Does anyone else out there go sit in a closet and have a complete meltdown after taking a 90-plus narcissist/parent for a check-up and getting a big thumbs-up?
She had a bovine valve transplant at 90.
"It's ticking like a Swiss watch," says the cardiologist. Well, whoopee! Yah, that's great!
My take on the good news is: complete bowel incontinence (aided by the outrageously expensive medications to keep the Swiss watch ticking, which is already causing frequent Hershey squirt accidents all over the house), becoming wheelchair-bound, dementia, blindness, being in constant pain, bankruptcy, etc. is coming!
And I alone will have a front row seat to it all! The ticker will still keep ticking. Yah, it's a miracle!
I felt like vaulting over the table, grabbing him by the collar of his white coat...
But, I couldn't even look at him, say a word. During past appointments, I did get the feeling that he is conflicted too. Mentioned sheepishly, other patients with crippling arthritis, suffering terribly. But, still ticking.
Is there a profession left in this world that hasn't become a complete perversion? Doctors feel like they are causing suffering, cops are the bad guys, teachers are the ones who don't care enough about children. I digress.
But, it is another aspect of interacting with reality as a caregiver for someone who is, let's face it, just living too long, unnaturally. Everything is upside down and inside out. Life bad, death good.
My productivity is to keep her around unproductively to siphon off the productivity of even more, even younger people struggling to survive so she can suffer some more and maybe play bridge a few times more, after 30 years of retirement in the lap of luxery, after working for less than 20. My mother had to deal with all of one month of having her mother around.
I can't believe how old I'm getting, and it may very well never be my turn.
Could go on and on about everything, as I'm sure most of us could. And maybe will :)
The last "good news" doctor appointment set off a regression of all the progress I thought I had made with my coping attitude. (Plus, Thanksgiving, ugh...upside down inside out...special days used to be fun, should be, but are now torture. Seems we caught that sibling relationship sickness, a mutation of the excessive old age disease, that I heard about on here and never thought would happen to us.)
Anyway, the gist is that the no.end.in.sight part of it all has become inflamed, again.
I'm coming up on one year of living here with her like this, been reading all of your comments, have been grateful to you all for putting it out there.
My MIL passed away, funeral stress with his other 2 kids, our youngest child (girl, 21) moved out, built a big shed to house all of the things he couldn't get rid of (never to be spoken about or seen again), and 2 weeks later, FIL moved in. This is a second marriage for both of us (though together now for 31 years) but we both brought 2 kinds each into this marriage, so we had Never been Alone in our marriage, Never!
He's PERFECT! that is his descriptive word, "the Dr says I'm Perfect", "My lab tests are Perfect", "I feel Perfect just Perfect"! I hate that word!
For me, his Narcissism slowly revealed itself over time, it was leaning curve for me, as I had never knowingly dealt with one on a regular basis, let alone lived with one. He kept it well hidden in the short, frequent (few hours) visits we had with them over the years. I didn't know anything about Narcissism, until I joined this site, nor did my husband, he just thought his Dad was Tyrannical when he was growing up! My husband comes from a very Dysfunctional family. All 3 siblings were/are completely disconnected.
He moved in, and 4 months later he was diagnosed with stage 4 Mantle Cell Lymphoma (agressive). He did very well with treatment, 11 months of Chemotherapy, and has been on a Watchful Waiting status ever since. The long slow decline, every day consuming our independence, well you know. He's nearly 87 now, and Perfect except for mobility issues, his Narcissism (which he knows nothing about), and he is now heading down the rabit hole of Dementia, and his long term memory is shot.
My husband and I have not been away alone together in about 4 years now, except for one overnight last Feb, when my daughter stayed with him.
No help nor interactions with his other 2 kids whatsoever. They live out of state, and now I know why. Both of them took well advantage financially of their parents, probably because of the abuse and suffering they dealt with as kids, and my husband (the baby of the family) was the only one who stayed close and kept them in our lives, with our 4 kids, we actually had a good relationship with them, while his Mom was alive. He watches TV in his study from early morning til bedtime, while my husband waits on him hand and foot. That's our life now, until we can figure out other suitable living ideas, that he can afford, as I don't want him back on my porch, should his money run out while living in Assisted living, but we are trying to figure out this type of arrangement now, he's ruining our lives. After 13 years of this, it's our time now! Weve definitely made some mistakes in this living arrangement. We never should have promised him he could live with us, and we should have gotten him into a Senior apartment from the get go. Livecand learn huh?
Anyhoo, welcome to this site! Ive made great friends and have learned so much! Welcome!
I came from a pretty normal family, with great loving parents and all 6 of us very close to one another. 5 of us have had to deal with an inlaw living with them for some time or another, but non as long as us. It's not fair, it's not right, but there you have it. I was brought up knowing that it's just what you do. Boy was I Wrong!
I'd love to try again, but I smell something funny downstairs...
Quickly, I've been reading Leaving Home by David Celani, and another book of his re Fairbiarn's theory. Really good re the mind toggling between hope and hatred.
Thanks for sharing your stories, insights, and opinions. You all are so helpful!
Sense of humour is great. I'm all for that but it saddens me how many care givers on here are just hoping and praying for their loved ones to die. Yes, it's hard. I've been there. But in my case, I adored my Mom and would love it if she was still alive.
And before I get a big pile of whoop a** responses.......let me clarify that this is just my opinion and I'm throwing it out there.
Unfortunately, there are many caregivers who are so beaten down by it all that they wish for their own death. I understand that, too. I wish we had some better solutions to help caregivers. The problem is so big, since many elders need 24/7 help for years.
And of course some elders are "Easy Keepers" , sweet, loving and thankful for the care they receive. My folks are sweet people, quite stubborn, but all in all pleasant. However the quality of life is at about 1%. My poor mom can barely get through each painful day and has to watch my Dad with dementia fade away more each week. I don't wish for death but I sure hope they don't go another 10 years like this. I hope I've got ten years left for christs sake!
I love my mother, but resent the fact that she now resides with me. I feel doubly guilty because on balance I'm the angry one, not her. Yes, she's a narcissist, but one of the milder variety - not a screamer and yeller - more of a quietly manipulative one. I've only recently realized she's a narcissist because she was so stealth about it on so many levels over the years. I didn't realize till recently that the nasty, unfeeling comments she'd make to me on occasion, and her silence toward me when displeased was all narcissism. Yes, she did some emotional damage to me that I'm still figuring out and coming to terms with. Still, she wakes up happy every morning, and is a kind person and super easy to get along with. Seriously.
That's my double guilt - she's very pleasant to deal with and very unobtrusive and not demanding. I know there are folks on this site who would give anything to caregive for someone like her. I feel such guilt because as far as caregiving goes she IS basically very easy to deal with. She is 87 and has vascular dementia, had a few strokes, talks vegetable soup - to the extent that I can't tell when she's grounded in reality or sundowning. She's somewhat incontinent - we do have s**tsplosions on a regular basis - usually at night. She's lost weight - her normal weight is 116 - 120 lbs, but now she's down to 75 lbs. She's so frail! Cannot eat most foods as they give her diarrhea. Also when SHE gets mad, she refuses food (which she always does AFTER I've made the meal, never before).
Anyway, I'm an only child, single, and a loner. I'm used to living by myself and I love it. I do though have a wonderful boyfriend whose been through the worst of this with me and tells me he's in it with me for the long-haul - what a blessing he is! I just turned 60 last week.
I cannot put mom in a home - will not, actually - because aside from the fact that the nursing homes here in Florida are the absolute worst, she's a fall risk, and state law prohibits them being belted in or restrained for ANY reason (it would 'damage their self-esteem'). I know this because she had a 3 month stay in rehab for a fractured pelvis - the stay was so protracted because while there she was falling all the time and fractured on 3 separate occasions her left pelvis, right arm, and left shoulder. I will NOT place her because it would kill her in short order. AND as I'd said, the 'care' they're given is abominable anyway.
I'm lucky to have a great therapist, who says my anger is normal, and not to be so harsh on myself for my resentment, anger, etc., etc. he says I judge myself too harshly when I do get upset with her. I feel awful for not wanting my mother around and I feel awful for being angry with her for just being here and disrupting MY life. Oh, I almost forgot, I have a neuro-muscular condition that under the best of circumstances leaves me drained even on the best of days.
Can ANYONE relate? Thanks!
(PS...perhaps I should have started a new thread instead of posting this here....?)
It seems like an unhealthy type of co- dependancy to me. I'm sure some of you reading this are thinking "Oh, Gershun, what do you know" In fact someone on another thread said to me once. "Oh, easy for you to say Gershun, must be nice to have such a wonderful mother, but some of us weren't so lucky" Again, I get that. What I don't get is why you put yourself through it if there is an alternative.
I get that it's the Christian thing to do if you want to go there. But I never felt that God expected us to martyr ourselves. Trust me when I say if I had an abusive parent I would not put myself through what some of you are going through. In fact, I've made it clear to my husband from day one that if his mother ever moves in with us I will leave. She is the kind of manipulative person that you all describe and I can imagine what a nightmare taking care of her would be.
Anyhow, forgive the long post. I guess I am just trying to understand what makes you all tick, so to speak.
I think you would find if you bothered to read any of my many posts on AC that I am very sympathetic to others on here. Sticking my fingers in others eyes? What a bunch of B.S. You don't know the first thing about me my friend.
Truth can be shocking to read. Personally I felt for littleedie. You are right that she could place her mother in a nursing home, but someone somewhere is going to have to deal with this new truth. Perhaps it will get better.
Sorry you were shocked by the post. I don't know if you realize that you struck out at half the people in the group with your statement about writing about parents and martyrs. I hope this group does not become one where people feel unsafe to vent and talk truthfully about things. I know when things bother me here and I can't talk about it with anyone else that there are people here who will know. They are going through the same thing.
People who have not experienced a narc parent have no idea what those of us who do, go through. It is sad. What we have and are going through is sad. I don't wish my mother to die, but I will experience some relief when she does and look forward to a release of the burden. I will also go through a normal grieving process.
I am interested in your view of "Leaving Home" and also your view of his views of Fairbairn's theory. I got a kindle version of Leaving Home and look forward to reading it.I don't know much about Fairbairn, but what little I have read gives hope than unearthing the pain in an atmosphere of compassion allows healing to take place. There is a lot of compassion for those with difficult/abusive parents on this site, but, there are some who do not have it.
Hope things are still reasonable for you. Holidays tend to be complicated times and with dysfunctional families, the dysfunctions tend to get amplified. ((((((((hugs))))))
You know just cause I had a great Mom who I loved and who loved me does not mean that I do not understand hardship. In fact, in some ways watching her decline was even harder cause we had such a strong bond. So excuse me if I have not walked in your shoes, you people who have struggled so hard with Narc parents, but that does not mean that taking care of my Mom was a breeze.
I've had loads of antagonistic remarks thrown my way cause I didn't have a bad upbringing and I praise my Mom and adored her. It goes both ways, Golden, Jessie and whomever else on here wants to fling hurtful poo at me.
Get over yourselves. You haven't cornered the market on hurt and sadness.
I totally agree that we have not cornered the market on hurt and sadness. I didn't say we had. I was trying to get back to the theme of the original poster, as I am interested in the books she is reading.