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I am sorry to have to ask this, but I don’t know what to do. I am not asking for judgement of advice to spend money that I don’t have, but y’all are so comforting and have been through these same things, and I am completely empty of an ability to think. I need to pull myself together.
My brother is basically total care at home and must be watched all the more closely because he is ambulatory and will not use his walker or call for help. And he is confused.
My husband had a lacunae stroke earlier this year and is a fall risk and “feeble”
My brother in law just fell and broke his hip a couple hours ago and is in the emergency room. He is schizophrenic and my sister feels he cannot function without her ( he had a multiple compressions spine fracture years ago and can barely get around. Plus she will get another bedsore and require more home health herself from all the sitting)
I sent my daughter to sit with them but she was in an automobile accident a couple months ago and has a torn tendon that limits what she can do.
While I tried to fix lunch and cook some soup for later, every thing fell apart of course.
My brother did not take his medicine. He went to bed.
He would not drink his liquids ( this is not new, but one on one care does not leave much time to also take care of everyone else.
What can I realistically do with all this as it is piled up at once?
I assume that my sister and brother in law will join us at my house when the hospital decides to cut him loose.
No one is young. I am 75.

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Why is your brother in law on your plate?

Why is your brother not in a facility?

I'm just trying to understand why you are taking care of all these folks. Your husband needs your care and you are no spring chicken!
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No, no, no. You can't do all this. Everyone but your husband must make other plans for their care. You cannot have the hospitalized people back in your home! NO.
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You learn to say "No, I cannot help. My husband and daughter need me and I already have my brother at home."

Next time your brother lands in the hospital, do not accept discharge back to your home. Let the professionals at the hospital get emergency Medicaid in place for him and find him a bed at a longterm care facility.

At the rate you are going you are going to die before any of them do. Sorry to be so blunt.
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To care for all these people is compassionate, but not realistic. You have been doing yeoman's work, but (frankly) at 75 this stress may put you into the ground sooner than the others, and then what?

Everyone except your husband must transition into another person's care or a facility. Do not accept your sister and brother-in-law into you house from the hospital. Do not allow the hospital to bully you into accepting to care for those you can't. BarbBrooklyn will hopefully post what you are supposed to tell the hospital so they don't hound you.

I know this is not what you came here to hear. But you are being ground to a pulp and you need to put on your own oxygen mask before you can help your husband, and then maybe the others. It would overwhelm the best of us.

Please contact the Department of Health and Human Services to talk to social workers and get the others on their radar so they can become wards of the county and the county will provide their care, not you. You will still be able to visit them and love on them, but you won't have the burden of caring for them 24/7. Please think on this...your sole responsibility it to your husband and your own children. There are solutions for the others, you are just reluctant to take them. Don't feel guilty. Blessings!
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When you say sister and brother in law will join you, do you mean for dinner? Or for caregiving them both?!?!?!

Who is signing for BIL's discharge? Please make sure that sis is not saying "oh dont worry, my sister will take care of us".

If your bil broke his hip he likely needs surgery and then will be sent to rehab. Where he can transition to long term care of medicaid.
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Thanks everyone.
I have pulled myself back together with your help/
I still don’t know what I will be able to do, but I called my daughter back from the hospital and have gotten my brother to bed.
And I have a trusty dog by my side (my sister’s dog).
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Sendhelp Dec 2019
Jo,
Not just a day at a time, but sometimes a few hours at a time.
Hug that dog tonight,
Get your jammies on.
Go to bed.
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You exhaust me with your whirlwind of carer responsibilities, and I am 5 years younger than you. No wonder you feel as you do. If you dont as you say, pull yourself together, you will be no good to anyone, but most of all to yourself.
Guess what! If you were no longer there, things would get sorted pretty quick smart. It might not be to everyones satisfaction, but hey, life was never guaranteed an easy ride.
Listen to your mind and body. What are they trying to tell you? You have too much on your plate is the message I am receiving. Hence your thinking you need to pull yourself together. Even if you were just having a bad day when you originally posted, and life has returned to its routine chaos, it is long past time for you to relinquish at least some of your carer responsibilities.
1. You do not have to martyr yourself. No one can make you do that, you are allowing it to happen.
2. You are not indispensible. If you die tomorrow, someone would organise something.
3. Tell anyone and everyone you are not coping. Send them on the guilt trip they have forced onto you.
4. Go out into the garden or local park, anywhere in the fresh air you can be alone. Take a pencil and paper, a page to each person. List what you do for each person every single day, their special needs, their medications. Then write down suggestions as to how others might help, no matter how outrageous the idea or difficulty of the task.
5. Call a family meeting, put your cards on the table, or in this case your sheets of paper. Then tell everyone it is up to them to pick a person and take over your role. No notice to them. No excuses.
6. Have a pre planned bolt hole to hide. It might be a friend, a refuge, a trailer park. Somewhere no one would think to look for you. Have suitcase ready, call a cab and disappear. Turn off the mobile phone.
You need to detox and the family needs to form a support network. Tell them when they have put permanent plans into place to put an add in the newspaper, or on social media etc, only then will you return. Bet it takes no more than 2 days, 3 max.
In an entirely different scenario, nothing to do with caring, I did this and it worked a treat. Not only did I realise I was dispensible, those around me got the message not to take me and my generous nature for granted.
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What will these people do when you kick the bucket before they do, which IS going to happen if you stay on this path.

So, whatever they plan to do when you are gone, they should do NOW.
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I am 72, I am very good at saying NO, let everyone except your husband fend for themselves, they are adults, not children.

This way too much to deal with, start setting your boundaries. If the others get upset, so be it, they need to work things out for themselves, that's what adults do.
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NeedHelpWithMom Dec 2019
Dolly,

Maybe you could do a thread on giving others strategies on how to say no. I think it would be very helpful for those who have never learned how to say no. Your posts are always strong and on point.
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I was the oldest, a girl and a "goody two shoes". I always tried to please my parents. So I never really questioned, I just did. I also didn't like (and still don't) like confrontation. Can't think quick enough with a comeback. Usually, minutes later when I can think but not at that moment. As I have gotten older, I don't appreciate being intimidated. Makes me mad.

Saying that, No wasn't even in my vocabulary. When I lived home, Mom was always volunteering me once I had my own car. Then I married and she still volunteered me. This was my first No. "Mom, I work f/t and now have a house and a husband. Please stop volunteering me. U can ask if I can do it, and I'll tell u if I can. My NOs come when I am overwhelmed. I will not take on more than one thing at a time. I babysat my gson from 2 months old to 20 months. Mom, with Dementia, moved in. My daughter put grandson in Daycare. I could not care for both. Lately, a friend has asked me to go to an alumni reunion more than once. I must have told her No in a text, no on the phone and a week before the event, NO. And it had nothing to do with DHs hearing (which is what he thought) it had to do with...I didn't want to go. She tells me when she doesn't want to do something and I except the first NO.

So, as you use the word NO it gets easier. No excuses have to be made, just NO. My kids do it all the time, why is it my generation (born 40s, 50s,) have such a hard time. Because we felt we couldn't say NO. I taught my girls if u don't want to do it say NO. You don't need to explain why. "Sorry, I have to say NO."

So, in Jo's situation when/if sister asks to move in, its "No" when sister asks why "can't you see I have enough on my hands with DH and brother". If she keeps insisting, just say, "No, sorry, I just have too much on my plate to help."
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