Received a call from hospice that mother in law was put in hospice and they didn’t think she had much longer to live. We were told days possibly weeks max. Hubby and I flew half way across the country to see what was going on. Completely unaware that cancer was back and nothing could be done.) Hubby has a job and could not take time off to stay with his mother, after discussing things I said I would stay. She wanted to stay in her home, and we understood and we were willing to accommodate that wish. Nine months later and I am still here. I’m upset that I am at the beck and call of his mother. I’ve only been out of the house three times on my own in the time I’ve been here. I’m also taking care of her dog that is not house broke, and will only come near me if I’m feeding it. Am I selfish for wanting to go home (my home) and telling MiL that she needs to come to my house if she wants someone to take care of her?
Mil can be admitted to a facility near her home or near yours. Those are the only choices on offer.
You're not wrong to say enough. No one should expect a DIL to move to another state to take care of their MIL. What about your job? Your family? Your life?
Tell your MIL gently but plainly what your terms are. You will not remain living in her house. So if she wants to remain there she will have to have 24-hour caregivers.
If she wants to be closer to you and her son, she can move into a care facility near to where your home is. Don't move her into your home. That will be a choice you and your husband will regret.
Talk to her and to the hospice people. She has choices but they might not be exactly what she wants and demands.
Goodness. I order you to go home as soon as humanly possible, and definitely by Black Friday.
Why hasn’t your husband intervened here?
to be honest, this is absolute BS. GO.HOME.
time to leave.
Almost a year ago, MIL had a fall and was in the hospital for several weeks, disoriented and fragile. She recovered and went to rehab.
YS made the 'promise' that her mom would NEVER GO INTO A NURSING HOME OF ANY KIND. (Also promising that her brothers were also 100% on board with that.)(They were not consulted).
She was released to in home Hospice almost 9 months ago. Given maybe 3 weeks.
After kicking out every single CG that came to her, YS was burning up from stress. She begged the brothers to help. Thinking it would be a couple more months, at most, they agreed.
It has been 9+ months of what I would call a never ending kind of hell.
Amazing how well someone who is supposedly at death's door can do when every single need, want or desire is met immediately.
My DH and I talk about traveling, but we can't go anywhere. Because of his mother.
I fully expect her to live another year.
Leave. Just get your ducks in a row and leave.
My DH has the 'power' to have my MIL placed in a NH. He would never, under any circumstances do that. So this is our retirement.
It's a daily battle in my own heart to not grow to hate this woman who is so mean to my DH that he comes home dispirited and depressed. It wasn't enough she abused him when he was a child--she's still at it 70 years later.
Please stand up for yourself. My DH does this out of love for his SISTER, not his mother.
Good Luck.
what you describe has been my retirement too. Endless trips to NYC with longer stays even with both parents in the NH because now we are worried about their home being empty.
My stress and anxiety are through the roof. Hoping my mother can get on Medicaid and continue to be in this facility with my dad for the remainder of her days. We won’t know until January.
I wish this would be over soon but it won’t. It just keeps getting worse and worse if that’s even possible. I will probably go first .
A friend’s mother died yesterday, peacefully in her chair at home. No self sacrificing slog on the part of the daughter, no hospitalization. I’m so damn jealous.
It is not selfish in my opinion to re-assess the situation. I think it is smart, practical & very necessary.
MIL may wish to stay in her home - that's an understandable thing to want. Hopefully you can discuss this together with honesty. Discuss what is really important now.
- Staying in her home (IF this is possible) eg hiring aides
- Having 24/7 support (facility)
- Or being close with you (in which case she moves with you to your area or home)
MIL's choice may well be as Barb stated: facility nearby or facility near you. I'll add the 3rd option (if you still wish it) home care in YOUR home.
Home care by you in HER home is ending.
You retuning home will be set. Be non-negotioable. It is not within MIL's power to decide.
Nine months was your gift.
Now you can work towards what your 'new gift' is. 💝
Think about what you want to offer. Then offer it.
Set your end date. Stick to it.
It's time to take your life back and tell hubby and your MIL that you're going back home by the end of the month, and that your MIL can be placed in either a hospice facility or skilled nursing facility in her home town or in your home town, but under NO circumstances let her move in with you.
You've already paid your dues, and if hubby wants her in your home you tell him that since it's his mother that he can take FMLA and he can do all the hands on caregiving, since you've done it for the past 9 months.
So put your big girl panties on and tell both hubby and MIL that you've had enough!
If she is, then that is the option for her.
If she isn't, give her the date you will be leaving and help her arrange her care options where she is; have hubby come again to help in that arrangement if necessary.
Speak to hubby and decide if you both want to take her to your home to pass, or if she'd be better off in managed care at this point.
You've given more than 99% of daughter in laws would have given, so be proud of your selflessness in this situation. Your hubby owes you a debt of gratitude and a nice vacation after this is all behind you.
All the best.
Somehow days turned into weeks and weeks turned into months. If you aren’t careful months could end up being a year or more.
What has your husband said about all of this? Does he expect you to continue to stay in his mom’s house until she dies?
Have you told him that you are at the end of your rope? I know that you love your husband but I would be wondering if he cared about how hard this is for you.
You are one person. You cannot continue to do the job of an entire staff. In a facility each person works their shift and then they go home. They don’t spend the night and work 24 hour shifts. They don’t work for weeks and months with no end in sight.
Your mother in law can be cared for in a facility. The only other option is to pay for private caregivers. You will have to hire more than one person to care for her.
What is your mother in law’s financial situation? Can she pay for additional help while you are with her so that you can take a break? You’re running yourself ragged.
Your MIL and your husband have taken advantage of your kindness to stay and help out for awhile. If this had only been a temporary situation like you thought it would be, it wouldn’t have been nearly as hard as what you are going through now.
Research to see if an end of life hospice facility is available in her area, or if she is able to travel and you want her near your home then look there too.
If you can’t find one then other arrangements will have to be made.
I am so sorry that you have endured this much grief.
I hope this situation is resolved soon.
As one who didn't say "ENOUGH"
I spent 8 years caring for my mom who was only supposed to live at MOST 15 months due to brain cancer. I had an autistic 10 year old, a full time job and my mom to balance with zero help. I accepted the responsibility begrudgingly, as my mother was an abusive alcoholic so no one in my family wanted to help and she refused long term care. If your in law has their mind or the ability to to refuse LTC or make you feel guilty, then even if you have to leave, In law will eventually realize they need help and hire that care! Individuals save for years only to act as if they NEED it in the afterlife. They can't take it with them in the end. If the in law is not financially set, then allow them to spend down and go on State Medicaid.
I say please, for the love of yourself and your sanity, go home and allow the in law to eventually accept their limitations and enter a care facility. I don't know if your husband is an only child, but I had sisters, aunts and family members who made me feel selfish for the mere mention of putting mom in a facility. So, I kept caring for her, it broke me down in a way no human being should. She refused to get out of bed, take a shower, take meds appropriately, etc. and hospice was VERY little assistance, visiting 1x a week. I cleaned her rear, I cleaned her wounds and did everything just like one would care for an infant child. Sadly, she could do it for herself and refused!! (I call this the "success in failure" mentality)
I urge you to put yourself first! You have already gone over and above. How? Set a date, no negotiations, stick to your principles, as if you are quitting a job, get a plane ticket and go home. If your spouse is mad, then tough!!
This is your in law, not your parent and NOT your responsibility to bear alone! You are being taken advantage of, whether it is intentionally or not. Please save yourself while you can! It WILL get worse and you will be way more resentful that you are now. This, I promise. Good luck my friend. I have been there, it is a lonely feeling. Please do not accept the current situation as the only option. You don't have to and you deserve better!
MIL should pay for caregivers to come in and help out. (please note I said MIL pays..not you or your husband)
You can ask for a Respite break. MIL would be transferred to a Hospice In Patient Unit or other facility that can manage her care. That Respite can be about 1 week.
You can look into Hospice close to you and have mom transferred to another Hospice.
And just how in the hell does someone with 2 weeks to live survive another 9 months? I thought Hospice was supposed to be just pain mediation?
I can’t imagine the OP not being angry with her husband for expecting her to do this.
The only difference would be that her husband would be a firsthand witness.
Well, that is only if the mother in law shows who she is in front of her son. Often times, people will only show their true colors to the caregivers. With others they put on a front.
I have been puzzled by this behavior until I realized that they have to keep someone on the hook so they can get what they want. They can’t displease everyone because then no one would have any empathy for them.
This behavior makes it even more difficult for the caregiver. Often they aren’t believed when they speak up because the elder appears to be so helpless and sweet.
You're not selfish at all! You have given up 9 months of your life to take care of this woman. You deserve to be back in your own home and with your husband.
The error in your thinking is that you want to tell MIL that she should come to your house if she wants someone to take care of her. However, if you think that is going to make things easier/happier/better for you, you have another think coming.
If you get her in there, you won't get her out unless it's feet first. Until then (with husband oh-so-busy with his job), you're on the hook. She gets worse, the dog ruins all your carpets, and you still won't be able to get out of the house on your own.
You must find a placement for MIL and get out of Dodge. Don't depend on MIL to help find one. Don't depend on husband because he's probably happy as all get out that you're doing the heavy lifting. Talk with the head honcho at hospice immediately. Ask for options. Don't bother to talk with the aides, because they're not in a position to advise you about policy, logistics, or medical aspects of how MIL has managed to survive this long.
That's what to do about you, MIL, hospice and getting back to your own life. I don't know what you should do about the dog. If you're in Florida, you could drop it off near an alligator pond. Dogs disappear there all the time. I'd suggest a shelter, but they're overloaded and, sadly, no one wants to adopt a non-housebroken surly canine with a bad attitude. Or a mother-in-law with same.
As far as siblings, there are none, nor is there any close family members in the area. If she decides to stay then that is her decision. Is she strong enough to make the trip? I honestly don’t know. The hospice nurses are dumbfounded that she is still alive. To be honest so am I. One hospice nurse called me so we could talk and informed me it would be soon since she was declining fast, that was over a month ago. That was the reason weeks turned into months, she is defying all the norms even while showing the signs that the end is near. Today, she wants to go to the funeral home to make sure all arrangements are made and finalized. Does she finally realize that the end is near? Does she feel that time is catching up and she’s going to die soon? I don’t know, only time will tell. I do know that I’m going home, and she needs to come to terms with her situation and make some hard choices.
Don't fall for the she could be dying anytime bull crap and continue to hold on just one more week, indefinitely. As you know the months can and will just roll by and you will wake up on day and another year will have passed.
Great MIL wants to start making her funeral arrangements. That does not mean she is dying. More than likely she senses a reckoning coming with you staying there any longer and is trying to appease and guilt you and her son to continue with this craziness.
Why not do that now, get her placed in respite and go home. Then call Hospice and tell them you have chosen not to return so MIL will need to stay in the home under Hospice care. Its not abandonment because she is safe and cared for.
Your life is your own. What is wrong with your husband? He could have used the Family Medical Leave Act to get things settled with his mother.
About his Wife being absent so long?
About his Wife providing the hands-on care for his Mother's?
Are there deep cultural, generational or expectations here?
I ask, as these influences may be holding you in place?
Sometimes people write in with a 'caregiving' problem but it is underpinned by other issues. It can also uncover the need for some clearer communication with their spouse. (I may be wrong, but thought I'd ask).
Do you remember how to pack your suitcase, calling a taxi or Uber to the airport?
You could be home by Friday.
Traveling mercies.
Her husband doesn’t seem to care about his wife being his mom’s servant!
She should go to a spa and get the works! This woman deserves to treat herself.
She is still as demanding as ever. Hubby sees what she has been pulling and has intervened so her demands has lessened. Hospice in my home state has started working on getting her VA benefits, more to give me respite from being on call 24/7 with hubby doing most of the care when he gets home from work.
Hospice has informed us her tube feedings are no longer being absorbed by her body and to stop the tube feeding. Her liquid intake is less than 16 ounces a day. Her blood pressure is low, with breathlessness occurring whenever she takes a few steps. She is constantly asking for morphine for the pain. Hospice nurse was in yesterday and is returning today. He believes that she is at the end stage now, I will take a wait and see attitude since I was told that almost a year ago.
I do know that I will be starting my dream job at the beginning of the year, and hubby will have to hire someone to come in and care for his mother, since I no longer will be available to do so. It may appear cruel and or selfish, but I am not cutout to be a caregiver, nor do I want to care for a selfish woman who resents me for (making) her move from her home. I am looking into long term care insurance for hubby and I, there is no way I will allow my children to put through caregiving for us at the end of our lives. It is unfair and not right to force your kids to put their lives on hold and become serfs to aging parents.
There is no perfect time to say enough is enough.
You stepped up and gave her a huge blessing, it doesn't matter she didn't die in a certain building, it matters that she had you and her son because of your wise decision to go home and bring her along.
May The Lord give you all grieving mercies and peace during this change of life's seasons.
Best of luck and happiness in your dream job!