Thanks in advance for any suggestions.
My mother is 84. She has had health issues (high blood pressure, high cholesterol, small strokes, heart attack, two bypass surgeries) for over 30 years. She is also a non-compliant patient and as a parent, she was controlling and occasionally abusive. At least once a year, she has medical "emergencies" that require a visit to the ER to be admitted for observation and tests for a few days. Something that, in the past, the entire family would come running and sit with her. 30+ years of that....and more often than not, nothing being found wrong...well, none of us really come running anymore. This past year, her medical 'emergencies' have increased but coincide with stressful/life changing decisions such as, moving into assisted living and closing on the house. She's obsessed with her blood pressure, taking it multiple times a day. I am one of three girls and the only one that lives out-of-state. With small children and a husband who travels, I can't drop everything for these 'emergencies'. Both of my sisters live in the same town with my mom. One has boundaries well-established that she is rarely called for assistance. The other, the one I'm concerned about, is emotionally exhausted and drops everything she has going on to run to mom's aid...basically, she and her family are 24/7 on-call for mom and she, understandably, resents it but can't figure a way out of it. The facility mom is living in....there really is NO reason for her to be calling either of my sisters for anything she needs. I just got off the phone with my sister, who is on her way over to sit with mom in her apartment. She cancelled her own appointment to run over and be with mom. Mom calls her to let her know what her latest blood pressure reading is...for attention, we imagine. Actually, she mentioned she had an appointment and mom asked how long it would be. When told, my mom's reply was "Oh." To which my sister said "I suppose I could cancel it" and mom's reply was "I wish you would, please." Big age difference between my sisters and I, the only reason I share that is because we're at different stages in our own lives and not only does the one sister get called but so does her husband and adult children.
Our father passed away 3 years ago and he catered to mom. There is no replacement for him.
As far as friends of my mom's, most have either quit calling or it is very infrequent. If she has not heard from someone for a while, she does not reach out.
I won't deny that I'm very angry with our mother because I tend to see what she is doing, as being abusive, manipulative to my sister. There is no reason that one elderly woman needs 9 adults to wait on her, hand and foot...especially when she is living in a facility that can take care of everything. Mom says she can't take care of herself but will not relinquish control of anything.
Mom will later apologize for disrupting everyone's lives. To this particular sister, she will shed tears....yes, the push/pull thing.
Any suggestions on how I can help/support my sister in establishing boundaries that she can feel good about? We have a plan for her to take a vacation, that I come down to be physically be 'there', so she can take a break without feeling guilt but it isn't for a few months (Summer when school is out).
I understand that this stage of life mom is in, has fears and anxieties all their own. There is no lack of compassion or understanding on that (although this post doesn't really reflect that). Her fears and anxieties shouldn't become all-consuming demands from my sister and her family...right?
Once again, I am grateful to you all for any suggestions to help and support my sister with this.
Your sister sounds like your mom groomed her well for her current role. She's in an emotional dance that only your sister can stop being the dance partner in for mom is not going to change. Mom will get angry when your sister stops being her emotional dancing partner, but that is mom's problem.
Old people get obsessed about bp and bowels. They need doctors and rnds to reassre them. Not daughters to sit by their sides.
What didn't help? Having one of us kids there. No amount of reassurance helped. Somethinv in mom's brain was broken. She had anxiety that attached itself to whatever was available.
Your sister has to unenmesh herself from your mom. You probably should suggest some therapy.
Babalou, Yes...I agree that therapy would be most helpful. Perhaps to get a viewpoint from a 3rd party and such. Anxiety is definitely an issue with mom and we assume depression although mom does not agree that is a true medical thing. I know she has a script for Xanax that they used yesterday to help with the bp. Her habit with medication is this: If she's prescribed 5 mg of Lisinopril, she cuts the tablet into fourths and maybe ends up with 2.5 mg over a 24 hours period. Capsules? She opens them and pours most of the medication granules out then puts them back together. Doctors? Well, they are all younger than her now so she sees them all as 'quacks' that don't know what they are doing. I appreciate you sharing what went on with your mom, thank you. :-)
tacy022, Yes. She needs to get fed up enough to want to make it change. Guilt has been a big manipulator throughout all 3 of our lives and that's where I think therapy would help her the most....because it helped me (so of course, if it helped me I think it could help her...). Our eldest sister is a nurse in one of the local ERs and works the graveyard shifts. So it isn't that she is not available but no one will take her up on her offer to help...mostly because of the daytime sleeping due to her shift. However, manipulation is definitely going on because when middle sis went to mom's yesterday, it wasn't until she was getting ready to leave that mom 'fessed up that she didn't even call eldest sis, who had been off for days.
The three of us are scheduling a 3-way call, just us not mom. Mom seems to think that we do not talk to each other and is trying to use that to her advantage. It wasn't until events over the past weekend that enlightened us all on how this "game-playing" may have been going on for quite a while. So communication between just the 3 of us is key. There is already some resentment and we don't want that to grow and fracture our relationships.
I, personally, think my sisters AND their families are under NO obligation to provide my mom with their work schedules. I had a conversation with one of my nieces who told me how much she dreaded coming home on the weekends from college because grandma knew she was there and needed all sorts of things....my suggestion to her was to give grandma a call earlier in the week, tell her "Hey! I'm going to be around on Thursday this week, so get your grocery list together and I'll be by Thursday afternoon to get it and visit." Something more on her terms and schedule.
I can't do a lot from where I'm at. For me, its frustrating and almost torture-like to hear all of this going on....as if I have a front-row seat to watch it all but I'm gagged and tied to the chair.
Thank you all for your comments and suggestions...it had given me some things to bring up when we all have our phone call this week.
What your sister needs to realize, as many of us are seeing, is that we're losing contemporaries way too young these days. How many of us have seen people in their 60's and early 70's leaving us? The constant stress of life, caregiving and all are hitting the "sandwich generation" hard.
I put together some future dates and messaged them to my sister. Hopefully they are far enough in advance for scheduling and she can go away to recharge without worrying about getting called.
I've pretty much said my piece. Suggested counseling to her. As much as it pains me to say this, there is nothing I can do if she can't tell mom 'no'. I can give her a break when the kids' school schedule allows. However, if my mom is going to continue exercising her preference as to which daughter she prefers to have around...there isn't much I can do about that.
There will be resentment towards me. Currently, my sisters and I are to have a conference call...probably over the weekend. I'm calling the facility today so I understand what all is available and what can be done via phone. My sister agrees that she is being manipulated, abused and that it is affecting her family and marriage. Right now, she is so close to it all...I think she feels trapped. Has mentioned how hard it is to pretend that she cares when really she wishes she'd be left alone. I can't relieve her until this summer which I put together dates for each month so she can make plans to get away. Try talking to my other sister to see what she can do, aside from calling mom every morning on her way home from work.
Kimber 166, precisely! She moved recently to the assisted living center, end of November.
Since she has returned, another resident and their spouse have been bringing mom her lunch to her room. This resident asked when she would be returning to play cards and the reply was the usual "oh, I just don't know when I'll be feeling better." The resident replied, it doesn't take that much energy to get downstairs to sit and use your brain a little. Now, that isn't an exact quote. However, I was happy to hear that a 'peer' told her that. I think it would be good to be around some others who are also in their elder years and not willing to mess with the pity party. Or it could completely go the other way and she never leaves her room then constantly complains how much she hates it there.
I'm an optimist and also an opportunist (if the optimist and pessimist are arguing about the glass of water, I may take a sip of it. -yes, I'm trying to be a little funny.) So I have hopes....meanwhile, do what I can for my sister and go from there. Thanks for all the suggestions, concerns, support....I appreciate it.
I have two stories about it. One family member after undergoing numerous tests and doctor visits to all kinds of specialist (thought it was his blood pressure too, but no) he was referred to a psychiatrist and diagnosed with CONVERSION DISORDER. Check it out. I bet it will seem very familiar. My dad accepted the diagnosis. (Pretty impressive for a man in his 70's) He went to therapy for a little while and went on medication for anxiety. It REALLY helped. He's only relapsed twice just a little in the last couple of years.
The other person refuses to accept that she has it, but has finally agreed to take anti-anxiety meds her doctor strongly recommends. Her symptoms are way out of control and now the family just ignores her. It doesn't matter. That type of psychologically ingrained illnesses are so deep rooted and resistant.......Good luck. Beware that it runs in families and you may see it in children and grandchildren.
So you have a sister with an "it better be a real emergency" attitude and another one who's a softy.
My mother, when feeling lonely, also resorts to selfish, manipulative, attention-seeking behaviors. No one except me actually tells her the effect that has on everyone else because they're afraid of offending her. Or having to live with the guilt if in fact something serious happens and they didn't run to the rescue when they were supposed to. ... As if we could predict the future.
Regardless of your mom's medical history, the BS has to stop. She needs to hear it from you.