My mother in law moved in shortly after my husband did. He and her lived together after his divorce. We have his two teenage boys 50% of the time and my two kids 8 and 4 about 65% of the time. My house is a 4 bedroom home, 1 1/2 bath. I made sure she had a room of her own. She has health problems, 79 yrs old, stroke in 2004 leaving her with mobility issues, diabetes, smokes outside like a chimney, doesn't drive and is passive aggressive. She used to help out making dinner and buying groceries, I would take her to the store before but the 4hr trips to Walmart were too much. I tried to tell her I would drop her off and pick her up, but she wanted me to go with her. I work as a nurse and have 2 young kids, I don't have time to spend that long in a store. Did I mention my husband has 2 other siblings that don't even call her? I feel selfish at times fro feeling resentful towards her and my husband because She washee the dishes and helps with laundry and I can leave my kids at home when I work. She really doesn't watch them, just sits outside and smokes and drinks her coffee. She doesn't have to pay anything. We feed her dinner every night and serve it to her as well. I have always picked up her meds, took her to appointments and buy her cigarettes. I make sure she has everything she needs and my husband lets me. She is pretty much of sound mind. I feel she is ungrateful at times and mopes around the house because she doesn't have a vehicle. I would be afraid of getting that call where she fell getting in or out of her vehicle. She complains about the kids constantly. She has even come into my husband and my bedroom while we were laying there and proceeded to put clothes away. She sits on our love seat, a couch my husband and I bought for him and I, right next to my husband at night watching tv until 2am. I would have to sit on the other couch. I find myself hiding up in my room, to get any privacy. If we move her into an apartment (which he tried before and she said someone was breaking into it, that last 3 months). Then we would be left with finding a sitter while we work. I don't like feeling resentful, but I just can't help it and I knew he cared for her before I married him.
Seriously, i dont think even the grandma is happy!
Creative solution-- have her doctor tell her, she must quit smoking, get a volunteer job, walk 4 miles per day, and eat 50% green leafy vegetables on her dinner plate. Plus take all her meds.
If she cannot comply with Dr's orders, then she must move to a facility care-- where they do not allow smoking, and only have healthy food.
If you do not make a change to this deplorable situation, everything will stay the same, or get worse! And its sort of not your problem, nurse, as it is your husbands mom? So make it his challenge to get his mom on the right track-- no smoking, no moping, no interfering with you & your husband.
I am very worried for those assorted young ones who are forced to live in this extreme dysfunction. Is there any love, anywhere, in this house? I will pray all of you (and ask others to send prayers to you as well).
Also if there's strife in the home, this is another thing the children will pick up on because they'll most likely take the hardest hit. I don't really have a complete picture of the whole situation, but it does seem to me like the whole family is going through an adjustment of the living situation. Adjustment is required when people live together, and adjusting is harder for some people than for others. For instance, if you're more geared toward living alone or having your own space, you really don't want to bring someone else into the picture unless this stirs up stress for the person who's more geared toward having their own space. Apparently there is something more going on then we may know about if there's already at least one upset person in this picture. It's always a healthy thing to make rules and boundaries, and I took quite a bit of time to think of some very nice solutions so everyone wins and everyone stays happy. Anytime you have someone living with you, you always want to help them feel as much at home as possible. If you marry into a family where a potential spouse is caring for a family member, this can be hard on a potential new spouse coming into the picture if the person coming into the picture may not have had to take care of someone themselves. This can be especially hard. For instance, putting myself in the wife's shoes, if my potential husband is caring for his mom, it's probably not going to be easy for me if she's living with him before the wedding. It might not be quite as bad if there's a big enough home where everyone can retreat to their own personal spaces. It might also be better if there was help coming in to better part of the caregiving burden. I personally would never want a live-in taking an unreasonable amount of time away from intimate time with my husband, this would definitely cause strife in the home. I personally would be especially happy with a bedroom TV. That way, if I did have to retreat in such a situation as this, at least I would retreat to the bed and be more comfortable there than I would've been on the couch, because I personally would make sure at least my side of the bed is Tempur-pedic! They have dual side separable adjusting beds these days, but you can also have separate beds sitting side-by-side and each party can have their own mattress type for better comfort. As long as I could retreat to my Tempur-pedic, I personally would be very content if I did have to retreat to my room if I couldn't be on the couch by my husband in this type of situation. Putting myself in this type of situation, I figure if it was me having to retreat to my room, I'm going to be happy doing it if I'm actually looking forward to something specific in my retreat area because it's definitely going to be my bed, and I can watch whatever I want on the bedroom TV from bed! At least I would know where the remote is and I would have complete control over it should I have to retreat
I'm a non-smoker but if you simply pass someone on the street who happens to be smoking, it can also get on your clothes and stay there for a considerable amount of time. I didn't realize this until age 23 when I lived at a temporary group home. The rule was not to smoke in the group home. The house parent thought I was smoking just because she smelled it on me, which happens to not be true at all because she had wrong ideas about it. Just because you smell it on someone doesn't always mean they've been smoking because secondhand smoke goes everywhere and clings to anything it can.
Gives me an instant migraine!
It doesn't matter if she sat next to her son when he was single. Mothers who want their son's to be happy - like giving space for a marriage to succeed - do not behave this way.
Who are you to take her cigarettes away? Um....you're the owner of the home she lives in? You're the mother of the children she's poisoning with her secondhand smoke? Have you considered the mixed messages you're sending your kids? Nicotine is a drug and their grandma is an addict. You probably don't want your kids smoking. But she's a role model. And not just regarding cigarettes. She also kicks their mother out of her own love seat. Your children are watching and learning. Are these the lessons you want for them?
As for the rest, I believe you know the right things to do. It looks like you are just fishing for someone to tell you it is OK to remain in your current circumstances.
I also thought of how I would handle this if it was my husband and it was my needs not being met:
I would clam up and do some withholding in the bedroom to send a strong message, this is how I would handle it if I were you and in this type of situation. I don't know if you tried talking to him already, but if you haven't tried talking to your husband about the situation and what bothers you, you may want to carefully review the ideas on the form and maybe incorporate them into the conversation with your husband, because maybe he just needs to hear from you. Sometimes things happen and spouses may not know how much something upsets other family members, he may not even know you're upset! I would start by first reviewing the suggestions given here and take them very calmly to your husband at a time you can both talk alone. He may very well listen to you, I hope he does. If not, I would take it to the next level and do some withholding in the bedroom, but this is how I personally would take the next step if talking doesn't work. It won't be long before he starts wondering why, and this is exactly where you're going to have to speak up for your own needs by speaking up about what bothers you and that he didn't listen when you spoke with him before. If you decide to take to take this approach, don't back down or given until something changes in your favor, you'll definitely need to stand strong on this one even if you must seek out a good Christian counselor. I specify a Christian counselor because they know how things are really supposed to be and a Christian counselor will never steer you wrong. I had a different kind of incident years ago and I had a Christian counselor who was great! I would highly recommend a Christian counselor if you must go that route, especially if the living situation negatively affects the marriage
I'm not saying you have to take anything away from her but you do have to do whatever is necessary to spare your relationships even if it means moving her into her own place to save everyone else's sanity if others are stressed at her staying there with you all. As God's word says, a man is to leave father and mother and cleave to his wife. If your husband insists on keeping her there, everyone is going to have to adjust, it's all part of living together. I don't know how big your home is, but you all might consider getting a bigger home so there's more space for everyone. More living space for everyone will definitely help through getting a bigger place because there will be more space for everyone to retreat for privacy when needed.
I find myself in a similar position in that my father-in-law has lived in our home with us for the last 13 years. My husband has always done his best to put me first however my father-in-law's advancing age and ours as well has made it most difficult to continue on in this situation. We are currently intendind to begin the process to sell our home this next spring, and to move his father into a senior living situation. We have done our best to make a comfortable life for him after his wife passed away, but after 13 years it is time for us now to have our senior and retirement life, and we have made that clear to my father-in-law who has come to accept our needs.
I hope you and your husband can figure out a situation soon, that will work well for all of the family. It does sound like it is time for her to move into a senior living type situation where she will be amongst others who are of simular age and interest. Your husband and you, will still need to advocate for her in her daily needs and medical needs. But this can be done if you move her into a place that is near enough to your home, but it is time for you to put you your children and your husband first. I absolutely understand that this is not easy but it is necessary. Your children are too young to be left with a woman that is not capable of managing them both emotionally and physically. The very first step I believe that you need to take care of, is after school care for your children. Because if they are not being looked after appropriately you could be in for trouble, and they are most definitely not getting all of their needs met. Your husband needs to be proactive in this situation and make it clear to his mother that he is now a married man a father and she needs to be in a place where she too and have her needs met. But that is not in your household.