I've been caring for both my parents since Sept. in their home which is 2-1/2 hours from where I live. I told them in the past that I would care for them but that was when they were OK with me going to my place and coming here periodically. I haven't seen my adult children or grandchildren for 4-1/2 months plus I was helping my friend at his business and he needs me there. My parents have gotten so that they rely on me (I think too much). They can get around with their walkers in the house, they can do their medications and they can fix meals. They don't really need me 24/7 so I just sit here cooped up all day. Of course they don't want "strangers" in their house. My sister is coming from Arizona on Sunday for 2 weeks and we are going to present them with options for continued living (i.e. moving them to a mobile home or apartment near me, having someone come in to their home to help them (of course that would mean a stranger) They don't really have a lot of money to pay for someone to come in. I'm going to feel very, very guilty and like I am more or less deserting them by proposing them to move closer to me and I will feel selfish for wanting to go on with my life while I am able. I am 63 yrs. old and unmarried. My sister can't come out to relieve me for weeks at a time nor can she afford to fly here often. I don't know what else to do and I am afraid that when we present options to them that they will reject them. Am I wrong to want to have a life? The best option is to move the close by me, then I can still be there within 5-15 minutes when they need me for anything and I can visit them often.
I miss work from stress related illnesses. More colds and just being worn out. I am expected to drop everything and drive to the city and babysit my mother when ever something arises. There are many times I just lose it and cry until I can't see. Just out of stress. I look at myself in the mirror and I see an aging old woman with lines on my face that weren't there a week or two ago. She's killing me. I quite often just want her to go to sleep and not wake up. I want my life back. I want to have some fun but I can't because the reality comes back. I drink more now than I ever have to escape my crappy life knowing I have this constant burden on my shoulders. My husband is great but he has no clue about old people. His mom is vibrant, healthy and travels a lot still even with poor eye sight and she's 74. Once my mother passes I will miss her, but not this. It will be freedom.
Even as a child it was her way or the highway. I'm fed up being someones personal doormat. Mother or not. Some people think Oh, how can you be so mean to your mother? I'm not being mean, just fed up because there is NO give and take. Her life could be a lot nicer but she just won't do anything to change anything. Last summer my husband and I were out on our boat and the cell phone rings. Sure enough another getaway ruined. Dad was taken to hospital for another ailment and she's alone again. I should have said "To Bad" go to respite. That's what it's for. But I gave in again and we headed home so I could care for her "again".
She's impossible, selfish etc. My friend says she's needs to stop being a pain in the
"ASS" and get real.
Hang in there. I'm trying.. we are all trying to cope with impossible situations because we feel that we have to no matter what. But we can say NO..... we need to more often. Our parents guilt us into many things that we should just say NO.....
Thanks,
Anksana
Well, one day I was sweeping the upstairs patio and he answered the phone in the adjacent family room, not knowing I was within earshot. He spoke to someone he had not talked with in a while based on the conversation I heard. He did the "poor me" thing for loosing a son and told person X that it was so hard caring for him (whom he was always angry towards) but when the subject turned to me his response to whatever question he was asked was , "oh Wayne? Well I have not heard from him in over a year". That broke my heart completely- I took care of his son for 2 years to spare him the daily chemo/Dr. appointments, fed him, cleaned up the horrible side effects of the treatment, lost a huge amount of business, broke into my retirement at age 46 in order to care for brother and NOW I am caring for parents and he spins his tales of woe. Another comment that came back to me was him telling a neighbor, shortly after I returned, that I lost my business in San Diego and had to move home due to finances . This more than anything hurtful he has done in my life was the single most devastating experience. Pride, especially in men, is a real and difficult thing to deal with.
I read someone's prior post about allowing oneself to be hurt....I totally disagree.
there are some scenarios in which the hurt and pain comes with the territory of a decision made out of true love and concern. Family care-giving is not like an abusive relationship or marriage where the option to walk away is real, though difficult. If I were to walk away from here my mother, who is totally unable to represent herself- can't walk, can't talk much, totally dependent- and who is the single greatest and most loving and generous person I have ever known in my life, would suffer neglect and indirect abuse. My Dad dropped her in 2004 (left her standing in the hallway!) ending up with her having to endure a hip replacement...she has been through enough and I am here primarily to make sure she is safe and protected. Not to mention making my dad feel like the alpha male he has always been.
Sorry to rant on you but I related to your story so much I just wanted you to understand, as I was understood when I first came to this site. It is not so kmuch the "misery loves company" theory but rather: you are NOT alone, you ARE doing the right thing, you will NOT regret this in the future and you WILL survive to find a life of authenticity again. You just have to take care of yourself in the meantime....and the times can be mean...
Best to you-
The way I see it, the financial cost of our sacrifices is offset by the notion we did the hard, difficult and largely ignored work to make our family members more comfortable in their last years of life. And God please look on us kindly when our time comes...
Enjoy your life... We only have one.....
That being said, I have, at times, felt stifled. Mom is a sundowner so if my brothers and sisters are here during the day, they don't get the full effect. Mom gets very agitated at night, often worrying where our 'guests' will sleep (no one in the house except me, mom and the dogs).
I have recently gotten a part time day job. it gets me out of the house as often as I want, I earn extra money and best of all, my mind is not on mom.
I feel extremely fortunate that most of my family lives nearby but it is sometimes difficult to ask them for some time off from care-taking.
Miserable? Not at all. Stifled? yes but working on it. Mom is 91, and I feel proud that I can do this service for her.
i think mothers see sons as capable . there has always been a stronger bond between my sons and my ex than between the boys and myself. hospice sees me as an utter abomination but mom would whup the whole damn bunch of them if they screwed with me.. in any relationship there are disagreements and arguements. that doesnt mean your mother is being mistreated by brother..
My heart goes out to you, and I also feel moved to gently remind you that if you HAD arranged for SIL just so you could leave the house, THERE WAS NOTHING WRONG WITH THAT! Mom has no sense that you have real human needs, let alone a little respite from her care. She does not even realize how much care she needs. You and SIL need to not feel such depths of guilt that Mom is cranky and demented. You are providing care she needs and no, she is not going to be grateful on a daily basis, if ever, because whatever judgement or empathy she ever had are fading with her cognition. It is hard to accept but Mom just can't be in the driver's seat or call all the shots. Though you can be considerate of her feelings and preferences to the extent reasonably possible, she should not have the power to make you guilty over having a little time for yourself and your hubby; she should not be allowed to make you miserable, and your emotions need to be your emotions, not what she thinks they should be.
That steady stream of negativism and the fatigue and stress of daily caregiving without a letup can really do a number on your perspective. But you have your brain working for you and can change your perspective. Mom...well...she won't ever understand that so much, and probably never did understand, really. It took me a long time to feel any level of comfort with the idea that I would have to just make some decisions for my mom and they would not necessarily be what she wanted, because a lot of what she wanted was never going to be possible...hugs.
Life is hard at the best of times...and getting older is not the best of times I'm afraid. You have to think of your future, not theirs. That was their job and still is...
If she "makes too much" for Medicaid, you see an Eldercare attorney to set up a Miller Trust, also known as a pooled income trust.
Start working on this TODAY.
I don't understand why it is okay for your two brothers to do nothing. They didn't have to quit their jobs. Why is it only you that is without value? What would have happened if you'd simply said NO. Was it their idea that you move in with your mother?