My parents always seemed to prefer my brother to me as he is practical and I am academic. Three years ago when my husband retired, my narcissistic mother decided out of the blue to move to AL near us, and has expected us to take over running her life for her since then, even though she is not in particularly bad health.
Maybe my husband has taken over the role of golden child from my brother - who like me is getting more and more exasperated by Mum, whereas my husband meekly does whatever she asks, ignoring the emotional toll it takes on me.
Your mother moved near you because you are the one she has designated throughout life to be the slave to her needs. The golden child is above all of that, your needs and desires are the very last in the family hierarchy.
When the abused child becomes a caregiver it is because they have been conditioned to appease, to avoid conflict, to place themselves last and have never had therapy to understand differently. Somewhere down inside there is still a desperate child longing to finally win the love and respect of the narc parent.
Amen!!! Nailed it!!
If your DH upsets her, Brother may regain his golden shine overnight.
I don't suppose you could move?
You have realized you are drained and exhausted. You also have realized your need for autonomy and space which you rightly deserve. Your mother's current needs seem to be somewhat minimal, but that may change. I suggest right now instilling very firm boundaries. Decide the frequency and duration of contact you can have with your mother. Decide how much "help" you are going to offer and how much you want your husband to participate. If your mother is like mine, she can drain the very life out of you and your husband and anyone else in your family you are willing to serve up to her. Read about boundaries and search youtube, because it literally saved my life. You and your husband deserve peace, and you are not responsible for the emotional and physical well-being of your parent.
My feeling of freedom over the three months of lockdown when we have not been allowed into my mum's place has made me more determined not to go back to how things were, but I am not good at standing up for myself and am worried about whether I will be able to undo 50-odd years of mental/emotional conditioning. I mean to try, though!
If you haven't already, do some research online about being the daughter of a narcissistic mother.
It's very eye opening!!
You sound like many of us.
The classic "over pleasers "!
God bless!
She doesn't even notice. I did 8 months of cancer TX last year and she never called or inquired of anyone how I was. (sick, very, very sick).
When I went to see her, after chemo was over and I had just begun to grow some hair, her first words to me were "Oh, and you used to be so pretty". What a backhanded compliment.
Last week was her 90th birthday. My YS asked us to write her a letter and include good memories and such that we had of growing up. I just. Couldn't.
So I gave her a generic card and called it good. I'm sure YS thinks I was being a prima donna, but I won't lie to mother and pretend I feel like everything is peachy. I wasn't mean, I never AM, but I also do not have to kowtow to her.
I need peace--for myself to heal from a horrible year of being sick, and for my own self protection.
Sad for Y with whom mother lives. My SIL says she and YB fight all the time and he gets really, really angry. They both wish they'd never moved her into their home. 22 years now.
I remain a classic 'overpleaser'. But I choose whom I care for.
I often wonder if the golden child has inherited the personality disorder. I haven’t seen my brother up close during my life except for now while caregiving our parents. His behavior is like mom’s in many ways - including no conscience, lying, manipulative.
No is a complete sentence and is totally acceptable to say.
I just wish he would say he sympathized even if he can't know how I truly feel, and offer me more moral support. If I bring this up he complains that he is 'pig in the middle' and can't please us both, which drives me mad as he took vows to me, not her.
So I grew up feeling insecure. Imperfect. Never up to mother's standards. Always feeling the need to jump thru the fiery hoops to please the mother who would and could never BE pleased. To make mommy happy. To be the good girl who would make mommy proud. And that sort of brainwashing stays with a person throughout their life.
And, as an only child (lucky me), I was the only one around to take charge of my parents' lives as they aged and became ill. My dad was a great guy, but bullied and abused by my mother for 68 years. After he died 5 years ago next week, mother lost her main scapegoat and whipping post and turned all her anger and rage on ME.
So what I do is this: I set boundaries with my mother. I call her 6 evenings per week (she thinks I work full time, ha!) and my DH calls her the other day. We both go to visit her 1x per week for 20 minutes (it's a window visit right now at the Assisted Living Facility where she lives due to COVID19 restrictions) and that's it. I pay her bills, I run her life, I send emails make phone calls, arrange to have a tooth pulled, a doctor visit, order incontinence supplies, EVERYTHING. But on MY terms, from MY desk, at MY convenience. I make the rules and I stick to them like glue.
Otherwise, mother would invade what's left of my life with even MORE negative hostility, nastiness and BS in general.
Let your husband read these responses and then decide how to proceed with the situation accordingly.
Like others, firm boundaries is all I can think of. The nice high, concrete reinforced wall type.
The tricky thing is if Husband says yes when Helenb says no - or if every weekend Husband now has Mother's job list as priority #1. How absolutely infuriating!
I'm having a think on this...
She's in AL. Is it a full service type place? Eg meals, washing, cleaning, hairdressing, podiatry, Doctor appointments all provided?
Bills paid online. Could order new clothing (smalls etc) online. Even shoes.
Can she taxi on own to other appointments she may need?
What sort of 'busy work' is she needing?
My relative described herself as *independant* but clearly was not. The disability service had funding to help *build capacity* but some things just won't be achievable. So I thought why am I stressing out & burning out doing all that? She needs a different long term solution & more helpers, not just me. I'm not good at saying no either but am getting better! Each 'task' I asked 'what are you going to do about that?' Just keep asking her to solve her own problems.
If you suspect *capacity building* is achievable for your Mum to be more independant, you could put energy into that. But if not, deflect or delay her requests. Or outsource! You may find she says I'll just do it myself 😉
We've suggested she do more for herself but there is always an excuse, such as she can't hear to use the phone, the new phone for the deaf that we got her is too complicated, she can't carry the recycling and open the heavy fire door, etc., etc. She has become confused and even more immobile during lockdown, so expecting her to do things is pretty pointless really. What I am trying to do is work out what things I have a duty to do and what I can leave.
If she needs help, she hires help.
We DON'T owe our parents. They are adults and were responsible for planning their old age. Children are not a retirement plan.
If you are a member of a family that doesn't respect your right to your own time, you have no need to explain it to them.
I KNOW that it is hard to say no. Keep working at this in therapy.
And, a movie recommendation? Now, Voyager. Bette Davis. A wonderful tale about a woman who liberates herself from her tyrannical, narcissistic mother. And other things.
"Just say that you won’t be able to continue with the jobs, answer the phone with ‘Sorry I have to go’, don’t visit, and let actions speak rather than words. "
It sounds like your mother needs a higher level of care if she is expected to take out her own recycling. This was the case when my mom was in Independent Living.
My mother, living in this lovely place at 5k per month, would call us about ants in the kitchen and burned out light bulbs. "Call the desk mom" we'd say and change the subject.
If my mother ever became unpleasant with me, I would hang up.
Mum is not living in, Mum is not on the phone demanding to move in daily, Mum is not living in her car parked at your local grocery shop telling all you won't let her in (from a real post I kid you not!). Best of all, the golden guys, Brother & Husband know Mum's style & are not ganging up on you (as the 'girl') to be her #1 girl-everything.
Also on the good list is success breaking through Mum's 'only family will help me' mindset. With bad grace maybe, but accepted. I think it's a status thing. "My daughter will do it. (=she does what I say). "She does EVERYTHING for me". (=she loves me so much).
It's also a trust thing. Who can I trust? Daughter. Now she has to use her social skills to get others to work for her too. But using those social skills is better than losing them! Hearing loss & lack of social contact are two big risk factors for dementia. By accepting outside help she is actually reducing her dementia risk. Another good thing.
Sorry bit rambley... going to get coffee... your situation needs more than saying no more often I feel.
If you haven't done so already, you really need to start working on boundaries. Getting therapy can help as well. Since you're academic, I'd suggest reading books on the impact of personality disorders on both the person having them and children of parents with personality disorders.
It is extremely typical for narcissists to sow division by splitting where in a pair of people, one is good and the other becomes the bad guy. Similarly, triangulated communication is another tool of manipulation to drive a wedge between the two of you. Do not allow your mother to do this. Get those boundaries to protect yourself and your marriage.
I think it was that part of being the golden child is that they should never be asked to do anything, their very existence is enough. Whereas the scapegoat must be constantly doing to prove their worth.
I am an only child so I am almost always the scapegoat but on rare occasions the golden child. But even when I am the scapegoat—which now means I am abusing and stealing from her—I am expected to provide constant care and attention. Fortunately she is in MC now so I do I have to provide much at all, and can end the visit (FaceTime) when the accusations get too bad. Since your mom is in AL, I expect that a lot of her care is being provided and you can direct her back to the facility for some of her demands. You can just say no. It is a complete sentence.
Good luck. Narcissistic parents are always difficult and their aging makes it no easier.
Does your husband resent the current situation?
My sister arrived in a wheelchair taxi to a family event but didn't bring an aide. Assumed family would push her chair, cut her food, assist in the bathroom. (Family always helped before when she walked & was independant with bathroom but now functional decline). I had already said no, bring an aide. But there she was.
It's like your Mother arrived & did the same - but to your whole life, not just a lunch!
I think it riled me so much because there was no request. Just assumption. Just pushed everything onto her chosen helper.
So like you I forced more home help & that was rebuked but now successful. Basically I promoted myself from cleaner, maid (the rest..) to only driver for medical appointments. Until one week there was doctor, dentist, x-ray & podiatrist. I found I was living HER life. What happened to mine?? I sought advice which was to reduce to ONE day a week. Whatever doesn't fit - too bad - would be her problem. But easier said than done! Extra dental/doctor apt, a fall, taxi no show - always something.
So time to reassess the bigger picture. A review of total needs. Diagnosis? Living arrangements no longer meeting her needs. AL was recommended by Doctor at an arranged casual chat. (Still haven't got a more formal assessment done but will be broached as 'seeing what help would be useful for you').
I think maybe that's an issue here too. Mother can't actually be very independant where she is so leaning heavily on family. Not just for practical stuff either. Seems to have placed all responsibility for her social & emotional needs on them too. That's what's so crushing! If you say no, this won't stop as her needs are still there.
So to end my waffle, I'd say go for a chat with the Doctor about a needs assessment. Mum may be a long way from NH care but need more that her current AL. A continuum care/aging in place type with more services & social groups provided. With physio to learn how to push her wheelchair short distances - if that's a permanent part of her life now this will be a big adjustment, so councelling too. Somewhere that meets more of her needs.
Why does it create an emotional toll on you for things your husband does for mom? If he is complaining, then help him create boundaries for mom. Clearly evaluate what she can do on her own and stop doing those things. You are creating an invalid. Every time you do one task for her, it becomes yours and eventually she really won't be able to do it. If she can walk, she gets up to go get what she wants. If she can wash and fold clothes, it is exercise to continue doing so. If she's not good with finances, then take it over for her. Tell her why she must do for herself. The less we do today is what we cannot do in a month.
You will need to learn boundaries, not just emotional separation, and there is a difference. One is healthy for you. The other is not.