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My dad has dementia and has to go to assisted living and Mom has been bed ridden for two years with CPOD. Dad cannot take care of her full time now. I live 1100 miles away. My uncle is unable to take care of himself and lives 600 miles away. He causes issues each time he speaks with my Dad. Any advice on how to handle this?

My Rude Aunt gave me trouble about every necessary decision I made concerning my dad when he was dying. She insisted he didn't have dementia and that mashed potatoes would cure his cancer (she knew someone who had been cured this way). Plus if I'd get him Sudoku books, they would stimulate his mind and help get rid of the dementia that she said he didn't have. She insisted that I forced him into hospice, and took his money, and that my sibling gave him a cold when it was really the death rattle. Oh, and she also threatened to take me to court if I tried to prove him incompetent, which he wasn't until the last month of his life, and I never considered it because there was no reason to.

The best thing I could have done was to stop having anything to do with Rude Aunt. That's what I advise you to do about these relatives. Stop communicating with them AT ALL. You have enough on your plate without ill-advised nincompoops chiming in.

After Dad's funeral, I never spoke to Rude Aunt again. She cut me out of her will. And that was fine with me because she wasn't worth the misery she was dishing out, on purpose, to make things harder for me. She'd always been vengeful, but this was the last straw.

What would be the last straw for you with your situation? Or have you already reached it?
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Glockhart Nov 5, 2025
Thank you this helps slot
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When your "relatives" are ALL willing to step up and be actual Hands on caregivers for both your parents TNEN and only then can they give you a hard time about the decision you are making for your parents SAFETY and well being.

There is no perfect solution.
Sure 100 years ago when no one left the area where they were born and women did not have "real" jobs. And families were all together so help was available . And the life expectancy was not what it is now. So 100 years ago it was common for the younger generation to care for the older.
But this is not 100 years ago.
Caring for someone means that you make sure they are safe.
If that means placing them in a facility that can manage the care needs then that is what you do.
It is never an easy decision. But it is one made with lots of though, anguish and often guilt from "well meaning" relatives. You do what you need to do and forget the relatives.
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Glockhart Nov 5, 2025
Thank you for you helpful insight
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Not really. Just tell him you are doing what is right and haven't time to discuss in depth.
I must tell you if you are thinking that ALF will work for any amount of time with any severity of dementia you may be looking at nursing home for your Dad as well.

You will find that there is a lot of magical thinking where dementia is concerned, for the person suffering it and for many relatives surrounding them. You are doing the best you can. Carry on. You aren't responsible for this illness, didn't create it, can't fix it, aren't skilling in dealing with it. Your folks now require shifts of care with multiple skilled workers.

Heart out to you.
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Glockhart Nov 5, 2025
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Since "the relatives" do none of the care, they get no say in whether your parents get placed or not. You shouldn't be concerning yourself with opinions of Armchair Critics who do nothing but feel entitled to tell YOU what you're doing wrong.

Quite often, relatives are best not seen OR heard.
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Glockhart Nov 5, 2025
Thank you for the input. It helped alot
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Stop telling your Uncle (or any other unsupportive or clueless relatives) any information. If they ask, you tell them whatever you need to in order to shut them up. Or, just ghost them.
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It's way past time for placement in skilled care where your parents can get the 24/7 care that is needed.

I think quite a few of us on this forum have gotten criticism from relatives about placement or the care decisions we made out of necessity for our loved ones.

I had one sister who kept calling and making false reports to the Adult Protectve Services. I had an alcoholic mother who was doing a good bit of lying herself. She kept stirring up uneccessary drama until she became terminally ill herself with unoperable pancreatic cancer.

I was left with a disabled sister to care for, and I went through he!! getting her placed in a group home. No one in the family helped me with this other than too spread information that was untrue. Dad was forced to show up those last few weeks because I moved out of the home. I showed up for the final meeting with the officials responsible for placement. Dad had the pleasure of dressing my sister and bringing her to the meeting. Later that week, someone picked up my sister to take her to the group home. The home health aide and her daughter cried when it was time for sister to leave. Dad and his new family moved into the family home. I didn't speak or see them until about six years later.

Dad was there to see my sister off. I know he had to feel some type of way after all of us moved on. I had a good therapist, a very understanding and supportive supervisor, classmates from the university who later became friends, very dear close childhood friends, and my Al-Anon members who didn't mind early morning calls back then. Many of my friends have passed on, but I had a strong support network that kept me going through that ordeal. Also, I had a strong support system through church. It was a lot of wear and tear on my nerves with the constant worry of caretaking and maintaining bills.

Dealing with family like the one I have was very painful. My mother, sister, and I were the throwaway people no one wanted to be bothered with.
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Glockhart Nov 5, 2025
Thank you this helps
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Tell your uncle once and for all that this is necessary and to stop interfering with the transition . That he’s only upsetting everyone.

After that don’t even tell your uncle anything anymore about the plans , especially don’t tell him the timeline .
You are not obligated to tell your uncle any details .

If he continues, block your uncle’s phone number from the phone your Dad uses.
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Please don't let them get to you. You are doing what's necessary for your parents' safety. My compliments to you for that. It is a lot to manage, especially long-distance.
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Reply to MG8522
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If this uncle is causing your dad undue stress, block his number from dad's phone.

Stop explaining your actions to anyone in the family. Really, you don't need to justify these decisions. If anyone insists, all you have to say is "I'm not discussing this any further." End the conversation then and there.

The more you try to explain, the deeper entrenched you become.
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Reply to notgoodenough
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Just ignore it. Or tell uncle/other relatives they are free to step up and handle it if they believe they have a better plan
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