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.
What is his emotional weakness that she saw and now manipulates? What is yours?
Does he complain?
Does he justify her behavior? Does he feel duty bound?
I was always the whipping post but I was dutiful and loyal, I tried very hard to do the right thing it regardless of my feeling. It never paid off with more love and respect from her but it ultimately made me stronger and able to set boundaries and reject use and abuse by others. Nevertheless, in the end I loved my mother she gave me life, so in the end it was me that sat next to her 8 hours a day every days in the nursing home and held her in my arms when she passed. And I had peace in my heart after grieving because she was never able to really love me but I know what I gave to her let her know she was loved, but you describe my relationship with my mother and siblings. She loves you in her own strange narcissistic way. Hold on to that and the fact that you are a person if value worthy if your husbands time, attention, and affectionate love, support, and loyalty.
What is his emotional weakness that she saw and now manipulates? What is yours?
Does he complain?
Does he justify her behavior? Does he feel duty-bound?'
I have asked him these things but got no helpful reply. All he said was that he can't bear conflict - even though avoiding it with her led to our having a fight one day when I felt ill and unable to cope with what I saw as his putting her first. He is overconscientious and dutiful and likes to feel useful, at work, church or anywhere - he lacks confidence in himself so maybe obtains it from feeling that others need him. He does complain a bit, but not enough to stop him running when she calls. He doesn't have the 50+ years of baggage that I have and he feels sorry for my mother - well so do I, but not to the extent that I can sacrifice my well-being for her. I can't see this changing while she is alive.
It certainly sounds as though she would benefit from a facility that would provide transportation to doctors and the like. Perhaps more organized socialization would make it easier for her to meet people.
My brother, husband and I all think that we may need to buy in more care soon as Mum has gone downhill mentally in lockdown and refuses to do even the things she is still capable of, though we are all cowards and dread the fuss she will make about paying!
Can you talk through with him what you have learned about boundary setting, and ask him to think about his own boundaries? If you don’t want to say ‘do it for me’, you can say ‘do it for her’. It really is in her best interest to continue doing everything she can, so that she does not lose her abilities. It is in her best interest to create her own interests and friendships, not to rely on you or your husband to be her recreation and socialisation. It is in her best interest to have a life that does not depend on you both. What if either of you get sick? She loses her support at a time when you have no time to find new supports for her.
Everyone has boundaries in their relationships. For some people it comes naturally, with no dissonance between the parties. For other people it has to be thought through. You’ve got to the stage where it is your husband who needs to think through his boundaries with your mother. Part of that is obviously the emphasis he needs to put into the marriage, and indeed into his other activities. If you can treat it as an academic exercise, not a complaint, it might work better for both of you.
You're quite right about my husband. I have suggested he read the often-recommended book 'Boundaries' , with regard to his doing too much at church as well as for my mum, but don't know if he will. He can be stubborn even though he accepts he has a problem in this area.
You're absolutely right about my mum's best interests too, but sadly she simply refuses to create any interests and friendships (never did have many), and this has only got worse in lockdown as she now lacks the mental energy even to read, which used to give her some pleasure. There really are no answers to this.
My stepping back before was sucessfull but now I see it was more physical, there was still this huge emotional pressure. It did work though. Even though I started saying no, my DH still was willing to help. I got better at saying no, better at letting DH decide for himself his participation without any comment. Quite quickly he wound back his duties too. I mean, why was he leaving work, rushing here & there when I wouldn't? I think he started to feel a tiny bit of resentment & then stepped back too.
The best bit is it has allowed my relatives to get more in charge of their own lives, get advice from other impartial sources. It's a win/win.
Helen, I hope the path becomes clearer for you too.
Now, despite rising COVID cases and deaths, my mum's AL has allowed visitors back in. After seven months of caring at a distance, which suited us fine, I am now worried about slipping back into the old ways. I plan to follow Beatty's example and try not to react whatever my DH does for Mum, and let him decide when it is too much for him. People have said I should stop feeling guilty (because I'm the blood relative and feel it ought to be me) and be grateful for being let off!
I have had throat and cold viruses for six weeks now, so am not up to visiting yet, and no doubt wouldn't be welcome if I coughed everywhere! But I do wonder whether stress has something to do with my illness.