I've been the family caregiver my whole life. Told to take care of younger siblings. Then my parents divorced, and I tried to provide financial and emotional support to both parents. Then my mom got cancer and I took her to all her appointments. Then my grandmother needed help, too. Then my father had a stroke, and I also managed all his care and his home. It's been almost 6 years since he passed, and I still feel angry and resentful with my siblings.
My sisters don't show me any respect, care, or consideration. Made to feel like the family scapegoat. I tried so hard to be selfless and it has meant nothing.
Is it hopeless? Should I live with this estrangement and indifference?
Did you get a bigger percentage of the inheritances because of your selflessness? Did you get anything material from the deaths that was coveted by others? If so, then yes, you are going to have to live with the estrangement and indifference unless you are willing to give up whatever it is that they are asking for, however, there are no guarantees.
However, I don't know the full story. I don't know the personalities of the people involved. I am not a professional therapist.
My suggestion to be to go to a therapist and have them help you navigate these waters. 6 years is a long time. Its time to decide what to keep, what to let go and carve a future that you can be proud of.
You can send yourself a beautiful thank you card for giving care to your Dad.
Get elaborate, set it on your mantle, sign it anonymous?
Dad would have wanted you to be thanked!
Next time you are standing in the bathroom facing the mirror.
Turn around, give yourself a thank you hug, look over your shoulder to see yourself getting that hug!
Buy yourself some flowers, once a month until you feel more appreciated.
Thats it. They won't ever feel the way you do. Wasted energy trying to get the words you long for from them. They will never thank you or pat you on the back. Never. So get on with your life. They are getting on with theirs. And don't call them. Let them call you, if indeed they will. And if they don't, well, you know. So, carry on. Stay strong. Live well.
Your anger and resentment is hurting you, not them. Life is short....start living yours!
“But payback will come. Rest assure that payback will come.”
Music to my ears.
Sincerely yours,
Hello Karma
I hear you. I’m caregiver to my dad who’s 86. I had no choice when it came to looking after him in our home(my husband and my home) my brother doesn’t want me to accept money from my dad to pay for his board and lodging. It’s got to the stage when I see his name came up on my phone. He is Dads POA.
I cringe and think what now? My brother, it’s never to see how I’m going, it’s usually if he wants something, My sister who I’m pretty close to, genuinely loves me, well she’s got two kids in high school, so I don’t expect her to be able to help too much but her phone calls are a blessing and pleasure for me. When I first stepped up to be caregiver, my brother was initially worried for me about looking after him because I’d been pretty much under his thumb before I got married and was out of his house. My dad, prior to getting dementia, was a domineering control freak. With dementia, he’s still pretty difficult and a compulsive whinger. It’s not an easy job.
But I think you need to make time for you now. Enjoy your life and involve yourself in things that you love and enjoy. Do you have any creative skills or hobbies? Focus any energy on these things and away from selfish siblings who don’t deserve your precious time. I am currently studying a different language and when I’m stressed out, I also play the piano.
Look it’s not hopeless. One day these siblings may need someone to care for them, just make damn sure that’s it’s not you.
Good luck and God Bless.
You've been married for 5 years, and your father has been living with you for almost 2 years. You wrote that your H only tolerates your father. What's going to happen as your father further deteriorates? Your H might not stick around.
As far as your sister, why does her having 2 high schoolers mean she can't do anything? Why don't you give reasons that YOU can't do anything for your father?
You wrote that you hope it ends soon. Your situation could end soon if you would do something about it. Why don't you?
Most people would be upset at being invited to the ceremony only and not the reception.
I wish you peace and much love moving forward. Seek out professional help if you need to but be well and don’t let them win! You are the winner here!
Some people have never been in the presence of a narcissist.
Lighten up posters. Don't make CDN sorry that she came here for support.
Could it be that her comments have made some who are siblings uncomfortable?
None of us need to be taking sides on which sibling did what to whom.
Maybe her sibs are the ones with the problems cause they need to feel superior so they made Cdnreader a scapegoat. Maybe they should examine themselves.
Theres no excuse for treating someone bad whether she chose to take on the responsibility or not.
Its never acceptable behavior. Whether someone has self esteem problems or not.
1. If you consider that feelings for others (your sisters) only hurts YOU, you will change how you internalize these feelings. I learned that FORGIVENESS is for the person forgiving; it is a process of healing by letting go. It matters little what the other (sisters) say / respond.
2. While you learn to heal yourself, you equally need to do some deep inner work on yourself: learn how to set boundaries, love yourself, and tell others how you feel. If you continue to do, do, do, nothing will change.
3. I would suggest that after you do some inner healing on / for yourself, that you consider a 'family meeting' and tell your sisters how you feel, giving "I" messages. I feel xxx since I took on xxx (responsibility) and xxx (i.e., no one stepped up in the family to help with these needs). It is important to NOT address your feelings with YOU YOU YOU (did / didn't) as this will set up a defensive communication / exchange and they will shut down.
4a. I believe key for you is to learn how you want respect and except nothing less. If someone (anyone) communicates with you in a way that doesn't feel respectful, bring it up soon after (consider what happened/process your feelings, then discuss when you are not activated (emotional).
'WE TEACH OTHERS HOW TO TREAT US" (notwithstanding dementia / mental illness in others).
4b. I'd say that the objective of sharing how you feel 'now' (or when you might have this family meeting) is to share how you feel and not blame. What happened in the past is done; what remains is your resentment about it and how you let it go, and learn self-love, self-respect and what that means to you and how you interact / communicate with others, including your sisters.
I hope some of this makes sense. It isn't easy or quick as this is changing how you likely have felt about yourself for your entire life. You want to feel inner peace. Letting go through a healing process will help. This doesn't mean you accept as "okay" their behavior / past decisions / not helping. Self healing is so you will feel better about you. If the sisters do not provide you the respect you feel you deserve / want, then it is up to you to change accordingly. This might result in you realizing / letting go of the relationships as they have been 'all your life.' You want people in your life who respect you, family or not. Gena.
It takes time to get over your justified anger. I found a therapist to help me heal from it.
I decided on no contact forever. This sibling has no conscience & I don't/won't trust someone like that. That's helped a lot to move on from it.
Best of luck to you!
I understand perfectly how you feel. I didn't have as much as a time as you did since I only looked out for my mom. But my siblings didn't help much thats for sure. I was always looking out for my mom from the time my dad died when I was four and throughout my mom's life.
For instance when my older brother defaulted on a loan my mom had cosigned for him. This was when I was about 18 yrs. old. I found my mom crying in her room one day cause she had to pay his loan and had no money for groceries or bill payments that mth. I had four older siblings at the time. I told my mom no problem, I'd give her the money. No one else stepped up to offer and one sister even gave me grief cause I slept in the day my mom went to the bank. Mom got the money no problem but my one sister still glared at me cause I'd slept in that day. Even when she could have helped out but didn't.
Fast forward to my mom's declining years. Same thing. I did most everything but got criticized on how I did it from sibs. The gall when you think about it. Standing on the sidelines watching someone knock themselves out and criticize instead of pitching in. Or visiting mom, seeing that things look bad and instead of stepping up, phoning me to do something and then tell me how I didn't do it right afterward. When my mom died we wouldn't have even had a ceremony to say good bye if I had not arranged it. It was like herding cattle, but harder.
I've never been respected by my sibs. I know I never will. I've learned to not expect it. Once you learn to have no expectations from your sibs you'll learn not to care anymore. One other thing changed along the way. I lost all respect for them too. I don't look up to them, don't care what they think of me anymore and that's that.
Forget about them. Instead be proud of yourself and all you've done.
verrry good point.
there’s a natural tendency to look up to our older siblings, even admire them.
i’m the youngest also.
like you, gershun:
i’ve lost all respect for them, too.
I used to say things to myself like your replies written here to suggestions with, "I'll try," or "I know I need to..."
All my life I was a very submissive person and found it difficult to stand up for myself (as if everyone else had a right to be in front of me). Then I changed my language from submissive/passive to the active/affirmative.
Listen now what that sounds like: not "I'll try", but "I will do it." Not "I know I need to" (which always gives yourself permission to never do it) but change it to "I start Monday" to do this or that.
This is not a criticism of you. I recognized myself in your answers to recommendations people have given you. To begin a change in your life, change how you speak to yourself and how you respond to others. Say "YES!" not "I know I should..." and you'll feel stronger and more empowered. You are stronger than you give yourself credit for!
From your words, I can tell you did this for the same reason I did: to help; because you thought it was the right thing to do. And you know what? You SHOULD be acknowledged for this. I'm sure you didn't enjoy giving up your wants, your life, anymore than I do, but you felt like it was the right thing to do for the people you cared about. Kudos.
As far as your siblings, I DO go to a therapist. I go because my husband died from a mental illness and I also see a therapist who specializes in grief. They both agreed with me when I said I want nothing to do with my siblings after this. It's very painful to give up the HOPE of having a loving family, but they've never been there for me; why should I think that they would be in the future? I'd get more response from putting a head of cabbage on the countertop and asking for love and affection and support from it. At least the cabbage wouldn't spit back at me and tell me I like being a victim, am co-dependent, am borderline, am whatever they look up in the next google search, it's all my fault and whatever else they need to say to make themselves feel better about doing NOTHING.
I wish that going forward, you will find more self-love (I also wish this for myself) and that you can find more caring and supportive people in your life who will appreciate you for your kind and giving heart. Give yourself a big pat on the back for being a kind and caring person; I'm also giving you one. You can if this is over now, or when it is over, go out into the world with a clean conscience. You can go out into the world and be free to create whatever life you want and surround yourself with people who will appreciate you instead of abuse and use you. <3
Move on. Just like you, they were not obligated to help. You decided to. Your siblings may not show you respect because you're not showing respect for yourself and it sounds like you enjoy the martyrdom.
You tried hard to be selfless, but for whose benefit? Sounds like you wanted to play a role of being a selfless person, but then expected something in return. That's not a selfless person. That's a person who decided to do something, expecting something in return, when no one asked you to.
I'd recommend therapy. Your siblings may be selfish, self-centered and/or uncaring about your family members, but maybe they had a different experience with them than you.
Your bitterness towards them is holding you back.
hugs to you!! i strongly disagree with you, but we can agree to disagree. however, i must express my disagreement.
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you wrote to OP:
"You made the decision to be that caregiver."
as many, many people have pointed out throughout the history of humankind, NOT all decisions are really decisions/choices.
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if no one steps up to help your LO, you're the last remaining option: you then have a choice to also not step up, or to step up.
NO ONE CHOOSES TO BE TAKEN ADVANTAGE OF, TO BE EXPLOITED, TO BE THE ONLYYYYY CAREGIVER. NO ONE wants THAT.
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no one wakes up one day and thinks, "geeeee, i would realllly love to be the ONLY family member helping out, while everyone else doesn't help out."
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there are so many examples in life, of things that aren't real choices.
here's an example. someone says:
you can choose between killing your uncle or your brother.
let's say, the person chooses to kill their uncle.
then you, livingintx, would say?
"you CHOSE to kill your uncle."
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sometimes in life, you're faced with 10 bad choices.
you don't REALLY have a choice. you choose the least bad one. you were put against a wall, and made to choose between 10 more or less, equally bad choices.
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also, the more you have destroyed your conscience in your life, the MORE choices you have!! yipee!!
someone who doesn't care AT ALL about people, has all the time in the world, to FOCUS utterly, completely on their own goals in life -- often at the detriment of others, "kicking" people below them while they climb up, and "licking the boots" of those above them.
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also, OP made it very clear, this isn't just about past caregiving.
her siblings
"don't show her any respect, care, or consideration."
is it hard to believe, livingintx, that there are people who are RUDE? for no good reason. who're simply inconsiderate, bad, toxic, abusive?
not because you yourself have done something. simply because they're not nice people.
Your confidence in yourself needs some assistance. After giving and giving and giving all these years, you may have forgotten how to be a receiver of help, especially if it comes in an unexpected way or direction. However, I don't want you to be a victim of fraud or abuse, just because you are searching for a way out of the whirlpool.
It is not too late. There are many cities where the single females flourish. However, you need to be able to recognize and be accepting of changes. Are you willing to be part of a church? Are you willing to pick up a new hobby? Are you willing to volunteer? Could you go to vocational school or get a degree?
I would suggest that you find a therapist to help you navigate out of the whirlpool that your life has become. If you have a primary care physician, ask him/her for a reference. If your father's physician is still around, ask his office. I'm assuming you have some kind of medical insurance. If so, the insurance might have a list of providers that you can pick from.
Keep fighting that estrangement and indifference. It is not hopeless. You just might need to ask for assistance from an adventure guide (therapist).
I moved my parents down to VA just shy of three years ago, sold the home which was a hoarding situation and got them settled in assisted living. Like anyone who has siblings I was sure three of the four would be actively involved and of course I knew I was main caregiver.
One sister came every two to three months with longer periods in between. They are retired and have kids and travel. I was and am so grateful for the support because sometimes it is nice to sit in jammies until noon. I was going to my parents every day to make sure Dad ate and my bedridden Mom had company. I have taken a beating, at one point both parents were in Hospice.
The other sibling had every excuse in the book. She was busy, she has a daughter (21) she cant afford dog walkers, she cant find them.
a couple of weeks ago I tried to do FT with her. No answer which is fine, she was probably out and about. When my other sister came to visit she asked if I had heard from the other sister. I texted and said I tried to contact you and you didn't contact me back.
she told me her notifications weren't working and when she called she said she was busy. (Retired) I unfortunately said busy doing what? She was busy helping her friend.
that was the moment I realized she is never going to be there for me and I had to let that expectation go. Of course she is the victim and called me and my sister a B and guess what? She is coming to see my Mother in the middle of July to prove me wrong.
I realize my mental health is important and she was not helping that so I blocked her on social media because I want to move forward and stop expecting something that she is not willing to give.
it is hard to deal with this but in order to make your life better you sometimes have to accept what you can’t change.
you can’t change this behavior but you can change how you deal with it. I have had a really rough couple
of weeks trying to deal with this but I know not having the drama in my life is ultimately better for me and for the person I care for.
take care of yourself
Thank you for sharing your experience with your sister with me and for your compassion. I hear where you're coming from and we all have take steps to protect ourselves. I'm grateful to everyone for taking the time to share their advice with me. I'll keep trying to get more help and look after myself better. (((hugs)))
:)
you have good reasons to be angry with your siblings. as you said:
"My sisters don't show me any respect, care, or consideration."
Point 1
i would suggest:
cut them out of your life. people like that will only make you feel bad; your self-esteem will get lower and lower BECAUSE of them.
here's a quote i like, which i've repeated many times:
"Before you diagnose yourself with depression or low self-esteem, first make sure that you are not, in fact, just surrounded by *ssholes."
surround yourself with KIND, LOVING people ----- orrrrrrr, be alone.
"Better alone, than badly accompanied."
enjoy your own company :).
meanwhile: you'll find nice people, and they'll find you, too.
Point 2
you wrote:
"I tried so hard to be selfless and it has meant nothing."
don't despair, dear OP.
it meant something. it meant a great deal to all those you lovingly helped.
and it means something to the universe, too: a human being who was/is kind, loving.
Point 3
it's clear you're kind.
NOW rise up, and work on all your other qualities --- for example, your dreams/ambitions in life. it is never too late. hug!!!! fill your life with things you love.
in my case, very unfortunately for me, i looooove cookies, chocolate -- basically everything that is bad. so of course, don't be like me.
fill your life with wonderful things, wonderful people, OP. :)
Being selfless and taking selfless actions on another's behalf is a reward in and of itself, without recognition, rewards, or acknowledgements. Yes, often criticisms and judgements from others.
You are not the kind of person who in their mind sets out to do something for those reasons or rewards. You do it because it needed to be done, and because it is who you are.
That is why I keep repeating: "No good deed goes unpunished".
Try making new friends with people who are not narcissists, maybe that will help you feel accepted. Also, consider yourself retired as a caregiver, as you have more than done enough for others.
You are fully accepted and befriended here on this forum by members who know you.
You can allow the anger and resentment go when you are ready. There is hope for you, making the rest of your life the best of your life.
Get on other your own life. Leave the ungrateful ones to themselves. Keep your distance. If your caregiving days are over (it wasn’t clear in your post), keep your friends or make friends. Work. Volunteer for things that are meaningful to you.
if you are still caregiver, then consider stepping aside to either let another family member step up or have the person you’ve been caring for put in a home/hospice/assisted living/ whatever. You’ve done your share.
You are only human and you have completed your task to the best of your abilities.
You call it estrangement and indifferent. Others would say, save yourself now.
Perhaps you've vacationed somewhere and would love to live there? Joining community programs would instantly throw you into the heartbeat of the location. Do yourself a favor and don't volunteer for a solid year as part of your therapy!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Block your ungrateful siblings for the first year, too, another anger and resentment release. "Detach with love."
So he handles the day to day, I assist him behind the scenes, if I do not want to do something, I don't, just say no.
My brother, to my mother, is the Golden Boy, I was the scapegoat, no more, brother is now the "Golden Goat"!
Let it go, no more caretaking for you, just say no, I am done!
Take care of you!
sometimes it’s best to release toxic relationships and let the trash take itself out . Make a goal - fall in love , go on that hiking trip , buy that sexy dress , put on some make up and go out and have some fun . Focus on you now and the rest of your life - stay happy and healthy and find a new hobby like gardening . You can do it - this is your life .