My 92 yo mother had a stroke just a little over a year ago. It left her with hemiplegia. Up until this time, she was cared for at home by one of my brothers. He was no longer able to care for her and she went to a nursing home. The whole event seemed to bring out the worst in my siblings behaviors. The two oldest siblings have ganged up on the two youngest siblings and do everything in their power to sabotage the exhaustive care-giving attention we try to give our mother now that she is confined to the nursing home. The older two siblings have always resented us two younger kids because "we got it so easy and we were given everything on a silver platter". This is so far from the truth it's laughable. The older siblings behavior towards my mother, since her stroke, has been unconscionable. I need help dealing with all of the stress and heartache and shameful behaviors being displayed by my two older siblings. Any advice at all would be greatly appreciated.
Siblings seem to know what buttons to push to get the negative reactions they seek....try your best to not be responsive to their actions/words. You can't change them and holding bad feelings will only cause you problems. The troublemakers are happy and will only make you younger ones upset...don't give them that power.
Perhaps a family meeting with the nursing home social worker can get you all past these feelings and in one accord to taking care of your Mother!
I wish you the best!
Understand the dynamics of the family and how you can work with that dynamic.
I have a degree in biology and nutrition. I worked in the nutrition/dietetics field for a few years and then changed careers. I have one sister who is about 20 years older than me. She is retired and worked most of her life as a registered nurse. My sister was already married and had left home before I was born.
Fast-forward to the first week after my mother's stroke. I was spending 8 hours a day at the hospital with my mother. Because of the R-hemiplegia, blindness, extreme confusion and weakness, I decided to assist her with her meals. Based on my work history in clinical nutrition, I felt that if she was going to have a fighting chance at rehabilitation, she had to keep her strength up. Yes, she was obese, but this was not the time to become dehydrated and malnourished. I felt that if I did not assist her, she would rapidly lose weight and muscle mass. My goal for her: weight loss was fine; losing lean body mass was no good for her. I knew she would lose weight, so my goal was similar to a protein-sparing fast. I wanted to ensure that all the weight she lost was not muscle mass. (By the way, now it is 13 months later and she is 28 lbs lighter).
I was with my mother when my sister called the hospital four days after the stroke. It was lunch time and I was assisting my mother with her lunch. My sister almost cried out in agony when she discovered that I was feeding her. It seemed a bit strange but she had never been empathetic or supportive of me before, so why would she start now? Then, two days later, I had arrived at the hospital before lunch time, but had gone out to buy a coffee. When I returned, my mother's lunch tray was set up before her and my sister and brother-in-law were sitting in the room with her. I walked up beside her bed to assist her with feeding. My sister verbally jumped on me stating "you are not allowed to feed her". Then, my sister got up and stood beside my mother and re-stated "You are not going to feed her." She asserted that I was enabling our mother and that I was going to make her into an invalid.
I was so upset, I had to leave the room. When I returned about 10 minutes later, my mother's tray was totally untouched. She might have eaten a couple spoonfuls of jello. That was it. Of course an argument ensued between my sister, her husband and me. It was ugly. It was so bad, in fact, that after this episode, the administrator of the rehab unit told my brother (my mother's health care proxy) that we two sisters were never allowed to visit our mother again at the same time.
Thank you for reading this lengthy account. In summary, the fact that I was with my mother at least 50% of the time for the first three months, post-stroke, is still held against me by the two eldest siblings. Two days ago (13 months post-stroke) my eldest brother said, when I mentioned the sacrifices I have made for our mother in the last year, that what I did last Fall hurt our mother more than helped her!
After getting an opinion about the help you gave mum could you all sit down together with a mediator of some kind - someone you all trust - and work some of this out? I feel it will they will be harder on you as your mum declines as is inevitable with time.
Other than trying to resolve some of these long standing hostilities, or perhaps along with that, try to detach from your older sibs. I have one sib and have had to detach from her, as she has caused me trouble all our lives. I have accepted that is the way it is and will continue, I have POA and need to cover my butt I know. I communicate with her and other close relatives to let them know how mother is, but leave it at that. I fully expect trouble from her at some point, and will have to deal with it as it comes. I do not accept accusations, but will not fight with her.
Let us know how you are. ((((((((hugs)))))) Joan
1. Drinking will be in moderation; if he can't do that - you are no longer going to be his caregiver and he will have to hire in-home care or go to a facility.
2. He will no longer be allowed to abuse you physically or emotionally - if he does it again, "no sorrys allowed" - you will make arrangements to leave and he will have to hire in-home care.
3. If behavior continues, let him know NOW that you will leave and you will notify APS of his drinking and that you feel he is cannot safely manage his diabetes.
Stick with it. You do not have to put up with this and you've changed your life to caregive for him; so he needs skin in the game and he has to change his lifestyle as well.
Feed empowered and stick to it. Walk out the door and don't answer your phone next time. He should consider above as his final warning.
As for the sib issues; its a never ending battle -- this website is proof of that. You can have a family meeting with a counselor or mentor (should be one at the NH) and everyone gets equal time to state their case. Everyone comes with different history, different experiences and different perspectives esp younger vs. older sibs. Best case is you respect each others perspective and agree to disagree on how you were treated; but all should be on the same page as to the path forward for mom.
If you can't compromise, then you have to look inward and let it go. Do what you can; express what you will and won't do, time, etc. to your sibs and leave it at that. Accept that it will never be resolved and once mom passes, you may or may not have contact with your sibs -- although I hope you do.
In my case, it has brought my brother and I closer through the stress; but we aren't fighting over my mom's care -- yet!
Take a deep breath and plan your battles, your sister is good at sabotage. Good wishes your priority is your mom's wellbeing.
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