Follow
Share

I have been the primary caregiver for my 88-year-old mom for over 20 years. She was fairly healthy when my father died. But she was living alone until recently and has (in my opinion) some major untreated mental health issues. These issues have basically distanced her from other family members to the point where she relies very heavily on me for all her emotional and physical support. She made me her health care proxy, power of attorney, and executor of her estate, just to give you an idea. My 4 siblings are mostly on the periphery; only helping in times of crisis and even then, they really don't let it interrupt their regular daily lives. Mom has had several major health events over the years and now has terminal cancer.


I have tried to get my siblings more involved but they ultimately throw their hands up and always have excuses for not being able to help more.


Meanwhile my mom is very manipulative and only wants help from me because the others "don't know how to do it" or "don't know the way she likes things." She is an extremely anxious person and refused to get paid outside help at home whenever I attempted to set it up. Also refused things like a fall alert button, etc.


I work full time and have a spouse and kids at home.


Now she is at the end of her life. After a course in the hospital and rehab over the past 2 months, she is in a nursing home. She wants to go home but that's just not possible.


Now I feel guilty for not being by her side all day every day. My life continues as it always has, while my poor mom is scared, anxious, and dying alone in a nursing home. I see her probably 4-5 times/week for 2-4 hours each time. Is that enough? I just don't know any more.


I love my mom but there's no doubt that caring for her over the years has taken its toll on me. I have always had this nagging goal to "make her happy" but feel like a failure because she complains about everything no matter how much I do. She appreciates and loves me one minute and complains about every minutiae the next. Now at the end of her life, I still/again feel like a failure because I came all this way by her side and now it's like I'm deserting her.


I just don't know what the right thing to do is any more.

I feel so much of this. So much of this post about the resentment and loving her but not liking some of the things she does hit home with me. My mom has advanced Parkinson’s and has had it for almost 20 years (she’s 72). I’m an only child, single, and 45. She can still care for herself physically (bathing, etc) but she lives at a 55+ facility where she gets meals, housekeeping, activities, and rides to some doctor’s appointments.

I have FMLA but if something major were to happen I don’t have enough time off. I try so hard to get her to understand that I have a job, house, pets, my own health issues, and basic ‘life’ things but she just won’t. I feel so much guilt having to say no to things. It’s almost as if when I tell her I need time to myself she calls/texts MORE.

I don’t know anyone my age in a situation like this so just reading these replies helps beyond words. Thank you for all you do and the amazing responses.
Helpful Answer (1)
Reply to aphillips78
Report

You said “I take time off work, have FMLA so i don't lose my job, go see my mom when it's a good time for "her", not when it fits "my" schedule. 
I have made her a priority, canceled personal plans, put my life on hold.”

Sometimes dying people live a lot longer than we expect. It would be one thing of your mom was actively dying right now, but she’s not. You need to get into a routine that YOU can live with because this could go on for many more months. If you feel resentful now, and keep arranging your life around mom, you will be toast by the time she actually passes.
Helpful Answer (1)
Reply to LilyLavalle
Report

We are all "dying" we just don't know when we will take our last breath. You don't know mom may outlive you. (highly unlikely but you never know)
You have done what you can for her.
You have acted in her best interest.
You have a life.
You ...YOU..can't "make" her happy. Only she can do that and from what you have written she probably doesn't know how.
Is mom on Hospice?
Hospice even in a facility can help. And one of the goals of Hospice is that no one will die alone. So a Volunteer can come in and visit. When mom is at End of Life , actively dying a Vigil volunteer can come in and be with her, and you if you are there so that when you can't be with her she will not be alone.
You are not deserting her.

You have done the right thing, you are doing the right things. Don't let anyone tell you otherwise.
Helpful Answer (3)
Reply to Grandma1954
Report
MeMyselfAnd1 Apr 7, 2024
Thank you for your kind words.
I think you're right that she doesn't know how to be happy. It's just heart breaking to think about.
She is not on hospice yet, but only because she doesn't trust what they and I tell her. She is very suspicious and refuses to sign for it, thinking we're trying to trick her into something. For now, the nursing home is doing a good job taking care of her at least. She also will not sign a DNR, even though she recognizes she is at the end of her life, has refused invasive treatments, and says things like she "doesn't want to do this anymore." I don't think she understands what the DNR is, and anytime someone attempts to explained it to her, she gets irate. She's anxious and scared and fighting to stay in control.
(1)
Report
I think you have done Plenty for your Mother and you are spending time with her . I would Not feel guilty - your siblings should be visiting her also .
Helpful Answer (1)
Reply to KNance72
Report
MeMyselfAnd1 Apr 7, 2024
Thank you,
I should clarify that my siblings are visiting her. They have stepped up in these past months. It's just that my mom has always depended on me almost exclusively, so she does not have expectations from them. Their daily lives are really not that impacted in comparison to mine. I take time off work, have FMLA so i don't lose my job, go see my mom when it's a good time for "her", not when it fits "my" schedule.
I have made her a priority, canceled personal plans, put my life on hold.
My siblings have never done any of these things. Maybe that was my mistake from the start and now I'm paying for it.
(1)
Report
I have written on the forum before about my desire to make my mom happy. She died in 2022 and I have mourned over my inability to make her and keep her happy. You cannot control another’s happiness. I am not happy every single moment… no one is. Yet, I set this incredibly difficult goal of making my mom happy. It was impossible. She was her own personality, dealing with her own issues. I ended up making myself miserable and anxious.

Make the time that you can spend now valuable. Say what needs to be said and make sure she is getting good care. That is the gift you can provide now. You do not control her responses or her actions.

I wish you peace during this difficult time.
Helpful Answer (2)
Reply to Msblcb
Report
MeMyselfAnd1 Apr 7, 2024
You are absolutely right, and i tell myself these things regularly. Yet the self doubt and guilt are very powerful at times and leave me wondering if I am truly doing everything I can.
Im sorry for the struggles you have been through. Thank you for sharing your wisdom and reassurance.
(1)
Report
You are not deserting her .
You did not fail her in any way.
You cared for her for so long .
You have made sure she is where she needs to be .
You are visiting plenty .
You are not responsible for your mother’s happiness .
You deserve to have your time with your own family at home.
There is nothing else you can do different .
You are not the only people pleaser here, we get it.
Helpful Answer (4)
Reply to waytomisery
Report
MeMyselfAnd1 Apr 5, 2024
Thank you so much. I appreciate the reassurance, especially from someone who has been through it.
(1)
Report
I'm sorry you are going through this. My situation was very similar. If you are visiting mom 4-5 times a week for 2-4 hours, she is not dying alone. She is dying with the care an support of a loving daughter. Providing the actual hands on caregiving doesn't make the situation any better. In the case of moms like yours and mine I think it actually makes it worse.

What you said sounds exactly like my mom:
"Meanwhile my mom is very manipulative and only wants help from me because the others "don't know how to do it" or "don't know the way she likes things." She is an extremely anxious person and refused to get paid outside help at home whenever i attempted to set it up. Also refused things like a fall alert button, etc."

I ended up supporting my mom in hospice in her own home. I tried to do it alone but I brought in a lot of hired help over time against her wishes (mom was bed bound). I am still recovering from the physical, mental and emotional exhaustion, even though my mom died over a month ago. She was in hospice for over 6 months.

I really wish I could have just been there as a daughter. And as you said, being healthcare proxy, POA, paying the bills and being executor of estate is more than a handful in itself. Plus you have put in years of caregiving prior to this. It's time to give yourself a break. The biggest lesson I learned was I could never "make her happy". I wish you the best.
Helpful Answer (7)
Reply to LilyLavalle
Report
MeMyselfAnd1 Apr 5, 2024
Thank you. I'm so sorry for your loss and for what you endured. It doesn't seem normal to take on such a burden even though generations of the past and still some cultures do it all the time. For me, I feel like my relationship with my mother has devolved in a lot of ways that make it hard for me to "like" her. Of course i love her, and I have a lot of compassion for her, and constantly think about the terrible childhood she had that likely formed a lot of her ways, but i can't help this massive resentment towards her for putting me in this position of being the sole person she can rely on. I put my own needs and dreams aside to be there for her.
The past few years have made me realize that the only way to get my own life back is for my mom to die. What an awful thought.
Thank you for your support. It's comforting to know I'm not alone with a lot of these feelings.
(1)
Report
See 1 more reply
You've done as much as you could. Consider this: You were with her all this way, but you're not deserting her. She's reached the end of her life, and she, because her death makes it no longer possible for her to be here anymore, will be deserting you. It's what happens at some point no matter what we do to stave it off.

It was never your job to make her happy. That was up to her.
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to Fawnby
Report
MeMyselfAnd1 Apr 5, 2024
I tell myself that too. It's not my job to make anyone happy. I think I convince myself that I know what would make a difference to someone so i try to make an effort, but ultimately it doesn't matter what i do. We all bear a responsibility to find our own happiness in life and never to depend solely on others for it.
(2)
Report
Your mom would be scared and anxious no matter where she is, but as she is now cared for, that burden is off you.
Helpful Answer (6)
Reply to PeggySue2020
Report
MeMyselfAnd1 Apr 5, 2024
Thank you PeggySue2020, I know you're right. I just don't think I'll ever completely let go of the guilt.
(1)
Report
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter