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I am an only child and moved my mother from out of state 6 months ago to be close to use as I am expecting my first child and also because she could no longer keep her house as her neighborhood was deteriorating. She misses her house, the couple of friends she had as well as very nice neighbors but still spent a lot of time alone. Now she lives in a beautiful apartment 5 minutes from us and has everything you can imagine in walking/short driving distance from her - grocery stores, senior center, churches, lively downtown, etc.. I have spent so much time trying to integrate her into the community that I have neglected my own affairs, all while being pregnant and working full time. I have searched for local churches, senior centers, even found a small teaching job ( 3 hours a week) I know she would love and she says no to everything. I offer to go with her to activities so she doesn't feel awkward at first and in the end she ends up refusing to go. All she wants to do is find a reason to come to our house every day to do housework which I appreciate but she's using that as an excuse not to live her own life. When I want to spend time alone with my husband or see a friend alone, she either becomes very sad, gives me a guilt trip, or wants to tag along but I need time away from her as well. I also spend a lot of time driving her around for errands because she says she's afraid to drive in a new area. She can still drive but says she is afraid although she doesn't need to drive more than a couple of miles to anything she needs. I offered to drive with her to the key places she needs to go using a GPS and she always says no. I need time for my own life and can never do anything without feeling guilty about it. She is perfectly capable of making a phone call, driving and making connections but she doesn't want to help herself. I can only lead her to things but cannot force her. Initially she will say yes to trying new things but then never does anything about it. What is really frustrating is that she then complains how lonely she is and has nothing to do when she could fill up her days with really nice activities. This has been a huge burden on me and it's becoming increasingly difficult for me to run around so much for her as I am 8 months pregnant and very tired. She also comes by a lot without calling and this upsets my husband. We are also helping her financially and I feel like the least she could do is make an effort to help herself. I don't mind helping her out but what hurts is that she refuses to create her own life and then turns around and says how horrible her life is. I'm really worried when the baby is here that she will be here all the time and use the baby as another excuse not do do anything for herself. I really spend a lot of time with her (almost too much) so she doesn't feel alone but I cannot be her only social outlet. This is starting to stress me out so much that I cannot sleep and feel depressed. It's also affecting my marriage as I feel the need to talk about it to my husband all the time but he is becoming very annoyed at how much of a toll this has taken on me. I really want her to be happy, make friends and feel better but she is not making an effort. I know this takes time but she's not making any effort. What can I do?

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If your mom can drive to your house then she can drive to the store or to church or wherever she may want to go. It sounds like you have been there for her every step of the way during this process and now it's time for you to let go and let her live her own life. You aren't responsible for her (yet). People who are needy always seem to find one person who will bend to their will. I would suggest that you stop being your mom's only social outlet. Just stop. You work, you're pregnant, you have a husband and you have a life. Have mom over for dinner on Sunday's or designate one day during the week when you're able to help her but create some boundaries ASAP.
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Cutting that reverse umbilical cord is going to be hard, particularly when you moved her to begin with. Plus you've about to drop that baby and will need all the help you can get; even with your husband pitching in. A heart-to-heart with Mom is definitely in order, but the last thing you want to do is alienate her to the point she'll threaten to pack return to the old neighborhood where she'd planted actual roots. ... In the meantime, start with having her call before coming by. And don't be shy girl, make it clear there's a loving man in your home that needs some attention too.
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There are many services available that will send a companion that will visit with her and take her places which will reduce the burden on you. That person could also take her to a senior center or wherever you choose. This would provide mom the company when starting these new things, while at the same time relieving you.

Many churches have members that will assist with getting others to church and activities. With a baby due any day, I would call a church that you think she will enjoy and find out about their activities and other members that would be able to help get her going.
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You don't say how old your mom is, but if you're expecting, she can't be too old. I agree with Eyerishlass, you've got to step back and let your mom make her own way. Get her Skype so she can communicate with her old friends back home.

Is it possible she's depressed? If so, get her to the doctor to get that checked out. Set boundaries NOW, before the baby comes, or she'll be at your house every day and night once she's got a grandchild. You have done all that you can do to make your mom happy. Now it's up to her to do her part to assimilate into her new community. She's clinging to you because you're trying so hard to make things work. Once she sees that you've stepped back, she'll have to either sit there and be lonely or get herself out to meet some people and do some things. Right now, she's just waiting for you to try to help her, because she wants the attention from you and you're continuing to give it to her.

You sound like a wonderful daughter, so don't guilt-trip yourself. She's got to do her part to fit in to her new life. Keep us posted on how things go.
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Dear Hbib, Don't know if you saw it, but I answered your other post also. The above story gives more details which are very helpful. By being available to your Mom's every whim and every need and every demand, you are ENABLING her needy behavior. THAT is what you are doing wrong. Just STOP. She is playing you like a fiddle. As Eyerishlass commented, you need to set boundaries. Your Mom is overstepping because she does not what your boundaries are. Perhaps sit down with Hubby and figure out how much involvement you both feel comfortable with from your Mom, but she definitely needs to conduct her life more independently. Moving in when the baby comes is recipe for how to wreck a marriage! Placing these guilt trips on you is manipulative behavior and you are falling for it. From what you wrote, it does not sound like she was always that way. As Blannie suggested, your Mom may be suffering from depression (hopefully temporary). It would be a good idea to take her for an "annual physical" (flu shot time!) with her new primary physician. If you can speak to him privately ahead of time, explain some of her needy and dependent behavior and your suspicion of depression. He may give her something to lift her spirits and make her feel more self-confident. She is in a totally new environment, she may be shy (?) and hesitant to step out on her own, but she is totally capable of doing her own shopping and errands and needs to learn the routes whether she likes it or not. The local library, the church, senior center, are all good places to go on her own and get involved with group activities and make new friends. I know your time is running short, but if you can, perhaps you can get the senior center schedule and just take her there and stay the first time, but leave the second time and come back to get her later. The third time, let her drive her own car 'because you need to get to a doctor appointment'. Stop driving her all over town - tell her you can't do it today because you are too tired or make up any excuse but just refuse. I hope some of comments in my answer as well as everyone else's are helpful to you.
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You are very kind to not want to hurt your mother's feelings or make her feel unwelcome. But you have other priorities now. Your husband must be considered and soon a new member of the family will come ahead of everything.

You do not need permission to spend Saturdays alone with your husband.

You are not responsible for your mother's feelings. She gets mad, pouts, tries to send you on a guilt trip ... she is responsible for those feelings. And no one can send you on a guilt trip if you refuse to pack.

Set appropriate boundaries. Untie the apron strings. Others have given you specific suggestions for easing into this. But first and foremost you must determine to live your own life.
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As an only child, I know what you are experiencing. My mother calls me in tears and begs me to "come get her" it makes me a wreck...until I call the ALF and find out she's been fine all day. She is pushing your buttons because it has always worked. The baby and hubs are your priority and she's feeling shut out. She will deal with it. It's her fault that she's been living vicariously through you.
I think that onlys feel a huge responsibility to their parents (at least I do) However, I am learning that my independence has always been tied to their wishes. Follow the plan and everyone is happy. In my case, dementia intervened, and I found myself trying to answer impossible requests!
My mother actually said that when she dies, I won't have anyone. I'm married, have two daughters who live nearby and two granddaughters! They don't count :)
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Dear Hbib, It sounds like your Mom could use an increased dosage of her anti-depressant if it is no longer working. Perfect reason to get her to the doctor.
Additionally, your shy 'introverted' mother seems to wield a lot of power over you. The more you try to please her, the more excuses she seems to find that your solutions are not good enough. When she lived in her home state, she was fully independent and social and she is capable of managing herself just as well in your state. 74 is not that old for a woman of sound mind, intelligence, and ability to drive and take care of herself. She has no valid excuses! Don't you think 6 months is more than enough time to acclimate herself to her new apartment and location? She really has no excuse at this point to be acting so needy and putting so much pressure on you - especially when you are about to deliver - she is running you ragged! I think no matter what you do or how much you try to please her it will never be enough. From the sound of it, she will always find fault with something.
She already let slip her intention to move into your home when the baby comes. Hmmm.... Could that be why her new apt is suddenly too dark and upsets her - maybe planting a little seed here? Caring for a new baby is a joyful experience, but also a ton of physical stress in itself. When you crack from the additional physical and emotional stress she is putting on you, Victory! Now she MUST move in and help take care of the baby and your household as well! Won't your husband love that? Oh, but of course 'it will only be for a little while'. Suddenly her introversion will disappear and she will show you just how capable she is of taking charge of YOUR lives. I bet she will no longer have any problems running around town taking care of your shopping and errands!
Your discomfort with confrontation will be nothing compared to the discomfort you and your husband will experience if she ends up living in your house. Your unwillingness to stand up to her may be your own undoing. No, you shouldn't have to explain to her that you need to live your own life, but I think that is exactly what she needs to hear from you. Until you make that clear, I think she will continue to manipulate you. As your husband said, you need to communicate clearly with her, and let her know that you have done all you possibly could for her based on her interests and talents, and she has rejected it all (you basically wrote the list in your above post), so now she needs to stand on her own two feet and cannot lean on you any further - period. You and your husband are starting a new chapter in your life as parents and she needs to understand that you will be focusing ALL your energies on that, which means she needs to start taking care of her own needs. I would let her know that you are very much looking forward to her being a Grandma also, but not the "live-in" type, nor the 'hovering' type. Make it clear that you and your husband need your SPACE, and cannot handle the daily interruptions and unannounced visits. I would tell her that she needs to call and ASK if it is convenient to visit, and she should not get insulted if you say "No Mom, it's not a good time right now". I would make it clear that if she does get insulted and defensive that it is HER problem and she will just have to get over it - and you do NOT feel guilty since you have not made any unreasonable demands on her. Let her walk on eggshells for a change. I think the only way she will understand that you intend to live your own life is to PROVE it.
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You never did say how old your mom is. How old is she? The more you say about her, the more it becomes apparent that she is really trying hard to manipulate you. You walk on eggshells because she's learned how to blow up to divert attention and back you off from the boundary that you're trying to set. She turns it around and "catastrophizes" what you say. You say, "I want Saturdays with my husband" and she turns it around to "You don't love me". Her world is black and white. Either you meet her every demand or you don't love her. You can't win by trying to reason with her. She's acting in an unreasonable way. She's panicked that you're starting to show some backbone and stand up for yourself and your marriage. So it becomes even more important to set CLEAR boundaries and stick to them. No pussyfooting around with language. "Mother, I love you and I love my husband and my new baby. I can spend time with you on Mondays and Wednesday and we can do whatever you want. But the other days are for my husband and my new baby. I love you but that's how it's got to be."

Let her fashion her own life. Offer to move her back where she was if she's so unhappy. Otherwise, it's up to her to build her new life. You've gone above and beyond to help her out, but she doesn't want help to build a life. She just wants to be joined at your hip. And for your own health and happiness, you can't allow that. Back off, limit contact and let her start to do her own thing. It's her life and you can't live it for her. She's in charge of her health and happiness, you're not.
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Introverted people don't need a lot of socialization. We can be happy reading, taking a walk alone, working in the back of the library, knitting, listening to music and watching birds on a feeder. If Mom is truly an introvert it won't work trying to make her into something else. You've given her plenty of opportunities to build a social life. She can act on those if/when she is ready.

You are not responsible for her happiness. And that is a good thing, because you cannot make someone happy.

Maybe having more explicit conversations with her would help. Or maybe you should just let your actions speak for you. Set boundaries. Repeat them as necessary. "I'm not available on Saturday, Mom. You know I spend that with Hubby." Don't get defensive when she accuses you of pushing her away. "I'm sorry that you see it that way, Mom. You did a good job of raising me to be an independent woman. I'm all grown up now and I need time for myself. I still love you, of course."

You are right that you don't want to wind up resentful. Try to be polite but firm. And stop worrying about how much your mother does or does not socialize. Just focus on not being her constant social outlet.
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