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Have your husband read some of the stories on this site and see if he still thinks it's a good idea to bring her into your home. He may wake up and smell the coffee.
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No! He shouldn’t live with his mom. Nor should you. She can be cared for by a professional staff at a facility or an experienced qualified private caregiver at her home.
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I’ve been down this road and I will tell you how it played out for me.

Mother with granny flat in our yard. And key to our house. As her dementia worsened, she progressed from “visiting” 3-6 hours per day between 9am and 9pm, to demanding more attention, to demanding attention whenever she wanted, whether it was 2am, 6am, noon, dinner time, or whenever, until she demanded that I leave my husband and children to move in with her. She said we were to be together, 24/7, or else. She stopped eating and drinking unless I complied. I became her hostage. But she still talked a good game to anyone else. The moment she wrote a suicide letter, and made another attempt, I phoned EMS and she was taken away for an evaluation. That’s how I got her placed.

That is your husband’s future.

BTW, my mother is still very much alive at 97.
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My response (Marylu) was attributed to LaDeGo) No problem, but whoever LaDeGo might not like being associated with my brutal "solution"?
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LosingHopeHere: The absurdity of your DH (Dear Husband's) proposed solution to his "needy" mother is flawed from the get go. She doesn't get to decide this as she is already refusing to take medication to help herself, is paranoid and does not want to enter a managed care facility, i.e. anyone with that mindset cannot possibly be in charge of ideology. Dear Husband has not given much thought to Dear Wife; if perchance he had, he might ponder 'how will this idea affect my spouse?'
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How will she allow him to leave the house daily and go to his job?
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Theshrimp Dec 2022
Exactly
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Point out to your husband that he cannot provide 24/7 care indefinitely for the mother who by diagnosis cannot make safe competent decisions. Of course she is going to resist placement into a facility, but for her safety and long term care needs and the health of your husband, you and your marriage , this should be the next step unless the funding is there to pay for 24/7 in home care for her.
The husband should not be guilt tripped and coerced by incompetent mother .
Seek counseling for you both to support needed decisions.
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Maryjann Dec 2022
Yes. Counseling would help him and the marriage (if they can find a good counselor).
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Wow! Ask him what his expectations are for you and your marriage. It appears that she only wants him there and not you. Are you OK with that? This is straight out disrespectful and manipulation on his mother’s part. Talk to him about finding placement for her. This is hard work and I doubt if he can care for her full time and work. Time for counseling and maybe an Elder Attorney to get him to see the light.
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Without harshness it is time to give hubby an ultimatum.His first loyalty is to his wife. His mom had opportunity to have a man in her life and chose not to either by negleting her personal life or living under the delusion that her son owes her his life. (somewhere along the way she was either widowed , abandoned or never lived with his dad.) If my hubs moved in with his mom in our 30's I would have stayed behind (divorce material there). No way. My husband tried to have me move in with his mom and brother to save money. I told him he was not ready to marry so forget it. That was 29 years ago. He made 50 grand a year in 90's. We are still married and his 96 yr old mom lived with us for 10 months and was recently placed in memory care. She is 97 and still ticking. You never know how long she will live and who wants to hope she goes soon?
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She may have an undiagnosed mental health issue. Better for her to get evaluated and treated by her primary care doctor, a neurologist, and a geriatric psychiatrist.
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