Mom had sudden critical illness in June. Lost my job, about to lose home and now my boyfriend tells me he is preparing for the end of our relationship bc he is convinced I will move in with my oarents( out of state) and he is not good with long distance relationships. I chose to take care of mom and understood I would lose my job, I just did not expect boyfriend of 6 years would let me down. Mom is getting better everyday and I have been home for visits since June. I am going home this week for a few days to see boyfriend and check on house. Boyfriend told me not getting his hopes up bc my life lately has been roller coaster. I do not expect to move in with parents, I am just here helping them get over the hump and get a care plan together and looking at possibility of them moving closer to me. Help, it's just been my dad and I providing 24/7 care, we have started getting sitters in and getting more help in soon. It's an honor to take care of my mom but I am burnt out need a break. I am not sure if I should even see boyfriend or just break it off. He was the only stable thing I had left and this has been hard in both of us. He has been supportive and also very worried about me, he took 10 days off work to come and see me, but due to moms illness and another stay in hospital , he did not come. Mom has altered mental status so she is never left alone in hospital. Help
You lost your job. You have lost (or are about to lose your home). Based on your comments these are both directly related to your leaving your city/state to caregive your parents. You have been with your parents in another city/state (at the time of posting) FOUR months. You have been out of town caring for them for a host of very good reasons (but they are YOUR reasons). So you have asked him to have a long distance relationship that has no end in sight. If your mother's condition has not stabilized, and they don't have a good diagnosis, your boyfriend has every reason to believe that you will move in with your parents. You have in effect done that already. Again, with the best of motives and best of reasons for YOU.
Your boyfriend has been on the extreme caregiver carousel before. He has given up chunks of his life to caregive in what sounds like terrible circumstances ending in loss each time. You just asked him to wait for you an indeterminate amount of time and distance and support you while you sort out your parents' needs. Caregivers have PTSD, too; and your boyfriend's losses in the past 5 years are staggering. It says a lot about his character that he has tried to be supportive for you, asked you what he could give to you in male fixer mode, and that he has been there in illness for you in the past. I agree that you are facing a lot of losses in the short term, and the loss of his support is hard on you. I venture to say that he has missed your support in the past months too. If he is trying to distance from you to prevent one more loss, yes it's hard on you. But if he loves you as you indicated, it didn't come from a completely selfish jerk based on the other behaviors you described. Maybe you waited on the sidelines for months while he sorted out his caregiving issues, you didn't say. Maybe you came into the picture once it was all resolved and you could deal with aftermath, not the day-to-day crises. Keep the friendship alive if you can, focus on your parents as you have wanted to, but please give him the freedom to decide not have your parents become his focus after three recent caregiving intense losses. Your updated posting supported his position that it was a roller coaster, and that your mom was not getting better any time soon. I am sorry that you are both going through this, but if he's leaving as narcissistic jerk, well rid of him. If he is just empty at the moment to be able to support you after all he's been through, what a sad situation that you are both in at this time in your lives. Please start putting plans in place if your mother can't be moved for a while and a caregiver agreement with your parents so that your finances aren't utterly wrecked while you help them. In the period of 10 years, I had breast cancer twice, my son diagnosed with autism, both parents died after sudden and horrible illnesses and both my husband and I lost jobs at different times. Sometimes you just don't have anything left for someone else at the moment. Take care of you too.
Your comments about her mom is confusing. Your profile says your mom has dementia, but your post seemed to indicate that she was getting better. Is your mom, who has dementia, taking care of your dad? Is this the arrangement you are making for them?
Or this is a good life lesson to see how your boyfriend can handle those dark clouds that pass over. In the 6 years you have dated, has he had to help you with any illnesses of your own? Was he there for you? Did he help? Or did he just stand there with his hands in the pockets waiting for others to help?
Depending on how he reacts, look into the future when the two of your are much older, how will he act towards you if you had a critical illness? If he sounds like he wants to run now, he will also run at that time.
I ask because how you feel probably will govern how you discuss the situation with him, as well as the loss of stability which it seems he provides. After reading your post a few times, it seems as if he's in the triad of losses - job, home and BF.
You're facing some major crises and loss not only of economic support but of stability on several fronts. Any one of these losses is enough to destabilize anyone, but the loss of your BF is something that can be controlled on a more personal level, whereas the loss of income and a home are more complicated because of the employer, financial institution, etc. They're more bureaucratic and less responsive, in other words.
But BF may not be, so the question is what is he really thinking?
Thus I'm wondering if his potential departure could be a reflection of a few or mother of these issues:
1. He's serious about commitment but doesn't see how it could work if you moved, although you've stated you aren't going to. Thus, what's the issue with a long distance relationship, or is this some kind of cop-out?
2. He sees that he may lose your attention and companionship due to caregiving. Does he feel subordinate to your parents? No longer #1? Does he seem them as competition?
Frankly, I'm a bit concerned about his plans to end the relationship b/c it may turn into a long distance one. I can't help wondering if he's giving you a "gentle" ultimatum and a chance to make an effort to keep the relationship going. Maybe he's testing you? Is he that kind of guy? Does he need reassurance that he's important in your life? Does he want you to choose between him and your parents?
Even though he took time off to visit, I'm wondering if the sudden change in your relationship in your life and your mother's illness are too much for him to handle. This is one reason I'm wondering about your ages. A young man in his 20's might be overwhelmed with everything that's happening. Someone in his 30's might handle it better, and by the time a man is in his 40's or 50's he's probably had a few crises in his life as well.
I'm also wondering about the situation in his family. Are his parents stable? If not, has he helped to care for them? He might be seeing a repeat of something in his own family. OTOH, he might be someone who doesn't want to deal with the fragility of elderly people.
There's also the possibility that it pains him to see you in such a difficult situation, just as it's painful for you to see your mother in the situation she's in. Some people just can't handle these kinds of tragedies.
And he could also be thinking "there but for fortune go you or I".. some people are afraid that something dire can happen to them and they wouldn't be able to handle it.
It would help if you could elaborate a bit, without being too personal, on how you feel about him and the nature of your relationship. Then others can offer advice as well.
I do want to say that you're facing one of the most complicated, emotional and destabilizing situations a daughter can, but it seems to me that you have a good perspective and plans to address both you and your parents' welfare.
I'm a 60 yr old guy btw. There are lots of women active on this forum who will have better insight than me. Hang around and I'm sure you will get some good advice and disscussion.
If she needs to be in care find a facility for here. If she does not have funds apply for medicaid. If you don't get help you will be going down with the ship very soon.
I'm not scolding here. Some people seem to make a conscious decision to devote their lives totally to the care of their elders. If you are one of those people then carry on as you are but understand that it will be a full time job and then some....