So sick of my Mother defending my absentee sibling. My sibling just has bad luck, doesn't have enough time, has a "real" job, is a boy and boys aren't caretakers, his wife doesn't like her, he lives too far away to visit....blah, blah, blah.
I realize that this is how she was raised, but I am the one shouldering the burden. She figures that she did for her mother it so now it's my turn. The difference is that I own my own business and sometimes work 10 hour days right through the weekend. (of course, since I work for myself, she thinks that calling me 10 times a day is not an interruption. Reminders do not help...some passive/agressive stuff happening here)
What really bothers me is that she only sees me as her free errand runner. She has no interest in doing anything "fun" with me unless it includes schlepping her to her numerous doctor's appointments or running errands. I had this silly notion that somehow we could have some quality time together...time is so short. But it is turned into me doing all the "grunt" work and all the male members of my family sitting at home like little kings.
To add to my frustration she calls me nearly every other day an regales me with all of their adventures. So and so is going on a cruise, etc.
I just want to scream, "what do I care about them?" These family members never call her, never visit, and have practically forgotton her. I feel bad for her so I do not say what is on my mind.
But if there is going to be any "hero worship" shouldn't it be for the person who is taking care of you?
My real question is: how do you handle this when your parent constantly greets you with "you got to do this for me...?"
How does one handle it? Varying ways. Setting boundaries didn't work well with my mom, but many say that's what to do. My mom fought me every step of the way, no matter what I tried. There is no magic answer, especially when they are unreasonable. Depends on the parent. I wouldn't discount suggestions until you try them. If your's is "all about me," it makes things more difficult. But if something's not working for you, get help. It's better than resentment, anger, and bitterness. Who says we "must" cater to every whim? Find what works for you, and make than your guideline, but remain flexible to changing needs. If something's not working, get help. Peace and joy are worth protecting.
As a business woman it might be productive, and save your sanity to find & schedule a few working sessions with someone who can coach you through it - and be in the same room to listen to you and give feedback and hugs. One of the worst drawbacks of online only is that your feelings are reinforced, which is ok, but it is like putting a bandaid on a broken leg. Sympathy is not what will help you finally shed your frustration.
Once you have a handle on what pushes your buttons, you can get help on how to set those boundaries and keep these little things from stealing your time and life. We only have one life, and I've learned that I appreciate my mom because we have mutual respect. My friend's mom is actually nicer to me than she is to her own daughter - so we joke & she lets go of the stuff she can't change. I am assuming you still want a relationship with your mom - you just want to change the quality and topics of your conversations.
Hope this helps - if you run your own business you know how the smallest client can be the biggest headache? Sometimes its like that with family. Cheer up I hope you find someone to teach you the talk-to-mom-skills that will positively impact the rest of your life. We are not born knowing them - and its rare to be able to pull yourself out of a dysfunctional family communication pattern without help.
Here's to a new year & new possiblities!
I have been working on the boundary issues. Sometimes it works and sometimes it is ignored. Believe it or not my Mother treats me far better than her mother treated her. Funny thing is that she remembers her far differently than I do.
Ann: Mutual respect is exactly what I am working toward. I do not need praise for the work I do. Nor do I want to be compensated in any way. However, I do not want my Mom to get in the habit of reducing me to her errand girl.
I think one of the main issues in caregiving is that there is no opportunity for "distance." I am sure if I could take lots of breaks away from it all, I would have better perspective. But since it is just me here, that is not possible. I want to get back to the mellow person I used to be....right now I am just working on not being cranky.
Looking forward to the holidays and wish all here peace and respite.
Lilli
His wife doesn't like mother, so she never comes around. My mother makes excuses for my brother..."he works so hard and such long hours and he's tired when he gets home late in the evening."
I can say my brother did come stay with mother at night when my husband had to go to MD Anderson for his check-up. Other than that, that's it. You would think he would realize that my husband and I need a little relief sometimes. But, nooooo!
They take off on weekends and go their merry way to visit their kids, go to their camp house, go hunting, etc.
My husband and I would love to go visit our kids without all the hassle that goes with leaving mother with someone. She fights being left with someone else. It is just easier and less headache to stay here.
Anyway, I understand, but have no answers. If I had a backbone, I might not be in such a pickle. Take care and God bless.
1. Get a therapist to help you gain strength to stop playing the victim role by not feeling up to confronting.
2. Setting boundaries is never enough without real consequences.
3. I can clearly see why your brother's wife does not like your mother. I don't like my MIL for the same reasons.
4. Get a answering machine for your phone or get a separate line for your your business and don't give the number to your mother. She can call your home phone and leave the message on your answering machine.
5. I don't like confrontation either, but I'm getting better at it and others are happier and I have more energy by not always complaining about the person I needed to confront.
6. We actually weaken our relationships with people we don't have problems with by constantly complaining about the person that we need to confront ourselves and please don't push people into fighting your battles for you which I have experienced and bought into that role.
And she says "I really love you" to everyone except YOU.
When I grouse about my plight, I sometimes imagine I'm trying to care for her on the "road to Kandahar" (good movie), and our taxi has been stolen, all our money stolen, it's boiling hot, desolate in all directions. No toilet paper. How nice I'm in a heated home with hot running water...and food. ;-)
I have a slightly diff. question. My mother is extremely depressed and is not eating enough. Yesterday I drove the 60 mi. to her house, delivered groceries that I'd painstakingly selected, and she went into a fit over how she didn't know what she was going to do w/"all this food." Then she informed me I looked terrible. Etc. Nothing pleases. My blood pressure felt sky high.
Friend says that when my mom is depressed she wants every1 else to be, too. I think that's probably it. One time my sister called her, happy, and mom said, "Well, let me burst your bubble."
Every upbeat comment I make she counters w/gloom. I have spent the last 3 mos. calling drs., arranging rides to drs., emailing drs. re medication, on and on. I am trying to start a new business and am getting nowhere, b/c after dealing w/my mom's situation I am too depressed to function myself.
I encountered a book awhile ago about dealing w/aging parents. It occurs to me I need prof'l suggestions. Any thoughts about the psychological mindsets -- even tricks -- one might need?
I don't want to get into shaky ground here, but your mother's comment strikes me as open-and-shut abusive. It's always interesting to me that people who supposedly "can't help" themselves (making mean comments) always seem to be nice to the people they adjudge important enough not to offend.
The previous comment re "real consequences" might seem approp. here. If your mom is well enough to "jump out of the car" then perhaps she is well enough to find another caregiver on her own. Perhaps you could provide her w/a list of local and state agency phone nos. Of course, I realize that many parents are financially unable to pay for meals to be brought in at market rate, etc., but there must be some alternative to what you are experiencing.
Or, perhaps your son could take over some caregiving responsibilities.
For instance, when my mother wanted my aunt to make a special trip over to pick up some medication which didn't necessarily need to be refilled the next day, I told her my aunt wasn't up to it. My mom reluctantly got on the phone and figured out how to get it mailed -- which was the way she used to do it before I started doing so much calling -- in alarm about her condition -- and her primary care dr. got involved in the medication.
Try reading Elder-rage, or asking Carol Bradley for some books that might give you insight and perspective on what you are going through. You need someone to talk to face to face as well. Take care, it is not easy. I know what I am talking about because I am that ear for my friend who is in a similar situation - and I have said the same things to her.
Be well, take care.
I think that the main problem is that when my Mom moved here I treated her as a "guest" and did everything for her; and then she got used to it.
My Mom is really good at doing "end runs" around me. In other words, "if you won't do it, I will find some one who will." Then she proceeds to make a bigger mess that I ultimately have to clean up.
I have discovered that seniors do things out of fear. Their world is getting smaller, people that they cherished are now gone, they lose mobility and independence, and have to depend on us. They often do not show gratitude for those of us who "step up to the plate" - in fact it is just the opposite. And other family members "scatter." (still working out anger issues on this point.)
I am a very practical person who looks for solutions...but I forget that there is often no rationality behind some behaviors. People compare helping the elderly with raising a child. I am not sure if this is true. With a child you are helping raise them toward independence and a time when they will be on their own. With an elderly person you know that things will just continue to deteriorate. And that scares me because I do not know what the next step is. I always feel like I am skating on thin ice. I want to get back to some normalcy and being calm again...even if it is for a short period of time.
Those of us here who are dealing with far more dire situations than mine, you have my heartfelt support. I look at it this way: there is always someone has it a little better than you do and someone a little worse. I just keep plugging away, trying new stategies, coming here for good ideas and moral support, and remembering that I chose to do this for a Mom who was really good to me as a child. I am not a caregiver out of guilt, but sometimes it is still challenging to keep all balls in the air!
Lilli
"For I was an hungered, and you gave me no meat: I was thirsty, and you gave me no drink: I was a stranger, and you took me not in: naked, and you clothed me not: sick, and in prison, and you visited me not. Then shall they also answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we you an hungered, or thirsty, or a stranger, or naked, or sick, or in prison, and did not minister to you? Then shall he answer them, saying, Truly I say to you, Inasmuch as you did it not to one of the least of these, you did it not to me."
For me, that last verse says it all. When I do something that is not appreciated or completely dismissed, it doesn't matter. Cause I never did it for an ungrateful human in the first place. Now I do have to remind myself that on a regular basis, but once I reaffirm my ultimate goal, then nothing else matters. It's what the God of creation thinks of me, not some flawed human being.
Thank you for putting things into perspective, and for reminding us of what really matters. I love the saying:
"Only one life
'Twill soon be past,
Only what's done
For Christ will last.
Jesus is the reason for the season, and we love because he first loved us. We give because he is our example. To me to live is Christ... Philippeans 1:21 To God be the glory in all we do!
My thoughts are about cleaning up the mess and whether you have to. Sometimes living with the consequences provides people with an important lesson. I know that is not easy and not always possible. Creating messes for you to clean up sounds very manipulative.. I am very familiar with the "errand girl" phenomenon. My mother thinks I am her servant - or wants me to be anyway. She has Borderline Personality Disorder. Have you looked into whether you mum has something like that. For me it helps to understand the behaviours and find strategies to cope. I am caretaking at a distance which makes an enormous difference. Mother is in a different city by her choice. I would not take my mother into my home - it would ruin my life and she would be no happier than she is now. Mother has someone in her city she pays to shop and do other things for her. This lady is a nurse and does this as a business. Mother still wants me to do many small things for her which actually she can still do for herself. Sometimes I say yes, I will do it when I have time and it goes on my priority list and sometimes she ends up doing it herself, and sometimes I say that I cannot do it for reasons of time, energy, money etc. I still have much work to do sorting out stuff which I brought here from her apartment after moving her into a senior's residence. I moved her into a second residence within the year as she coujld not get along where she was and then told her I will not do it again as she is getting as good care as is available and the next move would be to a nursing home if she cannot cope where she is. This is reality. I used to not tell her about how I was feeling, but do now. If I am overwhelmed by her demands I say so, if I am not feeling well enough to do something, I say so, etc. I am finding that old dogs can learn new tricks and she is more aware of how her behaviour affects me and more considerate. I am still suffering the effcts of the moves last year (arthritis in my shoulder/arm/hand). Mother is 98 and I am 73 so I am caregiving at an age where some are being looked after. It is one disadvantage of being in a long lived family. In order to look after myself I have to draw very firm boundaries, and work to do that in a kind and honest a way as possible. She complains that I don't visit her enough, do enough for her etc and I do not feel guilty about my choices. I have a life here with my kids and grandkids nearby and a significant other. One of mother's recent suggestions was that I sell my house and move to her city into my own unit in her seniors's residence and look after her. .Of course this would mean no life for me, I would not see my grandchldren or my significant other much - and - she still would not be happy, nevermind that it is ridiculously expensive. As well as doing things for others, God said love others as you love yourself - not more than. My sister also lives at a distance and visits mother for a free holiday. She downright refuses to help even when visiting. I have story after story of that to the degree that it appalls me -yet she feels free to criticize me for not doing enough. So be it - I can't change her but I don't have to put up with the criticism without an honest response.
Please look after yourself. I have friends who are experiencing health issues from not caring for themselves when presented with the challenges of caring for parents. I have never been as ill as this past year (the arthritis is only one issue)and I think it is due to the stress from overdoing things with regard to my mother. It is no good living at the end of one's tether. I have learned that means something has to change and we can only change ourselves.
Blessings
Joan
But how things have changed, thanks in large part to the folks here. I have gained massive amounts of PERSPECTIVE. I have learned how to defend my health and sanity. I have the ability to set boundaries and use the word "no" without feeling guilty. I am no longer shocked by the indifference of the medical community and government when it comes to treating the elderly. And I learned what NPD is.
Emjo and dizzy I was nodding along with you as I read your posts. Emjo, my hub always reminds me about the, "love others AS you love yourself." It is not God's will for anyone to be abused, mentally battered, or left destitute. But these things do not happen to caregivers overnight...it happens incrementally over time. I'll bet you that I could now pick out the future caregiver from any family. They are the kids that never take anything for themselves, are giving and loving, and step aside for the more aggressive and self-centered sibs. (It will never cease to amaze me that parents continue to reward the kid that does the least.)
I do not know if what we write, the experiences we share, or the trauma we go through will ever go beyond these cyber-walls, but I think one solution to breaking this cycle is for people in our age group to not do this to our children. To have open dialogue with adult children and either include all of them in your care, or plan on doing it yourself so that no one person is singled out. To teach son's that they need to pitch in, directly, with the care of their parents. I hope that is the lesson that we all take away from this experience.
Thank you for sharing your journey.