I am in my early 50s, divorced and live across the country from my dad and older brother because of parenting custody laws in the state that I moved to when I was still married.
My older brother who is divorced too, cared for my mom before she passed 6 years ago and then moved into my dad's house and has cared for him 24/7 for the last 3 years.
During this time, my brother gave up a career that he enjoyed and has been absorbed further and further into dad's controlling and narcissistic ways.
Dad is 87 and has begun to fall at least once a week and become increasing confused. He is incontinent and absolutely will not agree to anyone coming into his home or going into any group type care. He could afford help and probably ALF but is bound and determined to stay in his home until they haul him out on a stretcher. Brother fully believes that if he set a deadline and left dad- he would be prosecuted by the law when Dad passes alone in the house.
Two years ago I had our family minister take dad to tour some assisted living homes nearby and dad completely refused to move. I've urged brother to hire a PT caregiver- he checked into this and then said, Dad's so difficult, no one would put up with him.
Recently, dad has had hernia surgery, recurring staph infections and fell in church and hit his head on the pew and paramedics had to take him to the ER where he needed 7 staples in the back of his head.
My brother believes he is in prison- counts the nights he sleeps on dad's couch and cries. Normally he is stoic, capable and very independent and now he appears to be in a severe depression. He did see a psychiatrist a few years ago but refuses to take any depression meds or get counseling for himself.
I told him I can fly out to visit next week and his response to me was "Absolutely not! I can't handle company at this time."
I am SO HURT that he now classifies me at COMPANY instead of his SISTER!
I am so hurt that he completely rebuffs any efforts I make to try to get them help, resources or set boundaries. I also feel guilty that I live so far away- I've been raising 3 kids the last 10 years on my own and work quite a bit to try to make ends meet since I am not getting child support any more and have not remarried.
Would appreciate your thoughts about what we are going through...
So many elders become childlike, or frightened easily or are so overmedicated they become easily manipulated at times.. It is a disgrace we tolerate such abuse and disempower any witnesses or family witnesses it all comes off as a battle for stuff, not right and wrong.
It does happen.
I have a very little tolerance for the disbelief that such occurres a lot or the focus on gratitude overshadowing this serious worldwide issue.
It is hard to prove, more so when shut out from access to information, and or the elder. You are naive, to think otherwise. I stated myself and other family saw this unravel, and morph into abusive as nothing changed, but got worse and worse.
It was too late and very hard to prove,after the fact as evidence was destroyed. Again I have stated this and if it seems "simple as picking up a phone" trust me it is not. I wish it were. The net is full of people and their loved ones betrayed and abused by the "system" in place now reharding elder care.
Not everyone walks in the same shoes, and many, cant complicated and agonizing issues are at stake.
If someone who is caregiving is neglecting the elderly parent/parents than you call the police who in turn involve social services.
Seriously, if someone thinks the caregiver is neglectful or abusive, take some action. It's as easy as picking up the phone.
Otherwise, it's BS.
Let's get real, in the majority of cases the caregiving falls on one adult child, usually a woman, usually single. They get no help because the others don't want to help or that adult child "chose it", because they were the one who offered help first, not knowing that down the road they owned the patent on helping mom and dad.....LOL.
If someone thinks a caregiver is being abusive or neglectful than take action.
Neither sis or I had the money to fight this. Perfect crime, right now to cremation of Dad, no proof he was over-medicated and oxygen with held.
It is true, money (really wasnt any really)does weird stuff to some. Land immediately put up for sale Mom dumped and left at hospital. We can do nothing, no power. She still thinks the world of him, she is blind regarding her favored son.
Hurts like h*ll..have had to accept it. Laws is without poa or in the will status...nothing can be done as long as elder doesn't see "Reality".
Perfect crime.
In retro spec I can now look back and see the role I played somewhat in MY own isolation at the time. Energy levels were at an all time low.cant see the forest for the trees.
I was also IN person with my Dad, fighting brothers "attitudes"every step of the way.
I am like "good golly you have a line of people willing and trying to help here and your issues are faulting that"
Later we all found out why,besides being a jerk..he was insistant on isolating Dad so that Dad wouldnt spill the beans brother had drug him drugged up to change his will. Bullied him into it. Shocking and abusive.
He had lived there free, and now that might change if Dads other will stayed intact for a three way split.
My sis and I could have cared less at that time about the stuff, we were shocked at how he abused Dad. We were there offering respite, brother Refused it and changed his will dumped him in the home to die alone. P d q
Total sick time of Dad? End of August till October. Caregiver burn out? Ah, no, pure greed.
When Dad got sick and couldnt eat solids she didnt know what to do - she is no cook - if it dont come out of a tin or packet or frozen you dont eat where mum is concerned. I wasnt there to care during the week I lived 4 hours away but I rang every day to speak to them both and listen to mum moan - because she needed to moan - this was WAY outside her comfort zone. Then at weekends I went down prepared a host of pureed meals - all meat and each veg pureed separately, and some soups for him to have for the following week. Mum went out and got the break she needed.
When my daughter went to stay with mum after Dad passed (her choice I might add no one asked her to and knowing my mum I did advise against it) then my Mum started to be very demanding. My daughter wouldn't acknowledge she wasn't coping, I spoke to her at least once a day to make sure she was OK and then came the shattering news, despite all my support, my daughter had a complete nervous breakdown. This was my trigger. I gave up work almost immediately - contractually I couldnt walk from the job but ASAP and came down to care for Mum, sold my flat at a HUGE loss (the market had just slumped) and my daughter bought her own house which I am so glad she did. Five years on daughter is almost well again although still struggles from time to time.
She now rings ME every day to make sure I'M OK so please dont think being absent means don't care it doesn't; it means don't caregive for some (or can't caregive due to other commitments - like paying a mortgage or loking after children for others) or in my daughter's case was burned out - simple as
Now am I attacking anyone here, no. But many times it is done. Last minute will changes.sense of entitilement, elder fears due to confusion or loss of memory etc. It is VERY real.
I certainly understand the never ending costs for eldercare or how picking up incidentals, gas to drs etc occur and the elders resources may be tapped if the have any to spare to balance out these costs, BUT. Some caretakers feel super entitled and do begin to lose sight of whose money it is etc. It happens.
And yes. There are many children who get off doing NOTHING,yet show up with hand out at will time.
Unfortunately there is lots of middle ground here too. To assume the worst in others is fraught with problems. To overelevate self, is also damgerous.
We never know ALL Circumstances, but POA is way overrated and families go on long after parents pass.
People really need to grow up quick in these circumstance. Elder care is a time bomb ticking as baby boomers (me) are getting there now. It is going to be the issue and it needs much more done to lessen the impact of the current problems their children will face.
One issue clearly is government mandates that elders 70 and over MUST withdrawl all savings before age 70. Many elders that planned well and are expecting to live off the interest of their savings cannot survive long if they have to withdrawl all interest earning monies.
Another is being forced into medicad by such legislation and current hospital and hospice policies.
We are trashing all options to the elder and their families to survive old age, their healthy financial and physical survival in their sr years.
In Tx there are things besides trust funds that protect elders life savings and homes. The are not well advertised, but essential to allow elders good care, and not to become or force their families into destitution.
Lets put our anger in letters to our represenatives to make elder issues more pallative to all.
And yes, there comes a point where there is choice. To be mature, adult and realistic. You cannot avoid this forever. It IS the fundamental issue. It is fraught with choices and options, and frankly if you are resenting it that much or your siblings time to step back and see if YOU, your guilt or pride or caketaker burnout are somehow related to the issues.
People would be shocked outta their socks at the blatant abuses and cruelty that were going on. Could I stop any of it? Believe me I tried, but he had POA, and clearly my mother had been convinced by him ( probably by threats to abandon her ( and he backed this up by doing it to Dad first) in a horrible, uninvestigated nursing home.
I. was smack in the middle of an expensive and animosity filled divorce from a 37 year marriage, and had a CHILD of 16 at home needing me, her parent,to care for too.
I stood to find myself homeless due to divorce issues that insisted be given my sole attention and my older girls were having babies and needed me AND Irishboy, I had a child at 41! That is really not unusual nowdays at all.
So does this mean I didnt love or care for my Dad. No. I was very involved in spite of my own immediate and concerning issues. Spent tons of my own money and had been through out parents elder years before they got old and ill. I had little to spare after divorce, yet still spent as brother wouldnt part with a dime, parents supported him the majority of his adult life FREE.
Of course I will get my dander up to anyone making uneducated assumptions about others. Been there done that.
I can clearly see (as would anyone who read up on these issues) polarizing based on faullty and inexperienced or immature typecasting and assumptions as it serves serves no one. Chastizing based on one frame of reference is rude, mean, counter productive and polarizing.
We all have our stories and all love our parents. Nuff said.
But suppose what I really appreciated was her, hm, relationship? with me, as in looking to me as at least one who did care even though I wasn't the one who was physically there. She understood about having other responsibilities other places.
And did not see me as doing nothing just because I wasn't there, just as she also didn't see him as doing everything just because he was. But she was also very good at gradually getting him to do more that needed to be done if he was going to be there. But definitely not to make him feel like there was no point in him being there at all.
I do feel like I may have come across the other way because of bringing up the times I did go but there were definitely times I didn't feel I could and I'm so grateful she understood that because there were times I was when grandson definitely didn't want me to; he never actually denied me coming; actually he'd call and want me to come; he just wouldn't want to stay as long as I did when I did go, which not sure if that's quite the same thing or not.
But still I wasn't just staying; I was staying until certain things were worked out that she understood but he didn't, like getting the home health care arranged when he came out of the hospital; could he have done it? maybe.
Should I have let him? what about when it wasn't getting done like it was supposed to be?
Do I just walk away from my dad? what about when it turns out the home health agency sends what turns out to be a social worker but under another guise, truly, was that deliberate or just a coincidence? She supposedly was there just to set up telemetry but they send out a social worker for that? Especially when there'd already been issues at the hospital with the social worker there not wanting to send him home with him being the caregiver - do you not think they might have talked with them and told them? Especially since he was only allowed to on a trial basis? But yet he tells me that she tells him that I'm the problem? While she's telling me that she'll put me in the same role as the housekeeper does; in other words that she'll make sure to report to me?
And, yes, I can imagine how it must feel to be on the other side. But it was somewhat because of what had happened in the hospital; it definitely took more than one person there; that's why I stayed there and, no, don't believe he would have if I hadn't it; he didn't see it necessary but then he also didn't like the way they were handling it either but also he didn't even want to handle it initially if it stayed that way when he came home; they didn't even want to let him come home at all because of it; that was the real reason for the trial, to see how he was going to do. And I do think you've hit; the issue is guilt, now guilt for what, not being able to do it all, but why such an issue....
He was shocked when he came into the hospital room and saw what was needing to be done but he blamed them for it. He never expected to have to be doing that.
So the issue was how was he going to handle it, now that just being there was possibly no longer going to be enough? Would he do or be able to and if not, would he say so or be too proud to or, yes, in his case, once he'd been, he felt, basically forced into being that, want dad's house too much to, which found out he did badger dad to give him; just that he never would.
Know how heated he got after dad was gone about it; I wonder how heated he got with dad in trying to get him to do it before.
I didn't know that hospice could and would actually quit but I do know that had things gone differently his housekeeper, that I still stay in touch with, just finally really leveled with me and told me she was getting ready to report him; she had just hated to. Not really sure what got through to him but think she must have finally; maybe she even told him.
But he did start doing more; it was just way too little, way too late.
He wanted to just be there, nothing more. Dad wound up being severely disappointed in having him come but that's where I just don't know at that point what we would have done. Do know it's created some real issues.
What I feel essentially wrong with this situation is the utter disbelief that anyone can "take care" or show care unless they are physically there.
This belief system can cause huge problems in actually pulling together with the resources everyone has to manage care as a family refusing to become poloriazed, as realistically most siblings cannot just "drop everything"as much as they may want to.
I see a common stalemate with the opposite end and extremes the do it all vs the do nothings.
I also see "locked in " belief systems" really affecting caregivers and those "shut out".
Not every situation is fixable, true but many are. The thing to do is to get people less polarized, more into, doing what they can. Not in a damned if you do damned if you dont situation.
In this thread a woman is being typecast as not caring because she isnt physically there. Wrong. She wants to be there yet is being denied access.
Wrong.
This is the issue. Catch 22, she has tried to help in ways she can, and was rebuffed. Who wouldnt just give up?
This woman didnt and shouldnt. There are red flags all over and to me it is easy to see the real problem. Caregiver in trouble and yes, he has brought some of that on himself by negating "solutions".Or working with realities that HE is losing his capacity to cope. Perhaps a mature person could see that. He cannot.
Being on both sides of this issue myself, I know the dynamics. This is Not a job for one person. Ever. 1 stubborn person can negate the help he/she might have gotten for relief if he/she could think outside the guilt, I can do it all box.
Just like people think parenting is a snap, until they have kids. Uh ,no.
People that have NEVER cared for someone arent always prepared for the down and dirty of actually doing it. There is no job training but on the job.
You cannot assume that just because someone is PHYSCIALLY THERE, that they are doing a good job of it. Some do many dont, but are too proud, or have their eye on the prize(parents home or stuff) to admit it.
It can get very heated, to get real about what is really involved.
My Dad, had a horrible situation, and hospice was threatening to stop coming due to it, but brother let his pride get in the way of a solution. Just wouldnt hear anyones input at all.
Nor did HE do anything toward the goal of actually caring for Dad passed the end of his own self vested misguided nose.
Pride ruled the day. That didnt help our Dad one bit.And destroyed ALL goodwill in the family.