried. Take photos and get them made into pictures you can put in an album. Elevate the occasion any way you can. Notice if the questions agitate her and move on if they do. But try to have a plan each time that keeps you moving forward and doesn't allow for too much straying into troubled waters.
And since you just retired be careful that you don't spend all your free time getting beat up. Limit the days and amount of time. You can always increase it when you want to but if you start with spending too much time with her it will be harder to cut back. Enjoy your retirement. Someone who has always been negative probably doesn't feel that great. I'm sorry your dad wasn't honored in your home.
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