Mom is 93. She is relatively healthy with no major health problems. She lives in her own home with no outside help. I have tried many times to enlist home care but she fires them or refuses to let them in. I live an hour away and call her everyday. I visit once a week for 5-6 hours. (Total of 8 hours when you account for travel time) I work full time and sometimes don’t get home from these visits until 9 or 10 o’clock at night. I’m 60 years old myself and it’s getting more difficult to do it all myself. Mom refuses any help. She could use some help with bathing, laundry and meal prep. Which I do when I come. She eats mostly frozen dinners. But the worst part of it all is that she is CONSTANTLY manipulating me about moving into my home. I have very clearly told her that that is not an option and that if she wants to move closer to me I would be happy to show her some places. I have said this repeatedly. Which was very difficult at first but has gotten slightly easier. Still hard on me. I think she thinks that by refusing other help she will eventually get in a situation where I have no choice. She keeps testing the fences with guilt trips and manipulation. I’m soooooooooooooooooo tired. It’s been 9 years of this. I really do feel guilty about not taking her in but to be honest, I don’t want to. And that’s part of the guilt. I just had a grandchild. My only one so far and I would like to enjoy this time. I sacrificed for my children my whole life and now that they are on their own I would like to enjoy some time for myself. My husband is completely opposed to bringing her in but says he will “live with it” if she comes. I know she will tear us apart and wear me down to nothing. Problem now is that she wants to “visit” us for extended times. Or she says she is lonely and “can I come and stay for a while?” How can you say no to that? And every time she has a health issue, minor surgery, sickness etc she comes and stays with me and then acts like a beaten puppy when I take her home. The last thing she hinted at was that she would save up her pills and kill herself because “I didn’t want her”. How do I deal with all this. I’m at the end of my rope with her.
Stop the extended visits in your home. I can see her getting "hurt" or "sick" while there and thus getting to stay with you indefinitely. In her mind she may see it as you being somewhat open to her living there. She's hoping that once she's there a few days, that you'll say she can stay for good.
If she asks to stay awhile, a reply along the lines of, "Well, you get so upset when it's time to go back home, and I don't like you doing that." This turns the tables on her. She currently sees it as "She makes me leave and that upsets me." This other angle frames it as "I choose to get upset when I have to leave." Then the blame sits with her, not you.
Keep reminding her you'd be happy to have her live nearby. When she scoffs at that, maybe gently suggest that if she is so unhappy or lonely living alone, that perhaps assisted living would be a good option? She'll hate that idea even more, but the purpose is to let her know in a subtle way that you're not backing down and can't be guilt-tripped into taking her in. Could point out that you wouldn't live with your grown children either, and that is the normal way it should be.
Stick by your guns. Visit with her but don't bring her to your place. My Aunt had her Mom for a visit. She got ill while there and never left. My Aunt cared for her Mom in Aunts house till the mother died. I hear she wasn't the nicest lady.
I would continue to say NO. Sit down in front of her, look her in the eye and say "Mom you living with us will not work for many reasons. I would be glad to find someplace near us. Either an apartment, independent living, or AL" An IL or AL would have activities and transportation. Some IL have meals included. If she is still stubborn, then tell her these are her choices.
You are entitled to your life. This is the time you and husband get to enjoy life alone for a change. I am pretty sure if Mom was living with you she would expect to go everywhere u did. And pout if u tried to explain why she couldn't. Enjoy that grandchild. They are only little for so long.
At present she quite likes the way things are, and thinks that she can manipulate you to make them even better her way. You say 'will she ever stop manipulating', which means that this is a long term trait and it isn't going to stop. You need to make it so that she doesn’t like the way things are and knows full well that you are not going to do what she wants. She needs to see something different as best for her, not best for you. And for everyone’s sake, STICK TO YOUR GUNS!
If a big blow-up should happen, you'll tell her that she has several choices. Laay them all out and then add, "Coming to live with me is not one of the choices. It's not an option."
In other words, stop the manipulation by very plainly rejecting it. When she does the passive-aggressive stuff (You don't want me etc.), Just laugh and say that's nonsense, silly talk. Or say you'll talk to her later.
I love the saying repeated on this board: "No is a complete sentence." That means don't engage in her manipulative schemes; withdraw (take away your presence).
As Margaret said, turn the tables.
My mom wanted to move in with me, too. She promised to pay her way, which I’m sure she would have. We would “fix up” the upstairs as an “apartment”; for her and even turn one bedroom into a mini-kitchen. At that time, I’d just been presented with my first grandson and babysat for him full time. I had his nursery upstairs and it would have been in the middle of this “apartment” of her’s. He wasn’t a difficult baby, but he did cry and demand a lot of my attention which would have irritated her. Plus, we had two dogs. She tolerated dogs but never approved of my having two. The most dangerous was that the steps were carpeted and she would have taken regular flyers down them. I deflected and redirected and finally came right out and told her no way. She would never had taken my grandma to live with her! The dilemma was solved for me when she crashed and burned with a UTI and was evaluated in the hospital. It was determined she couldn’t ,Ive alone and I placed her in a facility.
Dont put your marriage at risk for her. She will move in and take over. Step back from caregiving for her. If she refuses care you’ve set up for her, so be it. Stop. If something doesn’t get done because she refused, fine. If something doesn’t get done for her because you were with new grand baby, fine. As long as you let her use you and take over your life, she will continue. Be kind and loving in what you do, but be the iron fist in the kid glove.
She says she is lonely? But in relatively good health. So, what is SHE doing about that? You are offering outside help in her home, but she says No. Well, then, guess she doesn't want/need the help. Basically, she is working at guilting, domestic tyranny, emotional abuse. Not a nice person, I think. You simply have no obligation to put up with this abuse. No reason for guilt. She should feel guilty for acting this way toward you. Tell her no as often as necessary. No arguing or explaining - the answer is no and that is final. This is something she doesn't get a say in - she needs to examine her own options for relieving loneliness.
Come back here any time you feel that guilt coming on.
Finally, at age 30 (me) she pulled that old chestnut out of the fire and I HAD HAD IT! I said "Please, mother, please DO kill yourself. But don't you DARE leave a mess for me to clean up. I am pregnant and unable to bend over. I hope that this finally makes you happy" And I slammed the front door on the way out. Worse part of that is that my kiddoes were with me and 3 of them understood what she was saying!!
I know now this is abuse and manipulation of the most awful kind. I'd rather she'd hit me than lay the guilt of her unhappiness at my feet.
Now she's 89 and is slowing down a lot. we do not have a good relationship and we won't. I swear it's the most difficult moms who live for-freaking-ever.
I have friends who lose their moms and I see the grief and sorrow they feel. I simply cannot relate to that. I'm sure I will have my moments, but honestly? She made such a mess of me that I'm not sure there's enough counseling to patch me up.
You are doing a great job of enforcing your healthy boundaries that are protecting both you and your husband, who also has earned the right to do with his time what he chooses. I've heard from many of my friends with grandkids that being a grandparent is precious to them.
Make a plan to make small changes. Cut down your visits to every other week so that you can spend more time with your grandchild. Next time she needs to recuperate somewhere, let the social worker know that your home is not an option and ask about inpatient rehabilitation. If she refuses, that's a good bargaining chip for you to get her to accept some in-home help.
Remember that you do not need to explain yourself and your choices to your mother. What's between you and your husband is none of her business.
I’m one of those who recommend counseling for so many situations, and to me you’re in one of them. Get some coaching. Your mom wants what she wants, it’s pretty human. You probably have room to be doing more steering here. BEST wishes!
Goto, you must tell your mother that assisting an adult is a paid profession, one you’re not trained in and you also already have a job. Regardless of who the person is in your life or how you feel about them, it’s a JOB. Every woman could stand to see more that our flitting tasks here and there are work hours. When you do them, it doesn’t prove you ‘care’ just that you’re willing to consume your time that way. And not consuming your time that way doesn’t mean you don’t care. Don’t know if I said that well.
You know you don't want her to live with you, and that's completely fine- can you imagine how stressful it would be to have her in your home ALL THE TIME?
You deserve to enjoy your new grandchild, and to have time and space to relax and rest.
So mom is lonely? There must be a Council on Aging near her . . . with plenty of activities- and if she doesnt drive, there are always transportation options for seniors. Connect her with those resources, and don't let her move in.
I would seriously consider the number of calls you are making and cut them back to random times so you cannot be guilt tripped on time etc or even if you have phoned that day, also change visits and don't go every week. Equip her with an emergency button linked to an agency. You will never get her to change whilst you continue in the same way. If she is capable of being independent great, but if she needs assistance she needs to come to understand that that will be from outside and your visits are for more pleasant activities like going out for a tea or to a shop she would like to.
Ome of his doctors told me there would be a crisis which would take care of it all. He ended up in hospital. They were going to send him home with help from a support team but said he was near needing 24 hour care. I told him this and he replied he would chase them if they came to door. He asked me outright to go and live with him. I said no.i have a life and a husband and i am not giving it up. I took my cue from that. It was him or me. I had POA for him so after much ado got him admitted to care facility. He's still trying to manipulate but I don't react at all. I only visit weekly for short time. I still do feel a bit guilty but it's their manipulation that causes it. It's hard but don't give in. I think I am immune to most things he says now. I can now walk away if it starts and know he's safe and looked after. Stay strong and use this site. It will make you feel better on days you don't cope so well.
Now that the dust is settling a little I'm reflecting back at some of things she did and seeing it thru new eyes.
I have brothers and they live 3 hours away from my parent(s) I live in another country 9 hours away. But I'm the youngest 55 and the only girl and Mom had some challenges with my brothers. (they tended to treat her as if she's still in her 60's when clearly she had different needs and abilities at 96).
This is what I've come to believe. What we see occurring is very layered and the manipulation may in fact be a cry for help. I moved away from the city that my parents live(d) in 15 years ago and when I visited it was for weekends (delivering literally a trunk full of cooked and baked single and double serving meals that I had made at home and carefully labelled with carb counts for Dad and gluten-free for Mom) . Drive Friday, stay overnight and return home Sunday. There were times where she seemed crabby and controlling and one time we (hubby and I) even drove up on a Thursday and she requested we go home on Friday so we left at 10 in the morning. :-((
Fast forward to last Labor Day when Dad had a fall. I arrived on a Thurs and insisted on filing an application for LTC for both of them (they went into the nursing on Sept 24) While meeting with their GP he mentioned dementia and while I had long suspected this and even asked Dad, my dad had always insisted there was no problem and in fact the doctor may not have discussed it in any great detail when they went for all of their appointments together. To this day Dad insists it was never discussed with him and I believe him. Turns out people in the early stages of dementia can mask things very for 8 hours at a time (I say this because by late Sat it always seemed that we'd have a tiff. In hindsight perhaps she was sundowning or simply worried she would answer a question wrong, forget something and it might draw attention to the disease that took her from us).
So as a person reading your post I can't help but wonder whether she's trying to send smoke signals to you. Your mom knows she shouldn't be alone anymore and perhaps worries about finances and the cost of care (mine did). Also people of that vintage are inclined to be very private and getting help was something my mom would not allow so I got sneaky :-)) I contacted a caregiver service in their area got pricing decided what fit into my budget (not lots but enough) and as a Christmas gave them a caregiver. Initially I printed off a homemade gift cert saying this was a treat from us and she balked at it but finally allowed it. Julia went in every second week so she was my eyes and ear and was able to help me get a sense of what was really going on when I wasn't there.
With regard to your mom saying 'you don't want me', my mom started with Dad. She would say 'I'm nothing but a burden. You should leave.' quite frequently.
Interestingly enough as the POA and now as the executrix I marvel at how thorough she was in preparing for the inevitable. Prepaid cremation and funeral, pension set up so that it transferred to Dad, list of all necessary contacts etc etc.
She was never a burden to him or I though in her final months she was very childlike and needed a different kind of attention.
My suggestion to you would be to get a caregiver as a first step and start looking into LTC's near you. It's likely to a point now that it wouldn't be appropriate for her to be alone all day in your home either. I know the beaten puppy look. I saw it last month when left Dad alone in his LTC adjusting to his new normal. I'll be back to visit for a week in June and one in August and my husband will take his vacation time in July and go up. (Airbnb has become our new best friend). Other than that don't won't have many visitors. Best of luck
Your parent will continue to treat you like a child. You can be a responsible adult without being mean.
I agree don't allow her to manipulate you by threatening suicide. I cared for a 97 year old who tried to manipulatee all the time. When I would end my shift to go home she would always say something like " say goodbye to me now I might not be here in the morning" or " call me in the morning to make sure I'm still alive" or the best one was she would imitate cutting her throat with her finger. I would get her all ready for bed and leave her all tucked in then get a call from neighbors telling me she was walking around the park outside. I would have to get dressed drive over there and scold her. Get her undressed and back into bed. Then it occurred to me and I said something to her about it, every morning I come and you cry that your arthritis hurts so much you need help dressing. But then I get here and see you've had no problem getting undressed and redressed after I leave. After a year I had finally had enough and decided that I could no longer care for her the way she needed. I had been working 12 hours a day, 7 days a week and I'm a single parent. Plus she didn't want to share me with my daughter. She was very very lonely, but I couldn't give any more of my life up for her. She had 4 kids non of which wanted to care for her. So they did end up putting her in a nursing home. I think that was the best place for her. My point being I would tell my mother that you will not be manipulated. That while you love her and care about her well being, you cannot and will not be able to take care of her along with our husband and grandchildren since she refuses help you may have no other alternative than to put her in a nursing home where there is staff 24/7 who monitor her meds for her and will care for her after surgeries and illnesses. Make sure to explain suicide threats should always be taken seriously and legally she looses her right to decide where she goes if she is a danger to herself or someone else. That's what I would do anyway. Good luck