My father-in-law recently had open heart surgery,,he is 85 and wasn't in that great of a shape going into this surgery. Now they are telling us that he isn't recovering as was hoped for and expected. He is on a ventilator and is in a care facility, his daughter is making all the decisions and does not keep us updated, which for me is frustrating. I encourage My husband to go and see his Dad sooner than later as we don't know the outcome of this situation. His sisters are in touch and Neil doesn't want to disrupt their plans.
I appreciate that it is frustrating not being kept in the loop, but I expect your SIL has her hands full; she may also assume that if you want to know what's happening you will ask. So do ask. Text enquiries are best, because they can be answered when time allows and you don't risk inadvertently butting in at a bad time.
Will you go with him?
I am sorry your father in law is in such rough shape. My late Aunt was in the hospital with pneumonia. I was the only family member close by. I was not the health care proxy. The doctors gave me very little information for legal reasons. She was there for 2 weeks and I took the trip to see her almost every day. I called every relative and let them know she was in rough shape. I had no way of knowing the outcome. She died within 2 weeks.
I would suggest that if your FIL is in rough shape and is on a ventilator your husband should get over to the hospital ASAP to see what is going on. It sounds like a precarious situation.
It doesn't matter what his sisters say. They may have no way of knowing what the outcome will be. At the very least your husband will see his father. Hopefully he will recover.
Encourage him to go, and go with him if you can.
Alert his sisters that he is coming and make that he doesn't rely on them for lodging or transportation or meals. Doing so will make his visit much smoother.
As over whelming as it is for you both I think it is probably more overwhelming for the sisters that are close by. They are faced with decisions and I am sure they would love the support.
I sure hope this is a supporting family and not one that is fractured......
And a side thought.... I am guessing that the sisters or at least one of them is close by and at the hospital often. If that is the case depending on what her life is like if there is a way to send her a gift card to a local restaurant to thank her for the support that she is giving your father in law it would be one less dinner that she has to fix after a day at the hospital
If at all possible I also think that you should go with your husband when he visits. Even if it is just for a short time. You will be there to support your husband.
That is my situation. My brother and mom have had no relationship over most of his lifetime. He and I are close, he defers decision making to me regarding mom. I'm sure when mom is dying he will not come and he has said he has made peace with that decision and I am comfortable of his decision and can appreciate how he feels.
Telll your husband you will go with him and support him; but if he doesn't want to go, that is his decision.
If he doesn't go, and his father dies, I think he'll regret it. If he does go, no matter how bad it is, I think he'll feel good that he faced it down and that he was there for his father. So keep encouraging him to see his father and tell him you'll be right there at his side.
That being said, after reading some of the comments here, if your husband comes from an abusive home, all bets are off. But if he feels shut out or intimidated by his sisters, or afraid to see his dad on a ventilator, those aren't good enough reasons for him to rob himself of seeing his dad alive. Of course, that's just my opinion, and I have no right to speak for him, I would just hate for him to have regrets.
Aisling
He should go and "make peace" as it were, despite what his sisters say. This is also HIS father, and he will kick himself forever if he does not have a final goodbye, or at least some kind of closure.
Sounds like your hubby is about my hubby's age--men of that age are often not in touch with feelings at all and simply compartmentalize everything and decide to deal with it later, or never. I know my MIL will pass away, hubby will probably be out of town and I know he'll feel so much guilt over all the things he didn't say or do for her. Try to be supportive of your hubby, this is scary for some men. He definitely should make an effort to get to see his dad---and you can help him.
Good luck. This is a trying and emotional time. My hubby watched his father fail slowly, then finally die and he still says "If only he'd fought that last bout of pneumonia he'd still be alive"----he hasn't accepted his dad's death and it's been over 12 years.
I'll come at it from a different perspective, when my mother-in-law Lay Dying in the hospital of pneumonia COPD, and CHF, her only daughter (a Nurse) who lived only 200 mile away, was calling ME for updates, and wanting Me to tell her if Her Mom was going to to die, and was she Severe enough that she should come to see her. With every phone call, I told her to get her butt up her, and see her Mom, before it was too late, as I was in No position to determine that, and I didn't want to be blamed later on. Her Mom did die, she missed seeing her Mother still alive, and she came the day after. Once here, she sat in her parents apartment, while her Dad, her brother (my husband) and I, all ran around like chickens, picking out her casket, headstone, arranging for the the funeraland the Minister, writing and preparing the Eulogy and the Obituary, making up the Memorial cards, making up a picture Memorial, buying the flowers, and my cleaning and preparing my home, yard and patio for the after wake, all set for 2 days henceand the list goes on. She did absolutely nothing to help us, not a written word, a memory, a flower, a card, she didn't make any food, or offer assistance in any way, not even a Thank you, and I was the one who had to remove her Mothers jewelry from herdead body at the hospital, after she had passed away, which the sister recieved.
While she was held up in my in laws home, she took that opportunity (disguised as "Helping"), and took absolutely every piece of my MIL's clothing, purses, shoes, and personal belongings, took what she wanted, and loaded that into her car, and the rest was put into a big pile, in the middle of my FIL's livingroom, for us to deal with, after the funeral and services. She didn't lift a finger to help us arrange for the rest to get bagged up for donation.
At fhat time, 13 years ago, I didn't understand the dysfunction that had been going on in this family since the very beginning, and never dreamed that her own daughter would have acted this way. My husband's brother only showed up the day of the funeral, and also gave no help or support.
I'm NOT suggesting that this is in any way simular to your family situation, but in my opinion, you should encourage your husband to see his Dad while he is still alive, but also to accompany him to the visit, and while there, offer every type of help and assistance that you both can give while you are there. It appears that he won't be long for this world, so think about how you can assist in things that will be coming up in the near future. But under No circumstances, should he overstep his bounds, but only come at the situation from helping standpoint, as his sisters probably have the situation well in hand.
And lastly, as others have suggested, be appreciative of all the work his sisters have done, as their lives have probably been turned upside down caring for their Dad these last few months, and possibly years! If he is in a position to send gift cards to Starbucks or Subway, and other lunch type places, or just cashin a thank you card, to help with the expensive parking at the hospital, he should consider this, as these gestures of kindness go a long way to heal emotional wounds, and are a nice show of appreciation. Its not the sister's fault, his distance from his Dad, if there is any, and any long standing family pain, will eventually have to be addressed, at the funeral. It would be nice if he were able to heal any animosity now, before it come to funeral planning.
Your sister-in-laws have no right to keep you in the dark. I understand they're stressed, but that's another story. They need to be responsible towards their brother and respectful of him as well.
The bottom line is that you cannot change them, however. You and your husband can change your disposition though.
Your husband should go asap! No hesitation, no questions asked. He should stay with someone he trusts or at a hotel near the hospital. He should go whenever he wants, not when his sisters want. You are free to go with him as you are part of the family! You have all the right to go. That is your decision and well as your husband's.
Fear gets us nowhere in life.
Be there for the family, especially for your husband's father. Show your love and support.
Hope your father-in-law doesn't suffer.
Take care of yourselves! Wishing you the best!
Tina ;)
But, the reason might not be what anyone would expect.
Have you asked him, why he does not want to visit his Dad? [...guy-thing warning: lost of them will just keep saying "nothing" or "fine" when there really is something needing addressed, or really not fine].
If he had bad relationship with his Father [sounds like it, from your post], then allow it be OK for him to NOT go visit...that would actually show you being very supportive of him....unless he feels there is any chance to get some kind of closure...sometimes there can be a last-minute visit and closure.
But if he's just afraid to see his Dad in such bad shape, then he really should go, because he really cares, but is just afraid to face age/infirmity in someone he loves.
Not everyone is able to talk-out past issues with a relative, when one of them is really sick/dying. But for some, that works OK, and there might be a good closure.
I find it very hard to keep distant from my dysfunctional family, even though I know how bad things can get. I finally "got 10%", and stopped trying to "belong" when there was no real hope of anything like that. Had to really think hard about how I will feel when Mom dies, because we have not been able to be in the same room for so many years. And thinking also, how my not going to visit, not going for a death vigil, and not going to a funeral or service...how that will affect my siblings...since they are part and parcel with Mom's behaviors, I've had to keep distant.
Sometimes it really is the better part of valor to "just not go there".