Hello , my 90 year old FIL doesn’t drive and needs help running errands. I don’t mind helping out taking him to the grocery store once a week but have run into an issue. He is used to going to the store very frequently - almost daily- when he was driving to pick up a few things at different stores. Now that I am driving I tell him we go once a week to his preferred store or 2 . He objects with this rule and is now not speaking to us. Who is in the wrong here? How do I manage his expectations? Obviously I can take him out more than once a week for immediate pick ups like meds that can’t wait but I can’t live in the grocery store every day because he needs garbage bags from one store and milk at another? Help!
You are not wrong, he is in expecting u to do this. I guess ur DH does not take him shopping?
He is using this as a social outing and mad that you are not going alone with it. He does not consider your time valuable. Time to nip this bratty behavior in the bud.
Sounds GREAT TO ME!
Hope it continues that way for a while.
I always tell people who come with these questions that the thanks you will get for doing this stuff is that you will be EXPECTED TO DO EVERYTHING. And that when you cannot or will not do everything they will be very angry.
We tell people who we are by how we allow them to treat us. If we tell them to kick us like the dog they will be quite happy to do so, and will expect to do so whenever they like.
You have to take responsibility for yourself and how you wish to be treated.
People will come here and they will give you sympathy.
That sympathy and about 7.00 will get you a Starbucks. Maybe.
The Silent Treatment is a passive-aggressive means of punishment to get you to cave in and do things HIS way. Except it's also a nice reprieve from the constant stream of demands, if you're able to view it that way.
Get him set up with a Wal Mart home delivery service and an Uber service or the phone number to the local cab company. They'll take him to stores daily if he'd like. Wal Mart food delivery also includes free delivery with no minimum on their merchandise not available for home delivery.
In the meantime, you're available once a week if he's still interested. If not, you've got 100 other things to do with that time.
Tell him to spend his money, you're not looking for an inheritance. Or better yet, move into Assisted Living where the mini bus will take him to run errands AND feed him 3 meals a day!
My Mom is very similar (although she still drives herself within a small radius of her house, I try to consolidate her trips for less driving). I also try to reason with her that by time she drives to 3 or 4 different stores when those items can all be found in one place, the cost of gas nowadays is an issue. I just paid $3+ a gallon today (at Costco) so you can make the point that the gas expenditure erradicates the "savings" from driving to a less expensive store. Also, my Mom does it because she's bored. The staff at the stores greet her like she's Norm from "Cheers" (and some of them run and hide).
I would not contact him first -- let him stew a little. If he does come back around and returns to this unreasonable expectation, maybe come up with a gas fee if he wants you to go more than once a week (and you're willing).
I went through this too .
He just wants to go out everyday . I’m surprised he hasn’t asked you to take him to a restaurant on the way because he conveniently hasn’t eaten yet today .( Been there , it turns into an all day event ).
The other alternative is having things delivered as mentioned already .
I also agree to taking him somewhere that has just about everything for one stop shopping , and maybe one other store if you are willing , or go to a different store the next week .
She hated taking her to the beauty salon. She had the wash and set thing every week. Do older women still do that? Sit with curlers under the hair dryer every week! LOL
"No, I can't possibly do that" is a wonderful response.
If he's not speaking to you, I guess he has the resources to get his needs met by someone else.
Independence is wonderful!
At least it's an alternative to 'No'.
After my dad died I drove to my mother’s house on the weekend to take her grocery shopping. She wouldn’t have ever expected me to take off work or go on a weekday.
When my mother in law became sick with cancer I offered to help with her mom’s shopping.
Oh my gosh, my husband’s grandmother was a very demanding woman! I had to nip that situation in the bud immediately! I set strong boundaries and didn’t budge from them. Otherwise, she would have tried to run me ragged!
Council on Aging in our area has a shuttle bus that takes seniors to the grocery, pharmacy, doctor appointments, etc. They will assist people with canes, walkers and wheelchairs.
Another option would be delivery service. I like Shipt. There’s also instacart. Some stores deliver groceries as well, Target, Walmart, etc.
Best wishes to you and your family.
My mantra...I am here to help people find the way, not be the way.
"I am sorry you can't drive.
But my offer is once a week to the store. Maybe I can help you think of solutions for the other days?
Eg You may need to hire an Aide for a 2nd day a week".
My LO started going to the shops more frequently. The weekly organised list gone. I noticed slippage of memory & planning skills - buying just 1 packet of this, 2 cans of that. Then back to the shops next day..
Now want to be taken to visit shops many days. Boredom? Loneliness? Hmm
It's a shame your Dad doesn't live in a village, where he could walk. The elders walked down to their local High Street in every area of London & Europe when I lived there. Here too, but only inner city/suburban. The outer areas need cars to get to big shopping centres.
Actually, those Assisted Living places are like villages.. just a little stroll to the coffee shop, the hairdresser/barber, the bowling green or newspaper reading room. Just saying..😜
What he is used to no longer matters and your husband should be doing this, not you. It is his father.
Or, he can Uber.
AL would solve many of his wants & needs. He is spoiled like so many old men are, they are all about their wants & needs, they could care less about anyone else.
Stand firm. Once a week is more than adequate.
After his dementia kicked in and he stopped driving, we didn’t take him to the store much at all. He was almost blind and leaving the house was too disorienting for him.
But yeah, multiple store trips like that are not feasible.
They absolutely look at shopping as a social outlet. I knew full well that she wouldn’t starve. I put her groceries away for her. Her pantry was stocked full. The fridge was too.
Don’t even get me started on how much toilet paper the woman had! Oh my word! She must have had a phobia about running out! LOL 😆
Trust me, she was never going to run out. When she died there was an entire closet full of toilet paper. She bought toilet paper every single trip to the store.
You have set the "ground rules" if he is going to depend on you for transportation then he has to accept that limitation.
Can he call a cab, Uber or other ride share? Are there friends or volunteer organizations that might take him once in a while?
Let me let you in on a little secret....
He goes to different stores because he is lonely and walking around the store and seeing the employees that probably know him makes him comfortable. Trust me if he does not show up for a few days they will notice and ask how he is. It is also a form of exercise, walking around the store a few times is safer than walking around the block or in the park. (floor is even, he has a cart to help support him and if he falls there are people to help him)
Can you manage 2 days "shopping" with him? If so you could pick a Monday and a Thursday (or schedule when your stores have the start of sales and then the last day of the sale.)
And...is is possible that your husband can do one of the "shopping" days? I hope he is helping out with the care of his dad.
And, studies have been done, see attached link, that show that these minor stressors will show up in our future to attack our mental health. the future is now.
Do let DH find an alternative mode of transportation for his father. It will take both of them a bit out of their comfort zone but that’s okay. Any angst needs to be between the two of them. You are caught in the middle. Remove yourself.
FIL will be a happier person when he is grateful instead of pouting. growing pains are a bit uncomfortable so you just patiently wait for him to adjust his attitude.
And gently I suggest that you allow his son to help him with his errands. When you get home from work do you sit and wait for DH to come home and make you dinner? Does he put a load of laundry on or run the vacuum? How about the clean up after dinner? So do you truly have more time or is it that you are just accustomed to pitching in for everyone and YOU are just trying to fold in one more chore? Why YOU?
When FIL was your age what was he doing? Was he worrying about how often he got his FIL to the grocery?
Caregivers make a huge mistake by not giving serious thought to what lies ahead and pacing themselves. As you mentioned, you already have your job and your mom. And please know that it is the psychological wear and tear that gets to us just as much, if not more, than the actual chore itself. The very level of expectation you are trying to manage with your FIL is what wears us down. He sounds spoiled and again, I’m sorry to say this but that’s on you. Stop it.
You wrote “Obviously I can take him out more than once a week for immediate pick ups like meds that can’t wait”. This is the ONLY reason you should consider even once a week. And why are you taking him to pick up the meds? They can be delivered. DH can pick them up without him.
This one little phrase speaks volumes to me. He thinks he needs to manage his own money is what I’m reading between the lines.
And I’m sure you could care less except for the aggravation of it all. An emergency is you or DH in the hospital. Picking up meds on command is not an emergency. Stop doing that to yourself.
You need to really spend some time on this forum to help you adjust your attitude. You found this site, you posted under Burnout, Family Caregiver and Driving. Yup. You are past due for a major reorganization of YOUR life. Not FIL life, if he is so smart he can organize it all himself.
I’d let him pout and I’d let him know when asked thats it’s once every two weeks now.
Mess with you again and once a month can be arranged.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3654031/
You could also set him up with an Uber for trips, if he could manage that.
I began to have this same issue with my father. He knew my regular day to run errands for him was Saturday but as you mentioned, if it was for medication, I would go anytime. He started wanting me to go to the store almost daily or after I’d been to his house and asked if he needed anything, he’d say no.. and as soon as I got back home, he’d call and want me to go get takeout or etc. I had to start telling him if it could wait, it would have to because I was running around all the time. I suggest setting a regular day and trying your best to stick to it unless it’s a necessity.
ELizabeth, I never thought of my Mom as a burden. But then she did not expect me to be at her beck and call. Like this FIL, too many parents have expectations that no way can their children meet. They don't like change. But when your getting up there, there will be changes and they have to except them. Their children are not the answer. My mantra is "I am here to help people find a way, not be the way". Meaning that parents have to except the help given them. If children can't or won't give that help, then the parent needs to find options. If their help makes it so staying home is not possible, then they need to go into an AL or home without making children feel guilty. If they can't afford to have their lawn mowed and upkeep to the house, then they downsize to an apartment. Boundries only need to be set when parents will not compromise. When they feel it has to be their way. I had no problem with my Mom. She excepted shopping one day a week. She excepted that I worked. She never asked my DH to mow her lawn. She paid someone. She had no expectations and appreciated the time she got. And because she had no expectations, I didn't mind doing for her. She knew if she needed anything call me at work and I'd pick it up on the way home. There has to be compromise in a parent/child relationship. This is what I can do, this is what I can't do and this is what I won't do.
Their shuttle buses take the elderly to their doctor appointments, the pharmacy and grocery. It’s great because they are able to accommodate people who use canes, wheelchairs and walkers.
I highly recommend that people check out their Council on Aging. Not just for transportation but for socialization at the senior community center where lunch is served daily and other scheduled activities throughout the week. Many seniors form lovely friendships.
Make a list of transporters and leave it on the fridge for him to call at his command (Care.com, Lyft, Uber, local cab service). Give him the name and number of pharmacies that will deliver or have the Care.com person pick them up for him. Some grocery stores deliver.
Now, you have time for a mani-pedi!
My husband was 100% in charge of his mom’s needs, both before and after he retired. She had cancer and vision problems, so there was a lot of necessary running around. I don’t think she ever asked to go shopping more than once a week and she often combined a trip to the store with a doctor appointment if she was up to it. Any help I gave him was freely volunteered and gratefully acknowledged. If FIL is like most older men the only chance of his accepting any boundaries is if you and husband are on the same page. So you will need to make him understand the score: If he doesn’t want to service dad’s whims personally, he’ll need to lay down the law and maybe grow a thicker skin when the pouting starts.
I feel it is a combination of boundary setting and compassion, i.e., his need with your availability - and more.
* It is understandable that he will 'naturally' want what he is used to or certainly more than less than what he's used to. It is good that he voices his needs and this needs to be acknowledged so he knows he is heard.
* Do not argue.
He will want to convince you to do what he wants so when you say "I can take you out once a week," he will have a retort immediately "No, I want ... " When he does this, say "I hear you saying XXX " then stop. Do not get into that maze. It only adds emotional upset / upheaval to an already sensitive issue - he is changing / losing independence and this requires that 'everyone' adjusts as needed. However, he needs to fit within your availability to help him out - and that won't be easy for him. He won't like it. AND, SEE BELOW. If you can arrange a visitor(s) during the week, you can let him know that he won't be alone ... someone 'lovely' person will take him out to xxx" -
* It is important that you 'check' yourself emotionally and psychologically. Do not get into a guilt trip or the "I shoulds" - this will not serve you nor him. Feel / learn to feel confident in what you can and cannot do.
- Once you make your decisions, stick to them. He will / may try to break you down. If you need breaks to regroup, do that. He will need structure. So much depends on his - and your - emotional makeup / history / self-esteem, and, of course, his mental state re dementia (if this is part of the picture).
- Understand that this is confusing and new for you. You may feel bad due to exhaustion and no time to do what you'd want / like to do (I certainly went through it - it is an awful feeling - knowing how lonely someone is ... depending on YOU ... and exhausted). You do the best you can. Period. No beating yourself up.
* From what I read, he is lonely. The going to the store for a carton of milk is a cry for companionship and company, and some change of scenery. This is important to address.
IMPORTANT: SOCIALIZATION VISITOR(S)_____________________
* If no other family member available or if then cannot assist, get some one else in to be with him. Consider hiring someone during the week to take him out for a couple of hours.
* Socialization visitor / caregiver in at least once a week for that mid-week visit / outing. More as you / he can afford.
* If money is an issue, get volunteers (I did this and it worked out beautifully - 2 or 3 during the week and my 3-4 visits/week). I had 6 days covered which was ideal - with some very dedicated volunteers. My friend/companion was bedridden in a nursing home. These visits were his LIFE line.
* If not a volunteer agency for supporting elders, try a college. Contact Dept heads: nursing, social work or geriatric dept. Some students will (or should have) experience in these areas and it will be good for them.
Work with whoever you hire / find to visit:
- Share some of his life history - work - hobbies - interests
- tell them to ask open ended questions vs the 'yes' or 'no' response questions.
- important to smile
- As touch is appropriate and responded to, perhaps hold his hand or give him pats on the back, if not a gentle shoulder massage.
Thank you for asking. Let us know how it goes.
Gena / Touch Matters
I’d suggest that you get DH to run FIL’s extra errands. You don’t want to do this, but if the pressure starts on you, you need DH to find out for himself just how unreasonable it is for FIL to expect this from you. DH might ask for FIL’s credit card for the fuel as well. At least think about this, and be watchful if the pressure on you starts coming both ways.