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"do I take her up on that offer to not go by anymore? And do I make her a doctor's appointment? She needs an antidepressent at the very least. I can call the doctor ahead of time with my concerns. ... "

STOP ALL THIS.

1. Call Adult Protective Services:

https://www.cdss.ca.gov/inforesources/adult-protective-services

2. You cannot manage / handle this 'crazy-making'.

3. You are being a 'co-(dependent) is not healthy for anyone involved in this family dynamic.

4. While it is fine writing all this to us, you need to discuss all these feelings in a therapy office. You need emotional and psychological professional support.

5. You are either a POA or you are not.

That you ask us if you should make an MD appt ... reflects your inability to manage all these needs. Report to APS and let them take over. You get into therapy.

And, yes. I would agree. Do not visit. You are not able to set boundaries of your time and abilities; you are allowing yourself to be verbally/emotionally abused, as it appears your father is (too). Do not make this your problem. Get professional support.

Gena / Touch Matters
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Scampie1 Aug 2023
"And, yes. I would agree. Do not visit. You are not able to set boundaries of your time and abilities; you are allowing yourself to be verbally/emotionally abused, as it appears your father is (too). Do not make this your problem. Get professional support."

Someone gave me similar advice year's ago. I was temping at an agency that were advocates for the mentally disabled. The advocate asked me one question: Why do you need to become a guardian when your sister is an adult. My sister was appointed an advocate and an attorney.

I agree with everyone else; there comes a time when you need to step back.
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Walk away or try to figure out ways to help them. It isn't that easy. I thin if you walk away you might end up feeling that guilt of walking away and not helping them. The reason I say that is because of what you wrote in dealing with the situation you described. Logic vs emotions - you know what 'should' be but the feelings go contrary, in spite the verbal abuse. I know because my mother was extremely stubborn, narcisstic, verbally abusive. No amount of kindness would have changed her - and believe me, I tried - I tried to my own detriment.

Try to figure out ways to help - i.e., make doc appointments, try to hire someone to help - it didn't go well for me. My mother refused any help except mine - even though I would pay for the help - she didn't want a single stranger in her home - the few times I did get someone there, mother would sit there and not say a word for entire 3 hours of the shift. Ended up not even letting the caretaker in.

Your mother's only contact is your father - and because there doesn't seem to be anyone else in their lives, they only have each other to keep each other company and talk to. The bitterness that is spilling over from your mother is probably due to her anger, frustrations and of course, physical pain- all that she knows will not be alleviated, although she thinks some of it might be upon your father's passing - but she will find that nothing about her will change. Too ingrained. Too stuck.

My mother refused to listen to me, my suggestions, my observations. I told her that the way things were going, she was going to fall, break something and then the doctors wouldn't let her go back home and she would have to, at that point, go to assisted living. She didn't believe me. Fought me. At 95 she fell, broke her femur, had major surgery, and passed away 3 months later. Never went back home after her fall. Reason I share this is because for some people, it takes something outside themselves (i.e., fall) to have their lives changed.

Perhaps contact APS as the first step. Let someone else - not you - make the decisions for them, or unfortunately, something else might happen, so that then you are not the 'evil' daughter who forced them out of their home. And please know, given your mother's disposition, no matter where she is placed, she sounds like she will never be happy with anything or anybody. So, at least accept that for your own peace of mind. It got to the point with my mother I had to totally disengage my emotions and feelings when I had to deal with her, help her, interact with her - otherwise I would have been an emotional wreak.
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Make her an appointment. Try to get her evaluated and treated by the doctor. It seems like neither of your parents should be living alone or without outside help. The help could be as simple as placing them both into a residential care facility through the medical care system.
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My parents are a couple of years younger than yours, but the situation is quite similar. My dad has dementia, my mom is his caretaker. He is slowly and steadily losing abilities. She has balance and mobility issues on top of some emotional problems. She hasn't seen a dr. in at least 30 years. I am trying to balance being supportive in ways that are accepted and helpful without driving myself nuts. I have made offers and suggestions that she could get medical help, join support groups, go to therapy, have aides come in, but she refuses all this. I have interviewed aides and brought them over, but she rejects them all or fires them after brief periods (one day, two weeks, etc.) She did accept a weekly cleaning service at least. I visited several adult daycares for my dad, these were also rejected. I have visited assisted living and continuum of care places. I do take my dad to all his medical appointments. And I do take my mom out to lunch every couple of weeks and try to remind myself that listening to her woes and expressing sympathy is part of the way I can help. I also help with stuff around the house, which she is interested in. It's hard to watch. But as someone else said below, it's harder to live it. I get that. For a few years I saw the situation as something I needed to solve, like it was my job was to convince her of what to do. Some of that I did and I'm glad. Like getting them to write their wills and give me health care proxy and DPOA. And getting him diagnosed, so he now at least gets meds that help with behavioral symptoms. She was in denial for a couple of years.

Now I'm realizing that there is a difference between what would make my life easier and my mind more at rest, and how she sees it. Maybe for her, waiting to fall and break something is the best plan? Once that happens, it's out of her hands and I will have to make all the decisions for both of them about where they live. I did convince her to let a visiting nurse come in briefly each day when I go out of the country for a week. I told her it was for my peace of mind and she says she agrees.
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