I am fed up with my brothers and their selfish and self absorbed ways. My mother has dementia and has been on the decline for the past 2-3 years. She lives alone with my father, they are both in their early eighties, and he is her primary caregiver. He is a simple man that gets confused with new things and changes easily, but once explained, he is fine. I am also a nurse so I am the one they look to for help. Over the past year and 1/2 my mother has needed a lot of things in the house to make life easier, transport chair, raised toiled seat, rails, etc. I am the one that orders the products and my brothers are the ones to help install if needed. She has recently developed a bed sore, and of course I am worried about it. I texted my brothers that I bought something to help and the package will come on Monday (they do not know what it is, it could be a cream for all they know). Then I got snapped back, stating “oh no, not another package” I inquired about the statement and they responded with, pop gets confused when packages arrive at the house. My reply was ok I know but it helps both him and mom, and is fine once he knows how to use it. They responded back saying I have no empathy. That took me by surprise. My feeling is, who is the empathy for? My dad, or them because they need to help him when necessary? Am I not seeing their point? Need help.
I have gotten to the point she will get mad and she will get glad again.
I can only surmise that they are not reading responses. I think that they did not get the affirmation that they wanted.
My point is while I know I carry my weight in the caregiving I also know that the affects on me are different when I’m in CT and hands on with Mom, just as it’s different when I’m home and doing it from a distance, each has advantages and drawbacks. So maybe as simple as it sounds to you and I who are doing all the work ordering and tracking, the stress it puts on Dad and therefor that puts on brothers is more than we can appreciate. It’s probably built up over time and has nothing to do with having to install anything or the items themselves it’s something about the delivery of packages that makes your dad anxious. My brother asked at one point that I start having mail order meds and other significant stuff sent to his house rather than mom’s. Seemed like extra work to me because it meant he had to remember to transport stuff up to moms, wait for things to arrive before he could go up, just an extra unneeded step but I came to realize mom got nervous when someone came to the door she wasn’t expecting and didn’t know (even if they are just leaving a package) and boxes would get left at different doors all the time, at least 2 of which are never used (flowers I sent for Mother’s Day and Valentines day were discovered months later) so we wouldn’t know packages had come or mom would find a package and then put it away unopened somewhere and not put together that delivery we were looking for might be the package she stuck somewhere. I now have to decide what to deliver where but I get it better now than I did when he first started insisting I send stuff to his house. Maybe it was a timing thing and your brother hasn’t properly explained how disruptive and time consuming it is to calm dad down when packages come but as we all do with people we are close to, he expected you to know and he vented his frustration to the closest safest person around, you. It’s a backhanded compliment about your relationship and level of trust but it is a good thing, I take things out on hubby, it’s not fair but there you have it and he does the same with me. My bro is divorced so I fill some of that space for him too especially around Mom because we are partners in that.
Ask if it would be better if you had things delivered to brothers house so they can then just take it over to parents with them, see what happens. If you can maybe it’s time for a visit so brothers get a break from the day to day and or touch base with each other to talk about any adjustments or future planning you all can do, vent some of the emotional baggage you are each collecting because it’s probably similar. Sometimes just feeling proactive and being reminded you aren’t alone, you are part of a team helps.
Well, the very thing that may rub others the wrong way are the very things that I love about the two of you. You don’t flip flop back and forth on your answers. That isn’t helpful. The people who helped me the most were people who were direct. So I thank you for being true to yourself. I am the same. Accept me as I am or walk away which doesn’t bother me. I just want to see someone helped. It doesn’t have to be my answer that they respond to.
There is good and bad in all professions. Once I had a pediatrician for my kids that actually got down on the floor to play with my kids, absolutely wonderful with my girls!
I instantly saw this woman’s leadership abilities and experience in wound care.
She was smart! She had to deal with cocky residents at the hospital where she worked for many years who were rude to her, thinking they were above her. She would try to teach them how to treat wounds.
The residents were offended and told her to butt out. She wisely let them try to figure it out on their own and told them if they needed her they were welcome to ask her. What an intelligent but humble person. I truly admired her. She said that after awhile they would ask for her help but didn’t have the decency to apologize for their rude behavior. Still, she was a professional and truly cared for her patient and always helped the residents when asked to assist them.
Anyway, she knew exactly how to treat any pressure sore that mom had. My mom had one very low on her butt that I could not see, even when I bathed her because she told me to let her bathe private areas which I respected.
Mom hid the fact that she had sores which upset me. I did not want her to be embarrassed or scared. Mom had fear about things. She had pride and did not want to ask for help if she was embarrassed. Kind of sad.
The nurse placed a special bandage with medication on it. She also placed a certain barrier gel around the sore. The sore began to heal. This nurse knew exactly how to treat it.
I received more help from her than anyone about mom, even the doctors. Nurses will sometimes have more hands on experience than doctors and can be a patients and caregiver’s best friend.
Anyway as I replied back to Riverdale, it can get a little repetitive and confusing. We have to pay close attention to the numbers behind the anonymous name.
I love having an RN in the family. I was a secretary for RNs. But not one of them will prescribe something without looking at the problem first.
Your brothers are the "hands on" people. They are there and deal with your packages. Maybe your Dad gets all upset when one arrives. And then one of the brothers has to deal with it. Maybe Dads confusion is getting worse. At 80 this caregiving maybe getting overwhelming for Dad but he won't admit it. Like said, why don't u send the pkg to one of the brothers. Do you call and ask them what they need or just send what u think is needed.
Your Mom may now need care that Dad is not capable of.
But let that pass - no, you are not seeing your brothers' point, and you are not putting yourself in either their shoes or your father's shoes, and above all you are not waking up to your mother's real level of care need: a pressure sore developing when she is being cared for is a red flag. Shouldn't happen. It means the care is inadequate.
Would you be able to go and stay with your parents for a week or two? Since your parents chose you as their health care representative, and you have accepted the responsibility, the best thing for you to do would be to visit the front line and have a closer look at how it's all working day to day.
Please show some gratitude to them instead of criticizing them. Also, since you are in charge and cannot handle their care then please hire someone to do it. Why should your brothers do it only to hear criticism from you?
Also, consider placing them in a facility to be looked after 365 24/7 so you can put your mind at ease.
Just curious. How often do you get to visit them? It must be hard living far away from them.
While you mean well, you are being selfish and engulfing 3 lives in this caregiving. It isn’t fair for you to send stuff and direct traffic while they are there dealing with 2 older people who clearly are unable to help themseves.
Stating you are ready to “cut ties”? For what reason? Because they dont’ do things exactly when and as you direct? Perhaps you need to look within yourself to see how you are being perceived vs. your intentions.. cutting ties over stuff like this is not the smartest thing you could do. at least the brothers try to help. Cut them off and your life will turn into misery. If possible, need to hire some caregivers for your parents at their home. If your mother has bedsore issues, then your father might need more help than you want to admit. Please step back and do what is right for them AND you/brothers. Even if it means assisted living for Mom.
And these "things" must be very helpful and needed.
But you are not listening "Pop gets confused when packages arrive at the house".
Find a new way to get them what they need.
In your easy chair, dozing off, you hear a ding dong, must ambulate to the front door, what a p a i n ! Please stop confusing the elderly, it is so very confusing enough.
You are a good daughter! Try to listen.
Unless there is a better reason that you are considering cutting ties with your brothers, please reconsider, and wait, study more on relationships. From reading on here, most daughters are thrown into the 24/7 part of hands-on caregiving. Your brother who is hands-on is going to be nominated for sainthood on this forum of caregiving daughters, maybe. (joking, maybe).
"Tell your sister to stop sending things!".
Yes, it really happened.
You say you order it, have it sent and then your brother's go install, explain and calm dads confusion. I say that you have the easiest part of that whole scenario.
"Oh no, not another package" sounds like someone trying to be smart aleck not nasty.
Being a nurse gives you special insight, but being boots on the ground, hands on help gives them more reality of the situation. I think that you should not cut contact with the individuals that are there physically for your parents without a plan in place for who you will have handling the things that they do. After all you have accepted the responsibility, they are only helping their parents out of love. What would you do with out their hands on help? Because you are responsible. Not trying to be rude, trying to get you to really think about what is going on and how you would deal without them.
I think it's vital for you to understand where they're at in this care giving process and for them to see where you're at as well. As an RN, you're the 'ear' everyone needs to help them figure out what's happening and the one to place the orders for necessary supplies, not to mention do the research required. That's not something to pooh-pooh away, and they should be respectful & appreciative of your time & input here. By the same token, they are the 'hands on' people dealing with the daily drama and everything else that goes along with elder care for TWO parents. Not easy.
You're each doing your part to create a safe living environment for your parents and should be commended for all that's involved.
Try to see things from your brother's point of view, acknowledge their part in the equation, and move on. Don't cut them out of your life, it's not warranted, in my opinion. Emotions run high during elder care situations of this nature, and the best thing to do is hash it out ALL of you. Together. Let love prevail, and above all, keep your parent's best interest in mind. That will allow you all to work together towards that end.
Best of luck