I take care of my elderly parents w/o any help from my brother who doesn't want to be bothered. My mom doesn't want to hurt my brother's feelings, so she never gets mad at him or tells him he needs to help out. My mom has no issues yelling at me.
Anyone else in this same situation?
Not a great environment to grow up in.
Her last years weren't the best but we did what we could and she slipped away peacefully in her sleep.
Your Mom may not take your brother to task because she knows it would do no good. Why bother? Where would it get one, but more loss.
As to her yelling at you, how about you look her right in the eye and say "I know you are my Mom and I know you love me, and I know you know I love YOU, but let me tell you, human being to human being, it is NOT OK to yell at me. And when you do it I will withdraw from you for a while, for my own sake. Doesn't mean I don't love you. Just means I will give myself a break.
I think if you plan on your Mom joining you in anger at the bro? That's a waste of your time. You know the sitch and so does she, and it won't change. He is what he is.
It's a no win situation so don't bother trying. Your brother will always be the golden child to your parents..........the less he does, the more golden he shall be. Unfair and stupid as hell, but typical.
My dad, on the other hand, when he was alive, doted on me, and took me places, but left the boys at home.
My brother’s too busy doing things around the house (drinking alcohol & smoking cannabis) to help. He reeked of one or the other until I pointed it out. Now he smells like cheap drugstore cologne.
I bailed last month on all three until things change. I’m not holding my breath, except for the stench of pot or Old Spice.
Thanks, OP, for this. It’s an injustice to hardworking adult daughters. Should be a rallying cry for change.
Mothers and sons . . .best friends. Fathers and daughters . . best friends.
Something I've observed my whole life with other families. It seems to be an anomaly when a mother and daughter get along like BFF's . . or fathers and sons.
I'm pretty sure you're not alone with this situation. Hell, even my mom liked my husband more than me. Yeap. Only child/daughter here. My mom practically ignored me when both of us visited her. Still , not easy to take, is it. *sigh*
I know she loved me and we had a close relationship but I always saw how brother didn't have to do anything and he stole her heart. In fact all three of my brothers, the same thing.
It hurt sometimes but I just accepted it.
We're discussing homecare but she lost the paperwork that was left by our consultant back in February.
She's doing the weirdest things, she could've called the younger brother to fix her outside faucet but didn't. She said it was too rusty, no way he could've fixed it? He's in heating and plumbing!
So seeing everyone posting makes me feel better, too!
You might think about getting outside help so you can repair your relationship with your mother? I'm hoping less confrontation will let the mending begin. We love them but they don't understand that at a certain age roles reverse and want to continue to be the mom.
Love and luck to all!
She wanted a girl, but not for the right reasons. She wanted a Mini-Me. I was a living doll to dress up and show off. I wasn't ME, I was an extension of HER. I was never a tomboy but after awhile I was tired of the frilly dresses and bows. Tired of "Show [relative or friend] your dress! Twirl around!". That's when it went downhill. She saw I was not going to be what she expected and it made her crazy. My brother didn't get this pressure; being a boy, of course he wouldn't be like her.
I think some of "my mother hated girls" comes from the mom's own self loathing. My mom acts confident, but really has little self-confidence. She is all about appearances since she feels it's all she has to offer. In their daughters, they see everything they hate about themselves. Some moms are jealous of their daughter's youth or qualities the daughter has that Mom doesn't. Love is a competition to these mothers. If daughter becomes "daddy's little girl", they get angry that daughter gets so much attention and she doesn't. It's twisted.
Also, daughters are often raised to be helpless. I know I was. That we can't make it on our own. Boys are pushed out into the world and less afraid. Girls get taught early on how the world is dangerous and to watch how they dress, act, and so on. Boys, almost never. If a daughter is grown but has no family of her own, she's still considered part of her parents, like she's still a kid. Think of a wedding, when the pastor says “Who gives this woman in marriage?”. I’ve never heard “who gives this MAN in marriage?”. Boys become independent MEN as soon as they’re legal adults.
A friend of mine was born to older parents. They'd had two boys prior and she was an "Oops, I thought it was menopause!" baby. Her mother was narcissistic and smothering. From the time my friend was in high school, her mother would tell her, "Well, I guess you'll be the one taking care of us when we're old and gray." They already WERE old and gray! The boys could go as they pleased, and even told my friend they were glad they were boys, so they wouldn't have to take care of Mom. She'd tell my friend she couldn't make it on her own. What she really meant was "I can't make it on my own, so when I'm widowed you'll need to stay with me." Whaddaya know, friend said hell no and left.
Now it many years later and I take care of my Mom and our relationship totally changed for the better. Go figure...
There are still places in the world where they practice female infanticide! It is so bad in some small villages that there are no marriageable women! Sons are better in their minds, because the ones they marry bring in the "dowry", whereas a daughter will cost them when she marries as THEY have to pay the dowry!
That said, there are always other dynamics at play. Some people make lousy parents, treating some kids as golden child and ignoring or abusing the others. Some care as equally as possible for all their kids. Although it has been too long since dowries were used, women certainly were still considered second class. Long time to get the vote, probably still no equal pay, etc.
Unclear really what our mother thought (at this point she may not even know who my brothers are, since they don't visit.) I did get tired of hearing how my OB called EVERY Sunday (her emphasis, not mine!) Yet I would call a couple of times each week. Whatever. He isn't local, so he calls, sends cards, etc. Does he really care? Who knows. Last trip here was over 2 years ago and I sent him to visit one morning so I could get ready for us to go clean out her condo. He REFUSED to go again the whole time he was here, as he "didn't know what to do with her." This from someone who found out how much MC is and said for that kind of money, he'd take her in! YB was the one she generally called if she needed something done. Now? The only thing I had to ask was for him to take over transport to one treatment which is 4x/year (she won't stand/walk and I can't support her weight) - he tries to get out of it and BMCs about it. FOUR times/year and he's got more years to go before he can retire - by then mom will likely be gone and he's free and clear! She'll be 97 in a few weeks, who knows how long she has left, but likely not that long. Meanwhile, OB skates and I get to manage/juggle everything and do the visiting (b4 lockdown.)
I will say before they did lockdown, she had not asked about either of them in a long time. I wonder if she has forgotten them? She knew me, but now it has been several months... wondering if she'll know me (no way to communicate - no window facing out, she can't hear on a phone or tablet and recently they allow outside visits, but you have to stay 6+ ft away, so she won't be able to hear me!
Anyway, I do think it might be more common, esp among the oldest generation. But it doesn't apply in all cases - as noted, there are many factors that go into family dynamics, this just happens to be one that might be a little more common and certainly noticeable! However, the mindset can also be learned, so if someone grows up under that environment, they might raise their own kids that way too. It's only when we recognize those things we don't like and actively attempt to avoid doing that when raising our own! I have one girl, one boy. Treated pretty much the same, valued their differences and encouraged their strengths. Tried to instill values in them, rather than judgments!
She ended up with dementia and he took control of her finances and started to tell me how I was going to do everything. I told him he could just do it himself and stopped helping.
After that he took her to a lawyer, had her sign a unlimited DPOA that he had drafted and amended her trust to benefit himself 100%.
I found out 1 1/2 years later about this but in the meantime he I wouldn’t let my mom see or speak to myself or my sons. That was over 2 years ago. My mom will be 98 next month and I’ve been fighting to see her since.
So, my point is....if you are the one doing everything, make sure you are her medical and financial POA. My mom trusted him and he took complete advantage and we were close before all this. Control and greed really takes over in some people. Best wishes to you.
We have worked to break the cycle in our family.
But the result from MIL/FIL was favoring DH, BIL(not even their kid) and their one grandson over all of the females. MIL loved her granddaughters and at least acknowledged them. FIL only discusses our nephew when talking about his grands, and that is only to talk about how much $ he makes, sigh....
I remember a Monday morning that I called her (make sure she made it through the night since she was still asleep when I left). When she answered, she let me know that she needed an enema. I told her I was at work 30 minutes away and couldn't bring her one until later. I also asked her why she didn't tell me she needed one the night before.
That didn't go over well and it got to the point of her yelling at me, "If I get impacted, it's going to be your fault!! Then, how much time will you have to take off work to take me to the hospital?!"
I suggested that she call her son and ask him to get the enema for her since he was closer to home.
Her reply? "He can't do it. He needs to go to work."
Fortunately, I called my hubby, he got the enema, and set his mom straight that my job is important also.
MIL was from the generation that women did the caregiving. That got old since I was the only female in the house and she assumed I would do it all.
I'm trying hard to raise my three boys with different expectations for themselves and women.
We no longer have a relationship.....haven’t spoken in over 2 years and we are the only siblings.
My son & my husband told me he would do this but I didn’t believe them because we were close. How wrong I was!
"Life isn't fair" and we have all experienced our share of just how profound that statement is. When favoritism among siblings rears it's ugly head we can either ignore it, fight it, or accept it for what it is. My brother is useless when it comes to helping out, and has been a financial drain (not because of necessity) on my parents. BUT....rest assured, when all is said and done he will be first in line with his hand out to get his share of the estate. I've resolved to help my parents as best to my ability without compromising my own health and well being. I won't do more. They chose to put my brother's selfish wants ahead of being fair to their daughters. I will never put my kids through the pain of thinking for one second that I played favorites.
I did as much for her as I felt was reasonable, hired a helper here & there - whom she would then fire. Then I told her I was hiring someone to take care of certain things and, that if she fired this person, these things would not be done. I had to lay down the law. You have to draw boundaries.
Things are changing these days but I was born into the old order; as the only girl, it was not fun.
The difference how the females were treated compared to the males was totally different, we were indeed second class citizens. I found it disturbing to grow up to see my brothers given more attention, more things and monetary help whenever needed, but I was not afforded the same luxury and was taught to never expect it.
After my father and both brothers passed away my mother never really recovered that all of her men were dead and believed her life was over. I took care of her until her dementia required placement in a home.
I taught my two sons to know otherwise, but even they believe (thanks to their father and a family line of narcissistic men) that women do not deserve the same respect that men deserve. And so it goes on...