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My dad is experiencing a lot of anguish and stress because he is seeing consequences of his actions (and lack thereof) around his affairs for years (especially financially). I can see the stress weighing on him and can tell that he is getting sicker all the time, and he isn't enjoying his life because of the grief he's experiencing, not only because of the mess he's in but also because he behaved like an ostrich about it for so many years. I am helping him sort things out as best I can, but they're enormous and far-reaching problems that may or may not be resolved before he dies.


I feel angry, frustrated, and sad both for him and for myself. His actions have had rippled effects on me and other family members that have been significant. AND, he's a good guy at heart who made some big mistakes.


My first tendency is to smooth things over and reassure him he doesn't need to be upset because we're dealing with it, but I sometimes don't think that's really the best approach. #1 because it's important to let him feel what he feels but it's also really affecting my wellbeing as his primary co-caregiver, and I don't think I should have to hide that.


Would love to know how others have dealt with your parents' harmful mistakes and/or actions as they near the end of their lives. How do I lovingly hold him to account and help him enjoy the rest of the time he has left, when the reality is he's caused a lot of hurt and strife?

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What effects on your wellbeing are the consequences of your father's decisions and actions currently having?

What could he do about it?

What can you do about it?
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I would consider the personality, the ease of communication and expectations.

Can you be honest? Tell him you see his anguish, you both know he’s hurt himself and others, and you’d like to understand why he made the choices he made. If he made selfish choices, what was in his past that bred selfishness? Maybe it’s an opportunity to become wiser.

Or if dad’s just having a pity party, and wants you to attend, why bother?
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Kitchen, I think that -- since it sounds like these mistakes can never be resolved or improved on -- there isn't any benefit in letting him 'feel what he feels' and especially at any expense to you. From the limited information here, I think there is a psychological and possibly biological reason for your dad's mental condition and behaviors. Rumination was mentioned; there are other things, too, that will only progress with age/dementia, like obsessive behaviors. Rumination mental processes and OCD behaviors are different but share some common themes. Whatever the reason, treating the symptoms here seems to me the best option. What good place could it go to if this continues and your dad suffers and you suffer, too? I think you should screen for underlying reasons (dementia, mental conditions) for this, if you can, before attributing it as being due to his behavior in the past. And either way, I think the best thing to do for everyone is to treat the symptoms.
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Accountability isn't something that can be elicited. What you really need to decide, kitchenwitch, is whether or not you can forgive your father for what he's done and for the consequences that you and others are having to continue to pay on his behalf as a result. That will help determine how you proceed.

In my case, honestly, the answer that I came to just this morning is, No. What my parents have done and the consequences I have had to pay as a result for them is not forgivable. They weren't simply errors or misguided judgments: they were decades-long strings of poor decisions and lack of decisions founded in denial, neglect, and the shirking of parental and personal responsibility. Their actions and lack of action not only left my sibling and me with permanent disabilities that have hampered the course of our lives: their denial and neglect have resulted in me having to make decisions no one should ever have to make for someone else, including having to set in motion circumstances that will ultimately result in a horrible fate for my sibling.

Knowing I was not responsible for the situation or that there was nothing I could do to change it honestly doesn't help make it any easier to deal with. My parents spent decades avoiding a situation (despite my begging), and now *I* will have to live with what happens next for the rest of my days. 

I'm going to make some therapist rich for years to come once I find one, that's for sure. My mental and physical health have been destroyed.

Like you, I've struggled with anger, frustration, and sadness, and the desire for my father to acknowledge the truth, extent, and ramifications of my parents' mistakes. (My mother is deceased.) But he hasn't. He never will. He has dementia now, but there'd be no accountability even if he didn't.

Santalynn noted that "You work with what you have in front of you; some things will be adequate, some things will just be 'cut your losses'." After many months of struggling, I've come to realize the things I have to work with are inadequate. All I can do to save what's left of my self (and my husband and my marriage) is to cut my losses and walk away.

That decision, too, I will have to face until the end of my days. I don't want to cause anyone any more suffering, not even my father. But some actions and hurts cannot be transcended. When a hurt is so large that continuing to be involved with someone translates, in effect, to you allowing your wounds to be reopened again and again and again, that's voluntary torture. The better path for reacting to that kind of situation is to avoid it in the first place.

Forgiveness is a wonderful and noble ideal IF whatever has been done is something actually forgivable. Only you can decide whether it is. But scary as it is, sometimes there is no way to move on except to actually move on.
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Davenport Jan 2022
Your story touched me, and also resonated with my own experience. Thanks for sharing.
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I think this comes under the heading of "rumination"--replaying the past and wringing one's hands over it.


There are antidepressants that specifically target rumination. I would talk to a geriatric psychiatrist about this.
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This is all my Dad wants to talk about...his mistakes. I cannot change his past.
His family suffered( mom, sibling and myself.) and he didn't really seem to care.
I told him he might like to contact one of the pastors, ministers or priests that come to the ALF to care for the spiritual needs of the residents. Anyone but me. I can't carry this stuff anymore. I have also learned to shrug and say oh well.
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MargaretMcKen Jan 2022
This is just another version of ‘all that matters is me, me, me’. My dreadful father was one step worse – he wanted to gloat over his old misdeeds. He hated my mother (a feeling that was justifiably reciprocated), and when she died he faxed me an illustration of a soul in torment in the flames of hell, entitled ‘Revenge Pursued Beyond the Grave’. When I did the final trip to see him 6 years later, he proudly showed me the original. I said ‘But why did you send it to ME?’. He looked at me as if I was nuts and said ‘Well I should think that’s obvious’. No, he wasn’t mad.

I think that some of the ‘nobody’s perfect’ ‘forgivers’ have limited experience with what they’re suggesting.
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You keep referring to his mistakes, and without full disclosures of the mistakes, it is hard to really answer you. Whatever has been done, has been done. Sorrowfully, we all must reap what we sow and that includes pop. Continue to hold your head up high and gracefully!
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kitchenwitch: For all intents and purposes, since you stated that the issues " may or may not be resolved before he dies," why are you trying to "hold him to account?" Ergo, if perhaps nothing can be done about it BEFORE he passes away, then what really is your motive? A piece of the puzzle appears to be lacking.
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kitchenwitch Jan 2022
Yeah I'm not really going to engage with a confrontational, suspicious reply like this.
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We all have made terrible mistakes, me included, and I suffer because of them but I can't undo what is done. I can't forgive myself and therefore how could someone else do so? I feel sorry, deeply sad, and knowing I did some mean things, that is the price I have to pay and that is just a fact of life. Just listen and let him talk - let him say what helps him and don't interfere. Just be patient and comforting. You can't undo what he did - none of us can.
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Ask him to leave a statement about his perceived failures, and how, now that he realizes the extent of his mistakes, could he have done better if he had a last chance. Many could benefit from reading this type of information. By attempting to help those who follow with an unselfish act like sharing his knowledge, what he missed doing might help many to avoid repeating the same mistakes. Crying over spilled water don’t quite cut it, helping if only one person, leads to peace and enlightenment. God Bless and Inspire his life.
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This thread is a bit like the ‘forgiveness’ differences of opinion. Perhaps some people are better at it than others, or perhaps there’s less to forgive. Perhaps it might be possible to say ‘it’s all in the past’, but perhaps it’s not in the past - the person is clearly just as much at fault as before.

It’s not easy to reconcile “I feel angry, frustrated, and sad both for him and for myself” with “how do I lovingly hold him to account”. In some cases you can’t “hold him to account”. The damage is done, he won’t hold himself to account, and you and others are still picking up the pieces, fall-out from the damage may still be continuing. “Lovingly” is more like reassurance for yourself, where you are judging your own behavior instead of his.

With my dreadful father, I did more than my sisters – traveling 12,000 miles to see him before he died. He hadn’t changed. I doubt if he regretted anything he’d done. This was the best I could do in the circumstances, but it certainly wasn’t lovingly.

Look after yourself and the people who depend on you, and walk away. Leave the whole mess to God.
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Your Dad sounds like my mom she’s done the same. She’s 90 years old has a very bad case of dementia. The damage she has cause for many years no family member wants to have anything to do with her. She doesn’t want to remember the past because she was a terrible parent. I have her going into Memory care it’s very hard trying to deal with her she has so much anger and she’s very hateful and mean. It’s the end of life for her and she thinks everyone needs to cater to her, not going to happen. Parents Will reap what they sow.
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You need to FORGIVE his mistakes!!! If he is nearing death ...then it is even more important now than ever before!!!

Have you ever made a mistake? No one is perfect. Please help him now when he needs you!
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kitchenwitch Jan 2022
I'm not sure what in my post made you think I'm not helping him.
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I’m dealing with the same thing. Although there’s no one whom he harmed alive to apologize to.

I told him what’s done is done and now he needs to acknowledge his wrongs, forgive himself and do better.
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People don't need to be reminded of Mistakes . if he is on his Last legs have compassion . My Mom got to a Point she didnt pay any Bills - my Doctor and social worker said " Do you think she is dying because this is what dying people do ? " I had never dealt with a elderly person before . You don't want them giving every charity money or having someone rip them off but when people are sick they are vulnerable and the vultures appear . I would Just say " hey dad that's the past - lets get on with today - Live in the Moment . " because you never really Know how much more time they have left . No Point in crying over spilled milk .
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Both of you get to have your legitimate feelings; and both of you (all of you) must get on with it as is (sorry, I've been watching old 'Supernanny' videos on Youtube, lol...she's caring, wise, and practical!) It's OK for dad to know you and your family have some difficult feelings about the 'what is' and likely dad knows, which adds to his stress/sorrow, but it's now time to 'get on with it' and deal in the Now. We can all get bogged down in 'beating ourselves up' over 'woulda, coulda, shoulda' but it's unproductive when a new path must be made. That was then, this is now. You work with what you have in front of you; some things will be adequate, some things will just be 'cut your losses'. Sorry for these cliches, but 'that was then, this is Now' helps to be creative with what's on the table now. Regret, looking back, is a human habit but robs one of energy needed for current needs/goals; try to help everyone respond as if you've just come upon the current situation, as if you know nothing about how you got there, since in a way it's sort of like a 'emergency' you come upon where you have to briskly asses the absolute needs, and simply take remedial action. Forgiveness all around will help everyone move forward. All the best.
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kitchenwitch Jan 2022
I think this is really wise, thank you.
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Being an adult means taking responsibilities for one's actions. Goes way back to childhood in the homes with parents who raised that child. Fast forward: what happened in the past is history, but now move forward with the best peace and comfort.
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I'm writing a book that I started while caring for my Dad. Same thing. I did something called, "Ten things I love about you". Ask him to do the same. Tell him that life is about learning, and if you boil it down, we all fall short. God doesn't keep a talley. If we trust Him, He only sees us through what we can be.

My Dad had a father that was very violent. Bad relationship there. I read a book called "The Blessing". Everyone needs the blessing from their parents. If you knew your grandparents, do what I did. I told daddy that maybe he didn't know it, but Grandpa used to tell people how proud he was of my Dad, thus, even from the grave, giving the blessing to my Dad.
It all comes down to that. Living in the past and not letting it go. Help him let it go, and live for today. If you and h im have a good relationship, tell your dad that as long as you are with him, you want to get to know him. Give him validation that way, instead of sounding like you're trying to appease him. I pray this helps. It helped me.

Tell your dad that because you love him so much, you want to get to know the real him. Find a day to start fresh. Make it about NOW.
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kitchenwitch Jan 2022
I think "make it about now" is great advice, thanks Ella.
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It's obvious he is full of contriteness, and very aware of the mess he has made. Everything you do for him now will benefit both of you in the long run, including emotionally. One thing I would suggest is to use the services of a good elder care attorney who can guide you to have all documents in place, DPOA, Healthcare Proxy, Will/Trust etc and also take the proper steps to ensure his medical care (ex. Medicaid) down the line when he needs it. Many blessings for your compassion.
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AngieGuido74 Jan 2022
any way you can get help by a professional, to sort out the financial mess. also don't forget you need a day off to. Men can be stubborn bc they don't like to admit their mistakes, esp to their children (I know from experience with my dad) get some help for yourself and hopefully it will also work out with your dad too. Bless you
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It is ok to agree that he has made serious mistakes and needs to make whatever amends are possible. It sounds like he is asking for your forgiveness. If there is anything he has done right, and you say he is a good man, those things might go into the balance. If you are able to forgive him, tell him so. You can be honest; it there are remaining wounds or problems, you don't have to deny them. But leave a little room to reach some understanding. When my father was dying I asked him if there was anything he wished to discuss. He amazed me by apologizing for some very serious misbehavior towards me which he had never been able to discuss. He said he was crazy, and he was, but did not consider that an excuse, it wasn't really, but it was a true explanation. I was in the business, very crazy people can exist without harming others with bad behavior. Sadly, many can not. For me, the final admission was a healing moment. We were on much better terms until his death. It did not remove the harm that had been done, or the consequences, but it was good for both of us to air it and settle it as best we could. Believe me, that peace will be as good or better for you than him. You need some good things about a person who is part of you to hold onto, if possible. You don't have to pretend the other things don't exist.
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kitchenwitch Jan 2022
Thanks so much for sharing this. In my case, he is not asking for forgiveness whatsoever. But I like the idea of asking explicitly, thank you.
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This is a road I traveled with my mother who is now passed. I will say this to you: How you deal with this problem that has also effected you and your family will determine how you come out of this episode in your life forever. This could affect your health and well-being if the stress isn’t handled. If need be, bring in a Cavalry of professionals to help him to cope. It will help everyone. I developed some life-threatening conditions because of the stress of caring for my mother for 10 years - and much of it had to do with her finances. Eventually she had to go on hospice and they were wonderful in helping her deal with things that I could not help with - just because she wouldn’t listen to me. Please reach out for help for you and your family because this is a biggie and your dad’s peace of mind affects you all. Make it more about you than him, or you will pay with your health.
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First off.
We all make mistakes. Yes all... No one is perfect. Yes you and others feel hurt. But God has forgiven all of us when we ask and pray for that forgiveness. Let God sort it out...
Carrying anger, bitterness and resentment will only hurt you in the long run.
If he's of sound mind, gently tell him you feel hurt, but forgive him.
You will sleep better when that Cortisol stress hormone is not counting through your brain.
We never can change others. Never. We can only change our response to the behaviors. I have had to do this time and time again for 40 years of marriage and 60 years with my father.
Is it hard? Yes. But as time has gone on, I have seen that those mistakes or bad decisions made me the strong independent and forgiving person I try to be .
Blessings to you. Life here is very short compared to eternity. Perhaps call a nearby pastor to talk, or get some godly counsel.
All the best,
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No question that he’s miserable. But! His manipulative behavior has ruled his life and that of those who love him.

It’s not too late to get some balance in that relationship. You can discourage manipulative behavior by either.giving no response or by retreating from the conversation even if it’s momentarily. Respond with warmth and interest when he starts to let go of his manipulation.

At some point he’s gonna have a temper tantrum. He’ll become openly demanding. Successful reasoning with him is as unlikely as achieving reason with a screaming two-year old. Just continue by not reinforcing bad behavior and responding with warmth to improvements in how he treats you.

You have my loving support. You can do this!
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Lulu61 Jan 2022
Hmm. I didn't read that he was manipulative with a bad temper. I read that he was a good man who made financial mistakes that have come home to roost now that he's in his last days/months. ??
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The best you can do is to help him with whatever options are available going forward.
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Save yourself first !!! This needs to be a daily mantra.
Be honest about the stress this is causing you. You cannot sacrifice your life, which will directly impact those your love as well. This will not correct his past.

You could ask him if he wants to genuinely make amends and how does he think he can, do not solve this for him, he is not a child, he is an adult who made choices.

Try to stay in the present. yes you brought this situation upon yourself, you cannot change the past. How do you want to move forward, for here, because this is all we can do.
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You said he’s good hearted but made some mistakes financially and that he’s emotionally suffering over it- I don’t understand why you ask if you should help him feel better, maybe I misunderstood (?) I would hope you would automatically want to help him feel better, he’s already suffering it’s not as if he committed a malicious crime against someone, if he was a predator or awful person that’s different, but you describe him as good hearted and made mistake so of course I don’t see why you ask if you should help him feel better
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kitchenwitch Jan 2022
I guess you're a kinder person than me. I hope you never have to go through what my family and I are going through.
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So many Q&As to this dilemma.
first we’ve all made stupid mistakes in our lives. Mistakes that have caused rippling effects on those around us. Mistakes or not, we all need grace and forgiveness for our indiscretions.
While grace may be given it does not take away from the fact that the consequences still remain. In that, your are doing an awesome job in still loving and caring for your dad.
I would ask, do you have a Durable Power of Attorney? If so, then exercise it to the fullest. Sell what ever needs to be sold, including his home if necessary. Liquidate all you can of his to clear up the matters. Don’t drag this out. BUT, don’t have him move in with you. Only offload the house if he has a care facility to go to. If he has no assets then you made need to have him made a ward of the state. This will be a tough decision and the consequences of that may also be ugly because the state doesn’t usually place folks in quality centers.
Has your father been officially diagnosed with dementia? If so, then likely he won’t be able to grant you a Health Care POA or the Durable POA.
I would speak with an elder care attorney and get some wise counsel on what your options are.
God bless you for your kindness to your dad. Do your best to show that in the midst of this turmoil.
The greatest gift of all is love.
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kitchenwitch Jan 2022
Thank you for recognizing the kindness that all of this requires. I appreciate your reply.
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I hear you kitchenwitch xxxx and deckaidit’s so hard to move on and be full of love when you’ve been hurt.
all we can do is listen, and not stick the knife in. I have a testing relationship with my mum, when it’s good is great, when it’s bad and she’s full on narcissistic I want to move to the other side of the world. She’s 82 I’m 49. It’s been like it for years. I’m in therapy. I know your situ is completely different but it’s a similar root in how we cope with repeated behaviours that hurt us.
at this stage I just take the good days, take a walk away from it when it feels hurty and listen and be with mum and dad when it’s good. It’s so important to let him feel what he feels but equally you want to voice too. That’s when a third party can help for you to voice. Have you tried just listening to him without saying anything, He knows he’s ballsed up and like you say he’s a good guy at heart. That’s what I remind myself with mum and with dad when he’s being an arse too. Mum was on a cow last night when I stayed over to help with dads care, Told me I love you this morning. I didn’t know what to say, so I said nothing, but see you later after work now I feel heartless but to be honest I just didn’t know what to say, so I didn’t say anything, I don’t know if it’s right or wrong, but it felt better than bull or shouting xxxx
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kitchenwitch Jan 2022
Thanks so much for sharing Moxy.
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Kitchenwitch, one more thing: All these people who can wipe their feelings away, who say to forgive and be happy, who say you should just enjoy your time with him... they're bats**t crazy.

When someone does wrong and it hurts you I say it's okay to be pissed. When those wrongs ricochet threw the years and hurt you over and over again it's fine to be pissed off again.

Today I learned of another stupid thing my dad did. He changed his Medicare/Medicaid during open season. Tenth time in four years. Now I'll have to untangle his mess again, maybe pay another doctor out of pocket again. Why? Because he's trying to get Medicare money back so he can buy stocks and get rich. He said, "I'm going to invest in COVID stocks. They're going to hit big." Christ almighty. He doesn't get money back when he's on Medicaid.

Feel free to feel pissed. It's either that or fratricide.
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jolobo Jan 2022
Sounds similar to my dad. Does what he wants regardless of any consequences and with no regard for reality. He thinks he's always the boss and can have it his way because he said so. So maddening.
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When I went to a lawyer to handle Moms house I said I hope I had done everything right up till then. He said if I hadn't, no matter, we are starting from today.

Tell Dad you are glad he sees how his actions effect everyone else. But nothing he can do about the past. But, you are there to straighten out what u can for the future.

Maybe he needs to talk to a therapist.
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