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I have said that I think caregiving of my parents will kill me and now its like shit, I may just be right...yet here I am staying with him after pressure from a sibling that asked don't I have time in between tests before a major surgery coming up where the stage of the cancer will be determined. When I think about the possibility of him living several more years because of course, apart from vascular dementia, he is perfectly healthy, it sometimes makes me want to die. It is hard to see a light at the end of the tunnel. I hate our healthcare system that is concerned only with keeping a body alive with no consideration of the quality of life, LET ALONE the intense burden placed on free caretakers. I have heard it saves something like 500 billion in medical costs but too bad it doens't account for the price to our mental and physical health. I think it is a broken system and something has to change. Historically we are not supposed to complain but I can only think of one relative that lived past 90 from my childhood...

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Ok, listen to me. First, I’m sorry to hear you have cancer.

YOU ARE NOT ALLOWED TO CARE FOR ANYONE ANYMORE BUT YOURSELF. Ok.

YOU have to be on your own team here. You have to put your foot down and say “no, I have cancer and I am only allowed to take care of myself now”

Repeat it in the mirror if you have to psyche yourself up to say that to anyone.

YOU are your patient now. That is just the way it is and tough tooties to anyone who thinks otherwise.

If you don’t stand up for yourself, no one else will.
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Reply to Southernwaver
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Hothouseflower Apr 16, 2024
This is very true. No one cares about you but you. The needs of the caregiver usually get trampled on.

Different situation for me but i put myself first — I got out of Dodge after my MIL died because there was no way I was going to take care of her developmentally disabled daughter for the remainder of her or my life. My MIL was not going to steal the remainder of my life from me. I pulled up stakes and left. In-laws were p***ed but who cares. They could figure it out themselves.
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You allowed your sibling to pressure you into continuing to care for dad. The correct answer should have been NO I cannot care for dad between surgeries.

It's not too late to rectify this and tell sibling no you can't do it and dad needs to be placed in a facility.

Sad that dad's life is more important to sibling than your health and your life.

Stress can lead to heart attacks, strokes and even cancer and other health issues.

I hope you are able to survive whatever cancer you have and have a life after caregiving before you die. But you have to choose yourself. Will you?
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Reply to sp196902
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Who has DPOA ? If it is you , place your father in a facility if a sibling does not want to take care of Dad . If your sibling is DPOA , you tell your sibling you can no longer take care of Dad , they will need to either take care of him or place him .

If your family does not support you by relieving you of caregiving , Perhaps your local County Area of Aging can send a social worker to help place your Dad . Call and tell them your situation and that you will not be able to care for Dad .

Regardless , your caregiving days are over , you need to focus on you .
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Reply to waytomisery
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We have the option to keep our body alive if there are treatments and meds that will do that. But we can choose not to. I’m not sure the medical profession is entirely to blame. It’s the patients who want to keep trying to stay alive, or their adult children who insist that they couldn’t live without Poppy so he must have dialysis. Then there are those sick people who want to die at the time and place that they choose, but state laws prevent Death With Dignity.

I’m so sorry that you’re dealing with cancer and wish you a complete recovery. But I’m curious—how do you feel about our health system keeping you alive at all costs? Would you still think it was a broken health system?
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sp196902 Apr 16, 2024
I think the bigger issue for OP is they want to stop hands on caregiving for dad but can't because of obligation to dad and pressure from sibling.
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Drop dad off on siblings doorstep, literally or figuratively, and put them both out of your mind as you focus on your own diagnosis and treatment plan.

Best of luck to you and God bless.
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Reply to lealonnie1
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I was in much the same position as you are now. I turn 55 in August and last year, in April, I underwent breast cancer surgery. It involved a long recovery time, where I had to take 6 weeks off from my full-time job as a teacher.
Although I don't provide "hands-on" care for my parents in my own home, I have had to expend a great deal of time and energy making decisions for them and being responsible for them. My mother has dementia and my father is as helpless as an infant without her. We moved them into Assisted Living at the height of the pandemic and now they both live in Memory Care. My husband and I (he also works full-time), have established POAs, and Advanced Health Directives for both of them, handle their finances (including the sale and emptying of their house), their taxes, coordinate and take them to doctor's appointments, manage their prescriptions, field endless phonecalls and complaints, oversee every hospitalization, etc. We visit them every weekend.

When I was diagnosed with cancer, I received no empathy from my father whatsoever, and my mother, of course, wasn't able to support me either. I have two younger sisters (54 yrs and 50 yrs) who I expected to "step up" and help me provide care for my parents while I was recovering. They didn't do much. I still was tasked with fielding the phonecalls from the facility and their doctors. No one visited them, and my dad was annoyed when I started skipping the weekend visits. No one else was "monitoring" the facility/staff, which must be done (again, this is my opinion/experience).

It is very hard to prioritize your own health, when you are used to being the dependable, responsible one. But you need to be a little "selfish" during this time.

In my opinion, you have the perfect circumstances right now to place your father in a facility where he can get the care he deserves. I had the same thoughts and worries that you have. I wondered about my own mortality. I realized that my parents (83 yrs and 77 yrs) did not prepare for prolonged illness or a decline in health, and I can't forever be held responsible for their lack of planning. Overnight, I shifted from the role of daughter to parent/matriarch of my family. My relationship with my sisters has forever changed too. As my mom's dementia progressed, so did their defensiveness and apathy.

I received a lot of good advice and support from this forum. I'm very grateful for that. I'm also grateful for my own daughters who encouraged me to seek therapy, and have told me how proud of me they are. And of course my husband's support has meant the most, because he has tackled this family crisis, side-by-side with me, since the very first day.

I recommend that you start taking care of yourself. Please relinquish your dad's care to your sibling and be sure that they place him in a facility as soon as possible. You need to focus on your own needs right now. I wish you good health and healing!
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Reply to MamaBearlyThere
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Hi Hasta,

Same situation, almost exactly, although my cancer is almost certainly worse than yours, and my father is 93, but, I'm still here.

This is hard for me to write because I've got so many family stressors going on and I don't want to bring them into this, yet, I have to, because you can face it.

First, you need to stop caregiving. Even a stage 1 diagnosis can come with chemo, radiation and surgery. It can easily knock you down for a year. You may simply not be able to do it. Focus on healing.

Second, your family. Mine has been a nightmare. Awful defines them all. My aunt sent me a message when I got sick with thrush asking where my body would be. My cousin when I told her that I was sick in a text replied, "okay", and that's all she said. My other cousin decided I was a shitty caregiver. If you are married or have a close family great. Mine are rewriting my father's will, seriously, they are.

Third, you may get crazy. The first drug I took caused mania, I went full looney toons. Then I got thrush, the cancer got loose and I got crazy. At the same time my father had a cardiac event. I had to respond to that and no one in the family cared that I could barely walk. I got angry, let it out, and I'm the asshole. I was an asshole, but don't expect people to context you, they won't.

Fourth, everyone else may get crazy. Sorry, family been nuts, outsiders ok, but count on no one.

Fifth, build a care team. If you have family, it's right there. Your care team will change though. I've had people come on and drop off. It doesn't sound like you have family, so do the best you can, find friends, anyone, shuffle them do whatever it takes. YOU NEED THEM!

Sixth, beware people who have never had cancer. They think they understand, they do not. However, some get close and can be good helpers.

And, you get help. Find support groups, there's a ton, and go to them online or in-person. Find a cancer friend, become a cancer friend. Don't go it alone.

I can do more but that's enough to start.
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AlvaDeer Apr 17, 2024
Always great to here from you, Someguy.
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Sorry sorry to hear this hastalacorona. Wishing you a smooth course in your diagnosis and treatment.

Our system for caring for the elderly has so many issues and problem. But in this case, where a caregiver like you is diagnosed with cancer, we MUST have a solution to this! You should be able now to fully get out of caregiving and focus on your treatment. We need to have funding for situations like yours, where you need to focus on your health now and there should be funding in this situation to cover your dad's care. Otherwise its just not right.
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Reply to strugglinson
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Hastalacorona, please read your first 2 sentences as if it were a close friend sending them to you. How would you respond to this close friend?
You already know the answer to that question and so do I, so put your big girl/boy panties on and learn one of the shortest but most powerful words...NO. And use it with your sibling or anyone else that wants you to put yourself second to someone else, especially with your now health scare.
You deserve to be as stress free as possible while going through your surgery and any needed treatments in the future, and I know from first hand experience that caregiving is NOT stress-free.
In fact statistics tell us that 40% of caregivers caring for someone with dementia will die from stress related issues before the one they're caring for. I know for a fact and so do you that your father would not want that to happen to you.
So start using that sort and powerful word NO, and understand that no is a complete sentence.
Wishing you complete healing from your cancer and for you learning the word no.
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Reply to funkygrandma59
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There is zero reason for you to continue as a caregiver. No matter how you do or do not choose to pursue treatment for your cancer, now is the time to care for you, and that doesn’t include providing care for a parent. Call your sibling today and bow out completely. If your sibling doesn’t understand, that’s not on you. Walk away. I’m sorry you didn’t get a better sibling, but really, how ridiculous to expect or even suggest you to continue after such a diagnosis. Get out of this today, no waiting, it will help you see more clearly what you want to do, or not do, concerning your own health and future. I wish you healing and peace
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