I am new to this forum and seeking advice in how to move forward in my relationship with my fiancé. Right now, he is the caregiver of his 96 year old grandmother, 60 year old father with mental health issues, and 60 year old uncle that also has severe mental health issues. His grandmother, father and uncle live together, however my fiancé cares for the house they live in (general upkeep, lawn care, cleaning) and checks in every other day or so to make sure everyone is "OK". Fiance lives with me and my two children (ages 8 and 10 from previous marriage), I have no family nearby and zero help with my kids etc. We both work full time jobs and I am the breadwinner of the home.
When we first met and for the first few years of his relationship, he would stop in to see his family and help out but it wasn't a focus on our entire relationship and everything that we do. He was able to balance both. In the past year, his grandmother had several hospital stays and has required more. He has had to take off work several times to take her to doctors appointments during the day, does not get paid when this happens. I had to pick up the slack when he is taking off work and not getting paid which puts more financial pressure on me and our family. His grandmother treats his father and uncle like children and although they both have mental health issues, I do believe they could do more around the house so that my fiancé didn't need to come over and clean, do the yard work and have this huge responsibility when he is newly engaged trying to have a family of his own. I feel his family puts a lot of onto him and does not view him as a man with a family but one that is still single without outside responsibilities himself.
My fiancé is overworked, stressed and it has completely changed the relationship that we have. I do not have extra time to help with my job and young children at home and my own responsibilities. His grandmother refuses to go to a nursing home. It seems like this current situation is non-sustainable with how stressed out my fiancé is and his inability to be fully present with my children now. We have put our wedding plans on hold since the sole focus has been on his family and their needs and he is so upset and stressed from it all. He tells me he feels very guilty if he is not helping out his grandmother all the time since his dad isn't doing it. I feel like he is taking out his guilt and stressed out on me and when he has responsibilities within our house. Not sure what the answer is? I love this man but it doesn't feel like an end is in sight. I am stressed, tired and resentful since I feel I am holding too much of the financial burden and have two kids myself to support. Thanks.
This wasn't the case for the first few years of our relationship, although once we got engaged it changed.
As much as you say you love him, I hope and pray that you realize that you and your children deserve much better, and as hard as it may be, that you make the changes necessary, not only for yourself but your children as well, so they will learn what a real loving relationship is supposed to look like. Because what you have now isn't it.
Best wishes to you and your children.
There is no end in sight unless you can see 20 years or more in the future.
His dad and uncle both in their 60's could live another 20, 30 or more years.
Do you want to wait that long?
His grandmother, if she remains at home will continue to need more and more care. If the father and uncle do not do their share then it will eventually ALL fall on your "betrothed's" shoulders to care for her. You think he is devoting a lot of time now...just wait.
Sit down and discuss with him your VERY VALID feelings, and concerns.
If he does not want to have caregivers come in and do what he is doing, hire people to do the lawn and other work that he is doing then sad to say I do not see a future for you that has a happy marriage in it, at least with him.
I think stepping away is the best thing you can do for yourself and for your kids.
If he is living in YOUR house tell him that he can move in with grandma, dad and uncle.
If you are living in HIS house then begin looking for a place you can afford for you and your kids.
If the house is owned jointly that might pose a bit more of a problem and you will have to consult an attorney.
If you love him and he loves you he can begin to "court" you again once his priorities are in line.
In the meantime you begin living your life for yourself and caring for your kids.
If you want to continue a relationship with him, that's your business, but separate everything else in your life from him, including his residence. DO NOT get married to him, or you'll be on the hook to support him and who knows who else.
Your fiancé is a good man but you deserve someone who is available for you.
When I mean available I'm talking eloping to Las Vegas tonight available not in a few years down the road available.
Nusing Homes are a Horrible place to live and she probably wouldn't last 6 months. They are all understaffed and never answer their call button.
All 3 of them are each collecting Social Security and or monthly checks.
Inoted of fiance doing everything, use their money to hire help for the yard work.
Use their money to have a cleaning service come clean the house once a week.
Check with their Insurance and sign up Grandma for Home Health where a Nurse will come by once a week and an Aide 3 times a week to help her with a bath/shower.
Use their money to have a Caregiver drop by a couple hrs every day.
It sounds like your fiance is a good man trying to take care of his family. You knew that about him when you met him.
Don't add more anxiety to his situation by useless complaining.
Try to find solutions instead.
Install a few Cameras in the home so fiance can keep in touch anytime 24 7 from his cell phone or lap top.
Praters that ya'll can figure this out.
If fiance father or grandfather was in the Military, they could get up to 30 hours a week Caregiver help.
"How can you expect others to change, when changing yourself is so hard to do?"
That has become my daily mantra in light of my husband's dementia, his nutty family and all the profound changes of the past seven months.
Think about your children, and what you want them to be when they are grown up. They come first.
You need to sit down with your fiance and have a deep conversation. Ask him what the long term plan will be for his family members. Ask him to think further ahead than next week. If his plan is to always be their caregiver, then you may have a decision to make. Explain to him that you were looking for a husband, a full time partner, someone to share the day with and the responsibilities of a household. If he is working full time and caregiving in his free time, that doesn't leave any time for him to devote to a new wife and household.
If he is open to finding other solutions for is family, he may need your assistance with that. For example finding out what dad, uncle and grandma qualify for. Filling out paperwork, maybe even orchestrating a move, getting a social worker involved. I am sure he is overwhelmed and not sure what solutions are possible. If you truly love him, help him. If he is not open to finding solutions and not open to your help, then you may have to make a decision that is best for you and your children and back out of the relationship.
Worst case scenario - If you and he can not get more volunteer help, get paid help using his grandmother's, father's, and uncle's resources. If they do not have finances, help them to apply for federal and local aid. It may be that grandmother may have to go into a residential facility as well as father and uncle. Your fiance' may have to sell their home to help pay for their care.
Start a series of discussions about relationship expectations and time commitments. You and your children deserve his love and care. His family members also need care. Work together to create ways for him to be father and husband and caregiver.
Call Office of Aging to see what services they have.
"when he is newly engaged trying to have a family of his own"
The last thing I would do is bring another child into this mix. I, for now, would find whatever services were available and put marriage on the back burner. If BF and grandmom are not accomodating, then I may just part ways. Believe us when we say, you do not want to get married when he has this kind of responsibility. If you marry, you are #1. With 2 people with mental health problems, Dementia maybe the next thing and you do not want to involve yourself in that. Plus, 2 close relatives with mental health issues. Is this hereditary? BiPolar is in my Dads family and I would not wish that on anyone.
I feel resentful that I am financially pulling the weight here due to him taking off work when he takes his family to appointments. This isn't something me and him discussed its almost expected that I will just handle this.
His dad has depression and heart issues and can not do a lot of the work around the house. The uncle is mentally handicapped. Im not sure the extent of it (and I don't even think he does either). Theres constantly something that needs fixed around the house, as in most houses I think. Its hard to have two families to be involved in and thats what it feels like this is.
No we don't have plans to have kids of our own. When I said a family of his own I was referring to him being a step father to my children and us trying to establish ourselves as a family.
Lastly, grandmas house is in all three of their names (dads, uncles and finances). My fiancé doesn't have a solid retirement and I think is worried that if resources start dwindling with their care that he will not have this resource in the future. Honestly I think eventually this will happen anyway with his father and uncle needing care. I have a solid retirement myself and am in a much different financial place than my fiancé and his family. this worries me a lot. I also might add I am about 10 years younger than my fiancé.
I don't think my fiancé has bad intentions. He's not a bad guy. Its just a tough situation with me having small children, no family nearby and a very demanding career. If I was at a different place in my own life this may be more doable, but if it were my own family I would never be able to adequately take care of my kids and another family as he does. I think he does realize the situation but seems unable to find a good solution. When I suggest solutions, such as hiring outside help and creating a solid game plan, he gets either defensive or agrees but doesn't move forward with the plan. I have zero ability to help with this situation and I fear if I do he finds it to be controlling.
It feels like one crisis after another with no solid plans, and just waiting for the next crisis to happen. I would love to help create a plan for all of this, but unfortunately this is met with a ton of resistance. I feel bad and guilty as if I am insensitive towards all of this, because I genuinely understand his grandma is 96 and requires care. I think what bothers me the most is that our entire relationship is absorbed in this and he is unable to mentally move forward with his life at all due to the stress it causes on him. If he cared for them and was still able to joyfully live his life then it would be fine but he's honestly completely burnt out. And so am I.
It's time for you to move on now, without your fiance, unfortunately. When you meet the right person, you will know it because YOU and your children will be his prime focus. If he has elderly loved ones to care for, he'll be open to discussing other options with you for their care & management. He'll be willing to call in outside services to help them and not be their only source of care, their cleaning staff, their #1 hero on every single front, even when he has to forfeit his own income in order to do so. Your new man won't have a hero complex and insist on being all things to his family at all times, while neglecting his new family entirely. And shutting his fiance out of discussions she needs to be an equal part of. That's not how healthy relationships work. And your new partner will also have a good job and income so he can be an equal contributor to the household you'll share. You carrying 90% of the load financially isn't a good foundation for a healthy relationship either. That's bound to get real old real quick!
Wishing you the best of luck disentangling yourself from this engagement and moving forward with your life.
pizza for dinner? A surprise trip to the Dairy Queen? Bake cookies or make ice cream sundaes at home. Go look at Christmas lights? Candle light service at church? Make the kids feel as safe and secure as possible and not have family stuff get in the way. I am sure the kids are stressed by what is going on and they need to know they are loved no matter who is in your life.
In the parlance of dating sites, you both came to this relationship with "baggage," that being your kids on the one side and his family on the other. You can't really expect him to care less for his family so he can care more for your offspring.
This is a situation where frankly both people should just cohabit. He is not going to be their daddy, and presumably real dad has a joint custody or some arrangement with you. Or should. You can't bail each other out of your obligations, and should not.
I agree. It is time - and up to fiancee to make decisions and set boundaries. He may not be able to do it. HOWEVER, Happytimes questioner here must set her own limits and boundaries. (More in my own post).
Gena / Touch Matters
People think that relationships will be easier when you're older, but that's not true. When you're older you've got roots (jobs, children, elderly parents) things you can't just uproot or leave. Finding time to nurture a new marriage or relationship is hard. You've got to find someone who fits into your situation and you into theirs. You've got someone cleaning your house and he doesn't even have any health insurance. You two are not living the same life....
One reader perhaps mentioned or asked if your two children have child support from their father. Does not matter whether you work or not. Your children's future depends on financial assistance. Support makes it fair for your children's happiness, future and productivity. Your fiance cannot even support his own family, let alone add you and your kids. This is very hard, but it may be best to leave this relationship to move on.
Patathome01
How things are now will only multiply if you actually became legally married to this man; you must protect yourself and your children. You can still love this person but you may not be able to live with him and this dysfunctional drama.
You can be supportive, but you don't have to sacrifice yourself, your integrity, your future to a disordered situation; the next step is professional help to get things sorted out for everyone's best outcomes.
You will need to make a hard decision now.
Do you want this man in your life 'as things are now' ?
Do you want him in your life if he doesn't change or if the situation (stressors he has with family) do not change?
He is clearly over-stressed and unable to make decisions that would ease his load/responsibilities. Does he know he needs to investigate county or medi-cal / medi-care support? or perhaps even legal advice (POA status, dealing with house the three of them live in.)
- He is making all this his responsibility, in part due to his feelings of guilt.
He needs to address these feelings with reality - to make decisions that ease his responsibilities.
- He needs to enlist help anyway he can. The question is: Will he?
[i.e., can't he hire a kid in the neighborhood to mow the lawn or do that kind of work/]
If he cannot or will not, you need to decide how you want to live.
As things sound / are now, you are going down with a sinking ship.
* It is heartbreaking to love someone who makes choices not in his best interest, or that of his primary relationship (you/your family).
* Perhaps if you give him boundaries and set clear limits on what you want and need, he will be 'encouraged' (pushed, cajoled, moved to make decisions he needs to make. In fairness to him, he may not have the mental wherewithal to do this.
* He needs counseling/some professional support.
Do any of the three have social workers? He needs to reach out for HELP. (AND not to you; he is already burning you out (as you allow it).
* He will not be able to maintain as he is now if he doesn't make some changes.
* The dynamics of the three of them in a house is explosive. Shouldn't be. Two adults with mental illness and a grandmother in need of care. If it is possible, presuming this is his / their home, he may need to sell it or take steps to be able to do that - to 1) place grandma in care facility and 2) get a caregiver / live-in to care for the other two.
I am not sure of the mental condition of grandma. Has she been assessed? Dementia?
Make decisions in the best interest of YOU and YOUR family.
You are your priority.
He may want to make changes and be unable to do it. This might be a 'tough love' situation where you need to accept his limitations and feel compassion for him - at a distance.
In addition, how he handles this stress now may be an alarm for how he may handle stressors in the future. With that said, I know - we all know here - how challenging and difficult caregiving / care management is. As I say, we are all in the same boat with different paddles. He is in a very difficult situation.
My heart goes out to both of you. Be firm with him. If you continue on as things are now, you are responsible to you and your family proceed as a result. I know you know this. Do not be blind sighted (sited?) by love. You must love yourself and your own kids first.
And, KNOW that with some distance now - as things move along, it might be possible for the two of you to get back together when the dynamics of the household (his) changes. Everything or mostly everything are shades of gray, not black or white. I believe though in this case what is black and white is how you decide to proceed.
Gena / Touch Matters
I don't think anyone can really tell you what to do with this relationship or what to do about the care situation. We can tell you red flags that we read from you.
That you have been in a relationship and are shacked up with a man for years is a HUGE WAVING RED FLAG. He has never committed to you or your children. You say our family but, he hasn't owned that and his actions prove he doesn't see it as his family.
That he is comfortable to be supported by a woman is another. A real man wouldn't be willing to have a woman support him.
That you and your children have never met his family is the biggest of all. All you know is what he tells you, are you sure he doesn't already have a family living with grandma? What is it he is afraid you will find out about him if you meet his family?
Another one that stands out, you aren't considered family, so you have no voice or opinions. Since his family doesn't know you, this is coming straight from him.
He is using you to play grown up, yet his every action speaks of a dutiful little boy. Not a role model I would recommend for young children. Your kids might not say anything but they know that he doesn't see them as family and that isn't an acceptable situation for them. Life is hard enough without that kind of emotional abuse.
Best of luck dealing with this situation.