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I take care of my grandbabies 4 days a week 8-5. The other 3 days I cared for my 88-year-old Mom. We lost Dad last July. Mom broke her femur this past Feb. She uses a walker and is beginning stages of dementia. I have 4 siblings and only 1 brother helps care for her. 2 others “visit “maybe once a week for an hour. Maybe bring dinner. But my brother and I do grocery shopping and housework and make sure Mom eats and gets a shower. I changed her bed, make sure she has deodorant and is clean. I MAKE her walk to help keep her independent. The problem is- no one else pushes her to exercise! They say oh she gives puppy dog eyes and says I really don’t want to... and they give in. Of. purse that’s easier but pushing her like I do is what’s keeping her strong. How can they not see that? Why wouldn’t they want to help their mother?! It makes my heart hurt and I get so upset because she would be so much better if everyone else did something for her. Mom is sore and hurts every time I go over because she’s so stiff. How can I get siblings to MAKE her move? I mean it’s for her benefit & health. Do they just not care enough? I cry because I must be, we joke, “the mean one”! I’m tired of being the mean one, it’s not fair! It would be easy to drop in for an hour a week. drop off food and leave. I guess they feel they’re earning inheritance. WTH? I don’t even know what my question is. I’m just overwhelmed, I guess. disappointed for sure. Oh, and sister starting rumors that I’m getting paid to care for Mom! oh and she used to work in PT! doesn’t make Mon do anything! the other sister has borrowed over $15K in the last 4 yrs! she doesn’t go by anymore cause Mon told her no more money. oh, they got bent out of shape because I had a sturdy privacy fence put up at Moms. That’s right before she fell. She told EMS that she got so agitated &flustered and tripped because her oldest daughter yelled at her to tell ‘me’ to stop spending all her money! I don’t understand how other ppl think. I guess I just needed to vent. and of course, I’ll still make Mom Walk and make sure she gets showers and clean her house. It just hurts that it’s me and one brother who does the best he can. it’s wearing on us. and get this! I’ve been yelled at by 2 sisters on how to care for Mom. My daughter blocked them on my phone and all social media. It sucks because if everyone took a day and DO something it would be nice for us and for Mom. I’m just so mad/hurt/confused how they just don’t care. I just started to read “Let Them” by Mel Robbins. Thank you for listening to my saga. Any advice is appreciated.

If you are POA, you can sell her home and use the proceeds to pay for Assisted Living for mom. That would upset the apple cart with your siblings, wouldn't it? But they'd have no say-so in this choice, mom would then have a team of professionals to look after her, and you could probably avoid your sibs more than you can now.

Best of all, you'd be out from under the horrific burden of housekeeping and caregiving that is so miserable. You don't have to do it, you know. You choose to do it. Yay for you, but you can choose NOT to do it. The probable reason that sibs don't help is that they know you will continue to take on every burdensome chore forevermore ad infinitum while they continue with their normal lives.

If mom has no POA, she needs to appoint one. Bring this up with mom, and stop communicating so much with the sibs. They are not your friends.
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Reply to Fawnby
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Venting is 100% allowed!

Good advice has been given to you by caregivers who have been there and done that. A longtime friend of mine often reminds me that "expectations are premeditated resentments". Your siblings are showing you exactly what level of participation they're willing to provide. Since you can't control other people ever, you need to accept this. But you don't have to accept doing all the caregiving yourself. You need to enjoy your grandkids and keep yourself healthy in order to do so for as long as possible.

Maybe consider hiring a companion aid for your Mom a few days a week. My Mom has 2 lovely women from a reputable agency who are with her every day while she waits for her broken pelvis to heal in her home. I live next door and my boundary is to not be assumed into being her on-call, 24/7 caregiver. She will go into AL when the time comes -- the same one my MIL was in (LTC) for 7 years and received excellent care. It is a faith-based non-profit that's been around for decades. Just putting this out there in case you are fearing "bad" facilities as an option for your Mom. No so! Do research and get current and insightful opinions on Nextdoor.com. Or maybe find an Adult Day Care program for her?

The only person you can control is yourself so finding and protecting healthy boundaries is essential. Bless you for only wanting the best for your Mom but you don't have to be doing it all on your own. May you receive wisdom and peace in your heart as you figure it out.
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I was an only child, so nobody at all to help me with 2 elderly parents who moved close to me, at my suggestion, so I could help them. The nearby relatives did nothing to help, only passed judgement on me. So did the faraway relatives. The Armchair Critics, I call them. Those who point fingers from the comfort of their recliners while doing nothing at all but eating bon bons and sipping drinks.

I made the decision to keep my parents in Independent Senior Living, then Assisted Living and then Memory Care Assisted Living for mom when dementia and mobility issues became severe. I also made a decision long ago not to be the daycare solution for my grandchildren. I am disabled from cancer treatments now and can't, but even if I could, I would not commit to such a fulltime schedule as you have. I'm just too old at 68 to run after kids all day.

You've made different decisions you may want to rethink right now, w/o trying to commit others to things they want no part of. Hands on caregiving is not for everyone, and certainly not when dementia progresses to the point where it gets ugly. I took care of everything for my parents from A to Z w/o doing any hands on caregiving and it was still a huge job. Some folks will say I don't know the first thing about caregiving bc I didn't have the folks living with me or clean up blowouts.

Its good to recognize there are many kinds of caregiving you can do. It's not necessary to leave your blood on the floor with the type you choose. Don't give up YOUR entire life to pursue caregiving for others. There are other options.
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DaughterByLaw Sep 18, 2025
Amen from another non-hands-on caregiver. I can't count the days and hours I've spent as POA through 2 moves and 1 death on research, aging-at-home modifications, dementia activities, social worker consultations, VA benefits, real estate coordination, downsizing, packing & unpacking, shopping, budgeting, bills, insurance, car maintenance, financial planning, medicaid planning, funeral planning, setting up businesses to hire household employees -- and so many of them ended up with glitches and delays and multiple phone calls + meetings + paperwork galore. It's been my part-time job for 2.5 years, at times surging to full-time work.

I've been told multiple times, yes, you're a caregiver, even though it's my husband who's spent time as both an unpaid and paid hands-on caregiver for them. Different types of work and stress but neither is a walk in the park :)
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First of all, accepting the fact they don’t/won’t help is a big first step. I’m one of 8 and my husband and I do 95% of my father’s care. We pay $20-$30 an hour to get breaks here and there. They won’t change. You’re wasting your precious energy. I know it’s hard-believe me. Also know you’ll have no regrets and you’re putting good karma out there for yourself. It’s really a shame how people treat a dying parent who did so much for them.
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In a perfect world, all family members would pitch in and care for the elderly. But we don't live in a perfect world. We live in a very flawed world. We also live in a world in which everyone has their own burdens and weight to carry. And it is not always crystal clear looking in from the outside what weight someone else is carrying.

Have you asked your siblings for additional help? If so, did they tell you they couldn't help? Or are they assuming that you and the other sibling have it under control and their "help:" is to do exactly what they are doing and stay out of the way otherwise?

If you've asked them and they have said no - that's your answer. They are giving exactly what they are prepared to give. And you know what....that's ok too. When you are the one providing the care, it doesn't feel ok. But it actually IS ok. They have the right to decide how they are going to spend their time just like you do. You have chosen to step in and take care of your mom. I get that, I will likely do the same. But that was a choice that you made, and your siblings have the same choice - to do it or not.

When we choose to take on caregiving - we are only choosing for ourselves. We can't make others do what we want. (Don't get me started on making your mother move for health - oh the number of times we begged my FIL to no avail, and we finally gave up because it wasn't going to happen. )

At this point, you have to really consider your long-term goal here. Is what you are doing sustainable? If not, and your siblings are not going to step in to offer respite, then it's time to consider other options. In home care potentially? Or even assisted living.

Heck, maybe if you decide to use Mom's money to pay for her care the other siblings will suddenly become more interested in helping to preserve the inheritance. But it's not likely. And if they are not offering help, they don't get a vote on how you care for mom.

But really consider where you are at this point and if you can maintain this. So many people recoil at the mention of assisted living or nursing home. But people are living so much longer now, and physically doctors can fix so many ailments, but the one thing they haven't figured out is how to fix things like dementia. And there comes a point where it's just impossible to care that alone.
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Reply to BlueEyedGirl94
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Deep breath.
The fact is you can’t choose what your siblings will or won’t do. You can only choose for yourself.
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Reply to PeggySue2020
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The resentment and anger isn’t affecting your siblings a bit, but it sure can mess up your health and happiness. I had mostly useless siblings, but came to see me spending my energy being upset with them was a waste. They made their choices on how to spend their time, as adults we all get to do so. I did what I could reasonably do for my parents, gladly, and let the resentment go. I hope you’ll find a balance of caring for yourself and mom, and stop drinking the poison of bitterness before health consequences come your way. I wish you peace
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Reply to Daughterof1930
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You can't force your siblings to do anything. Maybe they would rather have a pleasant visit with dinner rather than feeling angry and resentful, possibly damaging their health in the process, which may happen with the seven days a week you're spending caregiving. It's very generous of you, but is it sustainable? You need to take care of yourself as well.

As Fawnby suggested, consider placing your mother in assisted living, where she can get regular exercise, physical therapy, and walking going back and forth to the dining room and activities. You'd be relieved of the work of cleaning and grocery shopping, and your days off from babysitting could be relaxed visits with your mother plus however you'd like to spend your leisure time. Her assets, including her house, would be better spent on making her final years pleasant than saved as an inheritance.
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This isn't really so much aimed at the OP, because it sounds like they truly do have some major issues with siblings. However, as a "sibling who doesn't do much" I'd like to explain why maybe some of us don't step up more.

I'm the nearby daughter who moved here with my family 20 years ago specifically to help my aging parents. Mom (now 93) had a stroke last month, Dad (94) is her main caregiver, and she's currently in rehab demanding constant presence.

I have multiple chronic illnesses, I'm recovering from an eating disorder, and I'm AuDHD (on the autism spectrum and with ADHD) - but since everything's invisible and I don't "look sick," people assume I'm fine. My medical team has explicitly told me I need to protect my health or I'll end up hospitalized, which helps no one. Still, I feel judged for not doing more as the local daughter, and it's really painful.

My brother lives 3 hours away and admits "he doesn't know what to do," so most responsibility falls on my husband and me. I get it - he's still working, distance is hard, and honestly our family has some dysfunction that makes crises extra complicated.

But this situation has me thinking: what if some "unhelpful" siblings aren't just being jerks? Maybe they're neurodivergent, have invisible health issues, or have unresolved trauma with the parents. Maybe they know they'd make things worse if they tried to help beyond their capacity.

I see so much judgment toward siblings who don't step up, and sure, many deserve it. But maybe others are doing their best just to survive their own lives and genuinely can't handle more. Sometimes pulling back isn't selfishness - it's self-preservation that actually protects everyone involved. And some people aren't comfortable sharing every detail of their lives, even with (maybe especially with) siblings.

Not every absent sibling is a horrible person. Some might be drowning in ways we can't see.

So, again, not aimed at the OP, just my thoughts on the topic in general.
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BlueEyedGirl94 Sep 11, 2025
This is such a great point - and honestly - I hinted at it when I said that people often don't know the burdens and weight that other people are carrying.

When we were "sharegiving" for my FIL - my SIL and her DH had moved into his home because they needed a roof over their heads. But virtue of living with him of course the 24/7 care fell to them. My DH and I (we live an hour away) did EVERYTHING we possibly could to help within reason (took him to doctor's appts, helped with technical issues, gave them respite time, etc) but we couldn't logistically be there 24/7 because we didn't live there.

I love my SIL but I feel like deep down she resented that because she thought her brother should do more. But honestly, we were doing all that we could, especially since we had our own family to take care of, DH had major health issues, and my own mother and grandmother needed help.

People have all kinds of reasons for not being involved. But we should prepare ourselves and understand that not everyone can afford in any sense to provide care indefinitely for an aging loved one.

Your point is incredibly valid.
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Mom's PCP prescribed a home care physical therapist. He had Mom walking.
He came once or twice a week. We also walked Mom.

I agree with you. Movement is key. Lack of movement is the beginning of the end.
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