After only 7 weeks of going thru a hospitalization and rehab following complications from surgery with my 78 yo mom I have come to dread talking to anyone because I know they will ask how she's doing. I completely appreciate the concern. I appreciate the friendship. It helps to know people are thinking of me and support my mom and my family. But how do you even begin to answer such a question when one minute is awesome and positive and full of hope and the next is a crisis, dropped balls, pain, tears and sobbing?
I guess my point is I will think twice before asking such a general question. Instead I may just say I'm thinking of you and am here if you want to vent or cry or talk.
I have to admit, I sometimes feel I could go a looooong time without ever talking to someone who's never done this, and not miss them at all. If someone's never done this before, odds are slim that they 'get it'.
What chaps my hide is, my mom is still capable of talking on the phone ( she’s a HUGE talker! ) and I’ve given her number out to friends and family. To know how she’s doing all people have to do is call. Like 5 minutes. Once a month. Maybe 5 minutes once every two months. But people can’t bring themselves to do even that so they ask me how she’s doing to get themselves off the hook, because apparently I am supposed to be EVERYTHING for her. Okay rant off!
On a plus side there are a scant few people who ask and actually mean it! Then I answer the question truthfully but not being overbearing, and from there we have a reciprocal conversation with sharing going both ways. These people are precious!
Thanks for the space to kvetch - this has been a peeve of mine!
I hate that question too. In my case, people weren’t asking out of concern. It was curiosity.
Also, their question didn’t help me at all - it only took my time, in the middle of extremely stressful crises.
In addition, the one doing badly was ME. All things landed on me. And they didn’t bother asking how I am.
I was in the middle of helping, emergencies, pressed for time. I told those people directly, that their question isn’t helping me. Nor does it help my mom.
Later when things calmed down, I would answer how my mom is. But the question definitely got me upset.
(By the way, as a side-note, my mom isn’t just elderly. She’s abusive towards me.)
Right now, I’m faced with a totally different scenario. After ALL the help I’ve given my mom FOR YEARS, she’s turned against me, lying to others about me. I had to contact a lawyer. It’s a crazy situation and so unjust.
I’m safe. I’ve done everything right, and those are just lies. But she’s putting me through h*****ll.
Courage, OP.
Start with "I appreciate your concern" as you have said. Then tell them it is difficult just now for you to discuss and you hope they will understand. Follow up with "she is stable" or "she isn't doing well" or "she is doing somewhat better" and then move on to change the conversation. They are all simply trying to be kind. I am so sorry.
People don't know WHAT to say. They do the best they can. I sure wish you luck.
But we as human beings ask for lack of anything we can do to help and as a sign we care.
A. She's awfully fine for the shape she is in.
When people ask, I've found that I usually just say that they're doing the best they can - and then try to change the subject.