He goes to work (graveyard shift) so we don’t see each much.
He lives with me in my home (in separate quarters). But on his days off he falls apart by drinking. His car needs repairing so he is using mine.
I am at the age (80) where I see the hand writing on the wall and know that I need to prepare for when I am going to start needing assistance with things. I see my son wasting his life away on his days off and feel he will not be able to help me.
That scares me.
We live in an isolated area. No other family around. I keep in touch with my sisters through my iPad. But I paint them a rosy picture.
I am not strong enough mentally to tell him to get with it.
I love him too much to upset him or ask him to leave. I feel overwhelmed with worry and concern for him and for my future as I am now slowing down.
What can I do?
Also, if he's drunk and using your car, you're opening yourself up to enormous liability if he has an accident. If you have the money, pay to get his car fixed, but stop letting him use yours.
Call your county Dept. of Aging to get help on getting things rolling. You don't want to wait until you're too infirm to make decisions for yourself.
I don't mean this as a slap in the face - some kind of harsh home truth. I'm quite serious. You should move house now, while you are still able to adapt to a better environment for your needs, and as the best possible way of giving your son a face-saving exit route from the corner he's painted himself into.
Your needs are few, your concern for your son rings through everything you've said, you've even lent him your car, and you are thinking ahead. So I think it is very improbable, and it would be unfair to expect it, that you can possibly appreciate the debilitating effect that being in the position of your primary caregiver may be having on his ability to - as you put it so aptly - "get with it."
He comes home, he feels trapped, he gets plastered.
YOU HAVE DONE NOTHING WRONG. I can't stress that enough. But just read through the site and see how adult children living with their senior parents rapidly begin to feel about it. And yet, they can't move out and abandon their parents. And they can't live their lives while they're there.
But never mind him for a moment. What about you? I expect you live in a very beautiful place; but as you continue to slow down other factors are also going to matter more and more. Services to call on, accessibility, affordable help when you need it, and - if it appeals to you, not if it doesn't - the companionship or at least the near presence of other people.
I'll stop there because I've no idea how you'll feel about these comments; but do please give them some detached thought. Best wishes.
I would encourage you to listen to the advice offered.
Please help yourself. He is responsible for his behavior.
Of course, you love your son and always will.
I would level with him. But that's me. If you are unable to do that, and wish to continue with painting rose-colored pictures for others, there cannot be any answers to what you recognize will happen.
Please be honest with the rest of your family, no more rosy picture, tell your concerns as you have here. Ask for help anywhere you can. I wish you well in finding the strength to change this before a tragedy occurs
This woman needs support from a professional.
The fact that she twists co-dependency into "I love him" clearly shows that she needs psychological and emotional support.
What you say is not harsh, it is the reality of the situation. You said it better than I did.
Whether he is or isn't is not the focus here.
He is not responsible.
He apparently doesn't do anything positive to support / help out his mother who is 80.
She is afraid and she needs someone to discuss her options, create a plan, and then the two of them sit down and talk. I think it needs to be social services and/or an attorney, or both.
I also wouldn't count on your son to care for you if your health declines. Be honest with your siblings and let them know what is going on. If you can't confront your son, then don't, just let him know you love him and that you are concerned about him. Plan for yourself. Please do contact the area council on aging in your county (or whatever it's called where you reside). They can assist you in making plans. Please know you are responsible for your own life as your son is responsible for his life; so take the bull by the horns and get your plans in place before you are unable to take care of your self.
I wish you and your son the best of luck.
This is likely a huge part of the problem - likely for decades.
This woman is not helping her son at all.
Helping him would be: your car doesn't work, you need to get it fixed. No, you cannot use mine.
He hasn't had to be responsible to himself. This isn't love.
A man his age isn't going to 'get with it.' What he may need to do is get out of your home.
He doesn't 'fall apart drinking.' He is likely an alcoholic.
At 80, the writing has been written on the wall for a long time.
To support you mentally, you need to enlist others to support you to make some changes for your own welfare. 80 is not 40, 50 or even 60. If you do not make changes now, when will you? He is unable to care for you - physically care for your needs and perhaps emotionally and psychologically unable to care for you, possibly, in large part to his addiction to alcohol.
Sounds like you will need his apt / space for a reliable, paid caregiver.
It is time that you ask him to leave and stop loaning him your car.
You are supporting his addictive behavior.
What he needs is to be responsible for his own behavior and choices, and the consequences of his behavior. If he doesn't get his car fixed, then he doesn't have a car to use. You are NOT helping him nor yourself. Do you want your car totalled due to his drinking binges?
You are very fortunate this hasn't happened already.
Of course you are overwhelmed. You are frightened and alone, and 80.
Are you afraid he will hurt you? Contact Senior Services at your county, find a social worker. You need an immediate intervention to flush out your options and make a plan. Moving into a senior community, selling your home sounds like an excellent idea. Discuss your needs with an attorney. Have someone else with you when he tell him what you are doing and what he needs to do.
I worked graveyards for a few years, and drank quite a bit on my nights off; largely because there just wasn't anything else to do. I never drove drunk or anything dangerous like that though, and didnt drink a drop during my weeks on (I worked 12 hour shifts for 7 days, then had 7 days off).
Is his car broken because he crashed while drunk?
It can be VERY difficult to maintain friendships or relationships while working nights.
You seem to imply if he wasn't drinking he'd be able to caregive for you in the future. Even if he were the picture of sobriety this is a foolish assumption to make.
You need to sell your house and downsize to an apartment in a more populated area, like a planned senior community. If your son is working and holding down a job he can afford to house himself. At his age he should not be living with his mother anyway. Has he ever lived outside of your home?
To start off, give him a deadline to fix his own care (with his own money). Tell him you are getting older and cannot let him put more miles on your car or drive it without proper maintenance any longer. A month to get his car fixes is probably more than enough time. As hard as it is, take the keys at that time. He has income - he can choose to fix his car or pay an uber to get himself to work.
You say you love him to much to upset him, but you must understand your love is also creating the type of person who will not be able to manage when you are gone. Leaving him assets will be used for the same behavior until they are totally depleted. You might want to talk to an atty about setting up some kind of managed account so he can not get access to a lump sum when something happens to you. Naturally you want to leave it to him, but do NOT leave him a lump sum and the property. He doesn't even maintain his own car. Don't expect him to be able to maintain a home that you always took care of. Also if he is rewarded with too much money, he may decide to quit his job because he has money to pay his bills. I urge you not to help him dig his own grave. A lifetime of being an enabler is not easy to change. You might want to even go a meeting about it or look online for more information that might help you be stronger, for him, mentally.
Go ahead and work on plan B. Assume you have no son - how/where do you want to live when you can no longer live in your own home? If you have finances to hire caretakers, that will be your plan B. If you have little in the way of money, then start looking and asking others about assisted living and let son know you will go to AL and sell the home to pay for it. It may or may not be a wake up call for him, but he needs to know you have a plan where you don't depend on him.
I would recommend attending some Al-Anon meetings. You will learn a lot, and it will be there that you will learn not to enable. My son is a recovering alcoholic, and it wasn't until I went to those meetings did I understand that I was actually hurting him by enabling him, instead of helping him like I had originally thought.
Quit painting a rosy picture for your family and start being honest. It's only then that things will change. Wishing you strength to do what's right.