I am 29 and I live under the same roof with both of my parents (72 and 73) and my two children (9 and 11). I am home full time with all of them and I am a full time student. I make dinner 7 nights a week, and lunch several times a week. No one else cooks, but they sure do bring their negative attitudes to the table for every meal. Lately nothing I make is good enough, and I have to hear them whine like children at every meal. Its hard to feel happy about cooking for them when they just treat me like crap. Ive asked that my parents leave on Fridays so I can clean the house and enjoy myself by listening to music while doing it. They never leave and Im stuck cleaning up after them in silence like a maid, which makes it a really daunting task that I never look forward to, plus the house never gets fully clean because they are always in my way or making messes where I have just cleaned. I do all of the yard work and repairs to the house, as well as keep all electronics in working order for both of them. My dad has early onset dementia and my mother has what I believe to be untreated bipolar disorder. My dad is fine usually but does have aggressive rages every so often(rare and always aimed at my mother), usually his problem is forgetting to do important self care, which I can help him with. My mother is angry all the time and walks the house trying to get one of us to argue with her. Today, she started an argument with me because I used a trash bag, to put trash in, when I was cleaning my childrens room with them.... I pretty much lost it. We aren't poor, we can afford trash bags, and im going to use them whenever I please. Im tired of living around someone who hates everyone and everything. Its depressing and exhausting. But if I left, one of them would end up in a nursing home very quickly, which I know they dont want and I dont want that for them either. This is just a snippet of our home life.... but does anyone have any tactics, ideas, or words that might help me see the light? Sometimes I just want to leave and never come back.
Why are you not gainfully employed?
Your primary responsibility is to your children, not your parents. If your mother is bipolar and your father has early onset dementia, you are putting yourself and your children on a rollercoaster for the foreseeable future. Is that fair? Is that good parenting?
Your parents need a plan. And that may include a nursing home and/or memory care facility. Do you have durable power of attorney? If no, get it before your parents become incapable of signing. If they refuse to give it to you, it is a terrible idea for you to take responsibility for them without having the authority.
You have a lot to think about because children are involved. Their needs must come first.
As for the meals, you can try to plan meals together for the week so that everyone gets some input. If that doesn't help, and anyone complains, tell them to cook for themselves.
Get therapy for your self and your kids.
If you moved out to an apartment or home of your own, you would make dinner 7 days a week, keep you place clean, keep all the electronics in working order, do laundry, and possibly do yard work. The only tasks you wouldn't have are those related to helping your father.
So I know it isn't the workload itself that is the problem. It is about as easy to cook for five as it is to cook for three.
The problem is the lack of appreciation for what you do, anger permeating the house, and someone trying to micromanage your actions.
I wonder how you can reduce that? What if once a week you sat down with them or at least with your mother, and came up with 7 menus for the week? And then you have a rule that there will be no complaining about food they have approved. If there is any complaining there will be cereal and toast for dinner the next night. If they complain about how you've prepared the food they approved, they can hire a cook, and you will cook for yourself and children. Oooo ... I'll bet they'll be unhappy with that, but you are unhappy now. Why should their happiness be more important than yours?
You feel that your mother has undiagnosed mental illness, maybe bipolar disorder. Most mental illnesses, including bipolar, can be treated -- not necessarily cured, but dealt with in a way that enables the patient to be more functional and emotionally stable. I have two bipolar relatives, and proper treatment is essential. So ... mother needs a thorough medical exam, with the doctor being apprised of her behavior in a note from you before the appointment. She won't go? I'd make that a condition of your continued help.
You should probably tell your dad's doctors about the occasional rages. They may prescribe sometimes to use as needed to help calm him down.
You are right. The health of your parents is only going to get worse. Down the line some kind of care facility may be necessary, no matter what they want. Your help can perhaps delay that time, but dementia is relentless and doesn't respect any wishes or help. This will be Not Your Fault, whether you are living with them or not. The progress of dementia is Not Your Fault. Your mother's mental illness is Not Your Fault. Keep that firmly in mind.
I am kind of glad you blew up about the trash bag! If you were sharing a house with a friend and she got all pissy about trash bags, I'm sure you would either tell her off or have a conversation with her. Your housemate is your mother, but you are an adult. Your relationship should be as equals, as adults. She cannot micromanage your behavior just because she is your mother. Maybe in the future, instead of blowing up (that is what she wants -- so she wins) you can state your case calmly and firmly, and go on doing what you are doing. That may take some of the wind out of her sails.
If I were in your situation, I would make two conditions for staying, and if they aren't met I would look for a different housing arrangement.
1) No complaining about food at the dinner table.
2) Mom has a thorough medical exam and then follows up with any referral that get made.
Come back and tell us how this is progressing. We care.
I don't see any judgments being passed here. You are in a very tough situation, and we were trying to offer suggestions that might help. How is suggesting setting boundaries about topics of discussion at the dinner table judgmental?
In any case, if you were looking for tools for motivation and expect something like a list of the four images you should run through your mind, or the 12 steps to tolerating verbal abuse, you really did come to the wrong site. That is not what we do.
You need to find outlets for you to be you and have some fun. Maybe spend time as a family planning and then sharing in the meal prep. Try new things. I used to do that when I had five children and my FIL at home and my husband worked evenings. Start an exercise routine. Find a hobby you love and devote a few hours a week to doing it.
I would assume your children are in school, or even home schooled, so choose a topic to discuss at dinner related to their studies. You said you are a full time student, are you going to a school or doing an online program? Share your learning with your children.
Sometimes it helps to just focus on the positives. Make a list of all the positives that make you choose to do what you are doing and post it by your mirror. Look at it each morning. Post positive quotes around your home.
Approach this as a career...study and search for the best ways to parent, caregiver, bi-polar and dementia behavior management. (I spend a lot of time doing this.)
Invite others to dinner, it is nice to see company manners being used by all ;-). Set up a game night.
If your parents won't leave so you can clean and listen to music, see if they will stay in one room and get headphones for your phone or iPod, etc... And listen while you work. I like to listen to audible books while I clean, I put one on my phone, put on my head phones, tuck it in my pocket, and work away.
Good luck
Does school provide enough positive outside adult contact for you? When home is a "negative" environment, recharging with a little of the positive can help. Think of how you could increase your outside activities - maybe a short trip every day with your kids to a park? Talking with strangers about kids and community news over a cup of coffee can help more than you would think until you have tried it. Building a family tree on Ancestry can connect with distant relatives while working into your schedule.
Try to bring some joy into your home on a daily basis. Does one of your children have an activity your parents would enjoy watching? Is there an old comedy show your parents and kids could watch together? Maybe try talking to Mom about how she wants her grandchildren to remember her - as someone who was always angry and complaining or someone who laughs at shows/movies?
One of the things that seems to go first when dementia or depression sets in is the ability to make plans. Instead of asking your parents to go out on Friday, you might want to arrange for them to go out. Are there relatives or friends their age they could visit and stay over lunch? A senior center? A mall with a theater?
I sense you are missing "alone time" - that was one of the biggest adjustments for me when my mom moved in. My bedroom is now my space, although sometimes I need to use that space when the rest of the household is sleeping. I have found it's much easier to take an afternoon nap that get an uninterrupted hour for a relaxing soak in the tub so I usually soak now when everyone else is sleeping.
Others have given some meal planning suggestions so I would only like to add try adding foods your parents would have eaten as children or young adults. My Mom loves cornbread, soup, cottage cheese, soup beans, fresh sliced garden vegetables, etc. When including these dishes in a meal, she will often tell stores of when these were served at home or which relative enjoyed that food. My Mom loves homemade vegetable beef soup and cornbread so I make a big pot of soup and reheat it as a quick meal for her when the kids want something else.
The household doesn't need to retreat into the past, but having the music, books, entertainment, photo albums, and the like from your parent's youth around for some period of the day does seem to improve their mood - at least it does for my folks. Hope you find some of this helpful.
You must not be the only one cooking as you make dinners 7 nights a week but only a few days with lunches - no breakfasts mentioned. I'm not trying to be negative here, but it isn't adding up and could also be a lot of your "lack of motivation" as you are exhausted, maybe 24/7 exhausted.
I'm wondering how is your health? It is possible that it is time to take your children and separate from your parents - even if only for a short time - to let the air cleanse?
A wise man said, there are 3 sides to every story - your parents might have some valid gripes, you have valid gripes too, but the 3rd side is the actual truth of the situation. Most of us tend to exaggerate in our own interests. Me too and I try to catch myself whenever I do it.
You won't like me saying this but you need to put some distance between yourself & kids and your parents. You cannot leave your children so you must take them and leave your parents.
72 and 73 are not ancient and they can take care of themselves and function on their own. And, at 29, you should be raising your children on your own. For your own mental health and that of your children.
You still living at home and with your 2 children, seems to be making a bad situation for all involved.
AS I see it, Id be separating the 3 generations immediately. as others have said, you owe a good life to your kids, and being a slave to your parents is not a good state to be in.
Now for some reason, my father hated me and made it very clear from birth, so when I was' big enough and ugly enough' as he so often informed me I stood up to him in his early and latent dementia years by thanking him for his abuse. So when he said something awful Id say "So glad you like it" and that would have him spinning, he had no other nasty response.. then a few minutes later I would correct him on his comment. and quickly change the subject. Now they didnt live with me but it sure made the visits [ to check on my Ma] easier. So when they run you down regarding a meal just do the MonaLisa smile and say "So glad you enjoyed it" what 'it' is has nothing to do with the point really.
As for your mother, her venom must be upsetting your children big time. IF she doesnt have a diagnosis then go get one. You owe it to them. Not her..
And using one hand to count on Im guessing they had you 'late in life' and so blackmailed you from day one that you ruined their middle age, and coming along stuff for you to be putting up with such behaviour for so long.
I found out the facts of life at the age of 14, that my parents 'had me' I didnt land up on their doorstep or under the cabbage plant as I was told as a 6 yr old.
Can you make their living quarters separate from you, Give them an ultimatum meanwhile and say OUT OF MY HOUSE on a fri.. or move out. to fight over a garbage bag at 15c... really sums up the situation.
Please save your childrens lives.. it aint going to have happy memories in it.
professional experienced people) and no costs involved. If they evaluate your parents to need professional care they will remove them from your home and you will have a
life again!!!