He's in AL, no official diagnosis, but we strongly suspect early dementia.
I thought moving him near us would make him happy — he was so miserable on his own in another state. We have him over for dinner every week, plus other outings (holidays, birthdays, weekend stuff). I do his shopping, his finances, doctors appointments, etc. But he's turned into this miserable grump. The minute he gets into my car it's either a list of complaints or demands. He's slightly more interested in my husband and daughter, but even then, if there's a negative thing to say or notice, he says it. It affects my daughter (she's a teenager) a lot, to the point I encourage her to leave the room.
We try to have a nice meal, and manage his mood, but it's a huge drain on the family every week. My husband and I work long hours, my daughter is taking hard classes, we are busy people with busy lives and that's on top of my other caregiving responsibilities for him (his doctors, his bills, etc).
But he's always complaining about the fact that we aren't more excited that he's over, that I'm not more cheerful at having him, and my personal favorite: "Why do you act like everything I say is a complaint?"
(Um, because it is, Dad)
We make a nice meal, have wine, have dessert, have conversation and chit chat and all those things. But he seems to think we should all be acting like this is the most awesome highlight of our week, listening to him complain about how this lady at the AL eats weird (one of his ongoing topics). I keep trying to manage his expectations (we are all really busy, but we're happy to spend time with you) but it's not working.
I want these dinners to be better, but the problem is — him. What do I do?
So, every single time I'd ask her to PLEASE stop complaining, she'd say, "I'm not complaining.......I'm TALKING." She'd get highly insulted that I'd even SUGGEST she was complaining, and so it went. I'd tell her she was THE MOST NEGATIVE HUMAN I'd ever met, is that better words to describe what you're talking ABOUT mom? Oh I'm just TALKING for godsake, was her reply. In other words, she felt entitled to use us as to vent and it was her right, and it was our obligation to suck it up and listen, make the appropriate comments of AGREEMENT with all the foul remarks, and that was that, period.
What happened, in reality, is we backed away from mom bc all that negativity winds up getting absorbed by US and it's too much to handle. I visited mom at her AL once a week and cut the visits short when the toxicity level got too high, and took her home from my house earlier and earlier too. After she became wheelchair bound the visits to my house had to stop entirely. When the phone calls got ugly, they too were ended quickly. And I always told her why. It's not okay to "just talk" when the other person is TELLING you it's upsetting them. That's the road to ruined relationships...when the other person is too pigheaded to see the light.
Good luck with a difficult situation
With some seniors, it’s like they’re in grade school. They will want to showtime in front of their peers who are already incented to come over and say hi. Having a family visit in a group environment is often the most prestigious thing ever.
After so many years I've found disengaging with him helps. When I say disengaging I mean just ignoring him. Grey rocking is a term I've read on this forum a few times. Look it up.
I'm sure you'll get a lot of good responses on here. Just keep on reading. Good Luck!
I appreciate your kindness in trying to help and love your dad. But he needs to stop and you need to tell him so. Say, “Dad, we love you. We love having you over and will continue to do so under one condition. STOP COMPLAINING!”
Draw the line in the sand and follow through. You have to protect the peace of your home. Just because he’s related to you dies not give him license to abuse your ears.
set time lines. Try a week or two of following through. If it doesn’t work, start extending the enforcement.
If he feels more "heard" about particular issues, he will have less need to repeat them.
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