Follow
Share

We recently moved my mother closer to us so we could help out and spend more time with her. She's 82 and is in declining health. On a recent visit, mom said all of her phones were missing, then proceeded to unleash hell on my unsuspecting wife, blaming her for the missing devices. She also complains... constantly. My wife will never return to visit her.


My wife is retired and she originally volunteered to help out because I still work. I'm afraid that situation is no longer viable as my mother treats my wife poorly. So, I work, and I take care of her now, as much as I can while still trying to lead a somewhat normal life, which is getting more and more difficult.


She fell last week, breaking her wrist, and banging her head on the way down. When the hospital called, I had 2 diametrically opposite reactions: Shock, fear for her, and sadness. The other was hoping it was a severe fall and she wouldn't be coming home. I hate myself for that.


Does anyone else experience that emotional incongruity? Am I a horrible person for that?

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
My mother no longer seems to be my mother either. She is very very negative and rarely has a nice thing to say about anyone. She has made a hobby of twisting everything anyone says to her into something to be offended about. She has accused me of stealing, of being on drugs, of sneaking out with men (I’m 46 years old). She is manipulative and when she she is really mad at me she will purposely eat very little so her blood sugar drops.

She is only 76 and fairly healthy. She has the beginnings of dementia and some arthritis and could be living an active life but she does nothing but watch tv all day.

She currently lives with me and sometimes I wish there would be a reason that she had to go into a nursing facility. You are not horrible and you are not alone in how you feel.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Of course you're not a horrible person.

I'm a little bit in your wife's shoes, though my m-i-l isn't that bad yet. My husband says "She was never like this before," and I have to try hard to bite my tongue because, in my view, she was always like this. He just didn't see it, blinded (and fortunately so) by their loving mother-son relationship. But now the micro-aggressions are becoming more visible. There's no point in me saying "I told you so." It's hard to see him go through this realization, but it's an unavoidable part of life. You have a rough road ahead of you, but it will get better. Remember to always put your marriage first—you're going to need each other. Good luck.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

Sounds parr for the course for dementia. Textbook even. Better get some advice and educate yourself about the subject and you’ll understand your mom better.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Yes most definitely! My mother in law suffers with dementia. She Iives with my husband and I. She is declining every day. She can be mean and abusive to us and yes we get blamed for taking things from her which we haven’t taken anything. It is unbearable some days. We are trying to get her in a facility but the one place we can find that her Medicare pays has her on a waiting list. We are currently trying to get her on Medicaid. We have a hospice nurse and doctor seeing her but she is not in the right category to be eligible for it. If she is placed on hospice they can hep us get Medicaid and into a facility. It is just a waiting game right now for us. She really needs professional assistance. We are doing what we feel is right but it is an emotional roller coaster! I hate my husband has to see his mother like this. It has done a number on our mental and physical well being as well. I just want her in a facility. We don’t want her gone and just leave her for someone else to deal with her, we just feel she needs help from people who are trained in this type of disease. She has had emotional outbursts where we had to call 911 and hoped the hospital would send her somewhere but they always send her home. We feel awful feeling this way but it gets very tiring for us. I work outside the home as a preschool teacher and then I have to come straight home and help my husband with her. He is home with her because he is on disability himself. We do send her to adult daycare during the week for a few hours to get her out to be with others but some days she is worse when she gets home. I hate seeing her like this and I hate what it has done to us.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

OMG. What a relief to read that someone is having the same thoughts i had when i was my mother's caregiver. She had cancer that went to her brain which caused falls, confusion, etc. I was the main caregiver with school-aged children then. You are NOT a horrible person. You are going through an overwhelming experience and need a support system. Do you have children or siblings that can help? Home healthealth aide? This emotional incongruity is probably a lot more widespread than you think.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

Raysot: You are not a horrible person. Your mother has cancer and that has to be difficult for you. Prayers sent.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

It may be time to look into assisted living for your mother. It sounds like it is too much for you to be working and also caring for her and your own family. Her health may continue to decline to where she needs more and more help over time. Don't feel guilty about wanting to place her in assisted living. Sometimes people actually prefer it. Find a good safe facility that offers activities, has a nice arrangement for meals, having an aide take her to doctor appointments (you may have to pay extra for that if you can't do it), cleaning her room, etc. Make sure all of her paperwork is in order while she's able to make legal decisions. She'll need to set up Powers of Attorney if she becomes unable to make her own decisions. She needs POAs for healthcare decisions and financial decisions, a living will with her advance directives about end of life care, a will if she has assets, and most financial institutions also have their own POA forms. You also need to be on file with Medicare and Social Security to be able to speak on her behalf. You can do that with a phone call with her sitting next to you. You need all of these things in place to be able to take over her affairs if her health declines to the point where she can't do it herself. Your responsibility is to make sure that she is in a safe place and getting the care she needs. You don't have to do it all yourself. Good luck!
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

How on earth do you even question this? Your feelings of disgust, dismay, and anger and frustration are completely normal. Who would NOT get angry and upset. Your mother has serious problems - she is broken - she is NOT and never will be again who she once was. It is perfectly acceptable to not stand the way she is now. Don't fret. But at the same time realize that YOU cannot fix her, nothing will help, and to subject anyone to her abuse, regardless of why, is insane. You must remove her at once and place her where she is cared for and you and your wife can live your lives. It is time.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report
Riley2166 Jan 2022
Talk to an eldercare attorney so you can take over legally in every way and do not, no matter what happens, ever take her into your home again. You will live in hell and be forever sorry - N E V E R . Once they are like this, they never belong in a normal home - they belong in a facility.
(3)
Report
I know exactly where you are. I've been there many times over the past decade with my mom. We used to be friends, she used to be cool. What happened? She's not that old, not even 80 yet. She's bitter, nasty, and I have come to conclude she really doesn't care about my well being anymore. She's not really a "mom", she's just this person I am stuck with because I am her only child, so here we are.

Right now she's in assisted living. She went there over a year ago in a wheelchair. I was told she would never walk again, and she needed help bathing, dressing, everything. The physical therapists are wonderful but I would like to give each one of them a smack across the face. They have gotten her walking again with a cane. Now mom is plotting to get her own apartment & move out to independent living. We've tried this like 3 times now. It's not gonna work and my life with end up in a tailspin like it always does.

Frankly, I am hoping for a fall, or something, to set her back and slow this roll. Over the years when she would be discharged (to me) from the hospital, I would sometimes cry when I had to pick her up. After a while I started finding a way to be "busy" and let them arrange a cab for her. Yes, I finally just refused to pick her up and play into the drama (she chooses very self-destructive behaviors and then expects the world to grind to a halt for her).

I think your feelings are normal. I'm glad we have this place to vent. I've been on this forum for about 8 years and it helps me keep my sanity.
Helpful Answer (12)
Report
Beatty Jan 2022
I get you.

That awful stage between not steady walking & wheelchair bound.

I used to attend falls + other. Then falls only. Then called EMS for falls & attended.. slowly. Once keybox in place, occasionally. Then declined to go. It was hard at first. But I had done all I could. It was actually a relief to come to that conclusion.

Now social planned visits only - no more beck & call. Advise given to reduce falls & move by professionals. Consequences will happen.
(3)
Report
Don't be too hard on yourself. As people age, they often undergo some personality changes. In my grandfather's case the changes were extreme and sudden, with many other family members the changes were smaller and more gradual. In my case (I am now 71), I can see that I am actually becoming less tense, more easy-going. (I should probably check with my sons on the veracity of that statement!) In any case, your feelings are your feelings. You do not need to worry over them. Sometimes you politely conceal them from family members out of politeness, but deal with the issues honestly. You are right in making your wife and yourself your first priority. Your mother is her own responsibility. Do what you feel you can do and feel good about that. We all experience shock when the people we have known all our lives begin to change into that later incarnation of themselves. Please treat yourself, your wife, and your mother with as much gentle acceptance as you can while acknowledging your honest feelings to yourself. Act on the facts, however. Your Mom will continue to need more care and you are not the one to provide anything more than a supervisory role. Her personality is not one that will allow you to be anything more. That is on her, not you.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

You must know that you are not a horrible person (and neither is your wife) but you are coming into what is the "normal" world for those of us who care for those who suffer from dementia. They are not the people (parent, sibling, spouse) that we knew in our younger days. As an older person myself, I find the thought of dementia frightening and so they may be terrified and angry so frequently they will lash out at the person nearest to them. Combine that fear and anger with the loss of short term memory and you can well have a disaster. Unfortunately, no one realizes how bad it can get until they start down the trail. It was kind of you to move Mom closer to you for visitation and companionship but it sounds as if she needs more care than you can give at this time. And you and your wife deserve a life of your own. This is what the woman who used to be your mother would want!

As has been suggested, if Mom is currently in hospital, grab the social worker (call her right now) and get Mom seen by a neurologist. If the dx is dementia, she definitely should not be released back to her independent living as it is dangerous for her to be unsupervised. Dementia only gets worse.

DO NOT (yes, being rude and shouting) allow her into your home for 1 minute!! Tell the social worker she needs placement; do not sign discharge papers. The easiest thing is to have the hospital agree that she needs, at the very least, short term rehab. This will buy you some time to find a more long term living solution for her - AL (Assisted Living)/ MC (memory care) with a long term unit should she need that going forward. Hopefully you already have the VIP (very important paperwork) - DPoA, Medical Proxy and updated Will - in place so that you can sign paperwork for her without jeopardizing your own income ( this might be a good time to have a short conversation with a certified eldercare attorney - try this site to locate an attorney near you https://nelf.org - some of them will give you a 15 min consultation for free -- in fact, don't sign any paperwork for Mom unless you have DPoA before you talk to an attorney!). At the same time, look at Mom's finances. Is she getting social security, pensions, etc?. Is she on Medicare and if, so what type traditional (red, white and blue card) or Medicare Advantage (the social worker at the hospital will need this primary insurance pronto). If traditional, does she have a supplemental insurance? In either instance, these are health insurances and will not pay for AL, MCs or LTC (long term care). If she does not have funds to pay for custodial care in and AL, MC or LTC she (you) will most likely need to apply for Medicaid. In many states, Assisted Livings (AL) and MCs have very limited beds for Medicaid so you may need to get on lists. Try to find an AL/MC that will guarantee you a Medicaid bed when her private funds have ended. They are hard to find but they do exist. Get that guarantee in writing and have it renewed every time her contract with the facility renews. It will provide you some limited protectection in case the facility is ever sold. Yes, there are bad facilities but there are some very good ones also. When you see Mom you want to be a loving caring son and daugther in law, not overworked, stressed out caregivers. And you are still giving care because you will always be her advocate at the facility.

This is a long, tiring and oft times confusing journey but you are definitely not alone and you will definitely come through it. Please feel free to PM me if you need some addition info on the insurance process. 10 years of LTC Admissions history here.
Peace to your and your family on this journey.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

you can request care givers to come to the home once a day for things like bathing, cleaning her room, checking her vitals or just someone to sit with her and talk. this way you will have support and she will have a little variety of contacts. she's probably just as tired of you as you are of her....lol
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

yes, its an up and down cycle.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Welcome to the world of caregiving. What you are feeling is so common. You are not a horrible person, but I write this to you as I feel the same thing almost everyday and think I am a horrible person for thinking these things. Just know you are not alone. Just don't ever think about bringing her to your home for even 1 day after a hospital stay. The hospital may try to convince you to do it, but then it is so hard to get them placed somewhere. If you refuse, the hospital will assign a social worker to get it done fast.
Something that made a big difference in my mom was a medication called Buspirone. I call it her 'happy pill,' because without it she is a bear. Does not make her tired or drugged, just helps with her mood.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
SMacArthur Feb 2022
That was the "magic" pill for my mother too until she maxed out on the dosage. But it was a Godsend while it lasted.
(0)
Report
Seems your mother has reached the point where she needs help 24/7/365. No one person can do this on their own. Please consider allowing case management and social services help you with your mom's placement.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

I urge you to immediately take her to a neurologist for further evaluation. My husband was the same and his PCP sent him to one and was beginning of dementia. This disease affects each person different and what you described is one of the characteristics. Please don’t hesitate to do this for her, you and your wife. The brain deteriorates and they are not in control anymore. My sister was at the receiving end of this and until he was diagnosed and we understood what was going on and we could expect with each stage of progression and not personal. That was huge for everyone. He also takes anti-depressant and anti anxiety which helps his frustration and aggression. Don’t underestimate this he’ll disease of dementia/Alzheimer’s. Run don’t walk to get her evaluated and if her doctor says no then she has the wrong doctor and find a geriatrics one. It made a big difference and best thing I did for him. I wish you and your mom best of luck and lots of love and patience.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report
CarlaCB Jan 2022
LMarrero, I had the exact same thought.

Raysot, it's not clear whether your mother is not who you thought she was, or if she's not who she used to be. If this type of behavior is atypical for her, it may be the onset of dementia of some sort. You need to get her evaluated and see what treatment options are available.

That said, aging and decline do bring out the worst in some people, even those whose cognitive abilities are totally intact. Elderly people can become extremely self-centered, and forget that others have feelings, needs, problems of their own, conflicting demands, etc. So lots of caregivers feel as ambivalent as you do. Don't beat yourself up. You're only human, too.
(4)
Report
You are not a horrible person. You're a wonderful son who is stepping up to care for your mother. Your emotional incongruity is normal. I have the same feelings. It's a double-edged sword. On one hand, I love and care for her the best I can, and on the other hand, I visualize the freedom that I'll have one day when she no longer needs me, which makes me feel guilty. Blessings!
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

I am starting to see erratic mood swings in my Mom. She is 81 and has dementia. The doctor put her on an antidepressant and that is helping quite a bit.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Ask the doctor for his recommendation, inquiring about being released to a care center, AL or a NH. Your wife is likely not equipped to handle the situation and it could even become dangerous for both your wife and mother. Your Mom clearly needs to be at least evaluated for mental status. You're not the first to have to deal with the situation, but you're asking your wife to something you wouldn't want to do and you'd not be concentrating on your own feelings so much.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

As I write this I have been listening to my mother talk ALL night long to people who aren't there, offering them food she hasn't cooked. Some of them are deceased relatives, some I have never heard of. When I got up at 3 a.m. to help her get to the bedside commode, I was yelled at because I had to change her clothes and most of her bed linens because she had removed her Depends and wet the bed again. I said all of that to say this, "You are definitely not alone!",

Dementia is a horrible thing. It steals Mom's life, which steals my life. I have been in her home, taking care of her for the last year. I have quit my job because I promised both parents they would not be put "in a home". When we all had Covid, I had to put her in a Hospice under "respite" care, just in case I was too sick to take care of her. No matter what it takes, I never plan to do that again. She came home dehydrated, incontinent, and over-medicated. They only had 4.5 days. This was a Christian Hospice. I never expected this! It was like she was simply "put on a shelf", ignored for all practical purposes.

I had only one sibling, who passed away in 2015. It was a weird childhood. My sister was Mom's favorite. Seemingly, I was Dad's. Mom and I have never gotten along, yet here we are. At varying times, she has thought people have stolen her jewelry, money, purse. She hallucinates, both visually and verbally. Infections of any kind make them worse, sometimes taking her down another notch for good, but sometimes she recovers back to her last state of mind when she takes antibiotics.

Sometimes, so much of your life feels "taken" from you that you welcome a period of rest, which Hospice can provide for five (usually consecutive) days per month. I think that is where you are coming from...you need a rest! Is there no one in the family that could help you out for a few days? If she is placed with Hospice, please ask pertinent questions before you consider respite care. In our area you can hire a "sitter" to come in so you can go out, but they are range from $20-$28 per hour with a 2 to 4 hour minimum, depending on which agency or if the sitter is free-lancing.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report
southiebella Jan 2022
DaizyMae your post resonates with me. My now-deceased twin brother was my mother's favorite child. I was her worker bee, always ready to earn approval through performance. I learned as a child that she could not always be trusted, as she would expose my secrets and shortcomings if it suited her. And yet, here we are. I love my mother and am going to go to the end caring for her but it's soul sucking work. The dementia has robbed me of her - she is incapable of carrying on a conversation or discussing current events. She only wants to know where her parents are and when she is going home.
(3)
Report
I was experiencing the same thing with my husband. He is now in a skilled nursing facility. I receive calls nightly asking me to calm him down. Last night he fell and I wished it would be so severe that God would take him. He is miserable with this disease and no life for anyone. My life feels taken by this disease as well. I understand how you feel, let’s face it, no one would choose to live in this constant hell. Don’t feel guilty for wishing their hell to end peacefully and be with God
Helpful Answer (17)
Report

You are not alone.All caregivers go through this at sometime or other.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

When you moved your mother closer to you so that you could help out and spend more time with her, what exactly did you imagine that would involve? What assessment of her care and support needs did you carry out?

I'm sorry to be grumpy, and I do appreciate how sad this situation must be for you, but we see it all the time and it drives me nuts.

Your mother is elderly, she is frail and mentally frail, she has cancer; she has recently been uprooted from her familiar surroundings; and now because she's flipped her lid and said spiteful, hurtful, unjust things her daughter in law doesn't want to know. Again, I appreciate that hindsight is a wonderful thing, but did anyone attempt any *fore*sight before taking on this project?

And now she's in hospital with a fractured wrist and possible head injury.

You are not a horrible person, no (and neither is your wife). You have simply bitten off far more than you were ever going to be able to chew without guidance or support or training or experience; and now you are hoping she'll be unable to come home because it will relieve you of responsibility for her safety.

What's the news since last week? Are they planning to send her home?
Helpful Answer (4)
Report
Davenport Jan 2022
Ouch.
(3)
Report
See 1 more reply
I do.
I wonder what God's test is for me. Why did I get stuck here?! How can someone (my own mother) treat me like she does? She's 85, soon to be 86. It breaks my heart watching her deteriorate, she always took care of herself. Now it's asking each day; Mom...how about letting me wash your hair today? That's a no. How about letting me clip your nails? That's a no. Everything is a no. No to her medication. No to walks. No to visiting her sisters. No to everything and it's her house, she will do whatever she wants and I can leave. Giving all ger money away to my greedy brother and shelters the other one.
I woke up this year and it hit me that I've been there for 11 years!!!
When does it end? When do I get to live? I do have a son and 2 grandchildren!
Am I going to hell?
I wonder that alot.
Sending understanding and hugs.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report
Feelingguilty22 Jan 2022
You’re not alone Angie. I understand. I wonder if God has put me here for a reason. My life is on hold. My mom says no to everything too!
hang in there.
(3)
Report
See 2 more replies
You are absolutely normal. Your feelings reflect the unexpected changes and fears associated with watching someone decline and realizing that your life is really no longer your own but dictated by the needs of the decling person.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

No you are not a horrible person. I totally understand. This gets so tiresome. My mom has a “public” self and saves the complaining and such for me..The caregiver…thats sadly how this goes. Release your wife from the caregiver role. Mom needs assisted living and then visit her with your wife. You will thank yourself..P.S. we put mom into assisted after she had her hospital visit..
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

I empathize. My father died a few months ago of pancreatic cancer, and there were times he was downright mean. I’m not a medical expert but I think the extreme pain, coupled with dementia and the tumor spreading to the brain, causes this. Please don’t be too hard on yourself. You’re most likely burned out from the emotional and verbal abuse and your wife is too. Only those who’ve been in this situation can truly understand the toll this takes on caregivers. You probably have not been able to sleep well or relax. As long as you don’t act on these feelings, know that you’re reacting in a very human way and you are brave to be honest about this. Take time to rest and take care of yourself. Visit your mother as much as you can. Forgive and tell her how much you care. Literally welcome each day as a new day and blank slate—this is what helped me to cope with my father. I had to forgive him and myself on a daily basis—I had to literally let each day go and forget about things, knowing I did my best. When it comes to the elderly and their erratic behavior know that long before they due you are already grieving—grieving who they used to be, and this is a shock to the system. Protect your marriage, feel your feelings and understand that your mother may not be totally aware of her actions, this helps to not take it personally. Take care!
Helpful Answer (13)
Report
raynak26 Jan 2022
I just wanted to thank you for your response to the man who posted about taking care of his mother and how he’s feeling. I take care of my mother and am also dealing with constant negativity and many other things described in the original post but your answer helped me, I do need to let each day go. so thank you so much!
(9)
Report
See 1 more reply
With Dementia, no one should be living independently. If she can afford it, transfer her to Assisted living ASAP.

I have a feeling you had no idea how bad Moms Dementia was until you moved her near you. In early stages they are very good at "showtiming". For a short time being able to make others believe everything is normal. Then there is "sundowning" where in late afternoon/evening the Dementia shows its ugly head.

Short-term memory is the first to go, like forgetting where she placed the phones. The ability not to be able to reason is an early sign. They get paranoid and pick one person to take things out on. No Mom is not who you thought she was because the Dementia is literally killing her brain. With each stage, comes something new. There is no rhyme or reason to it.

To ease your stress you need to understand, this is not the mother you knew. This is a women suffering from a horrible desease that is robbing her of her memories and her identity. She may realize something is happening but can't understand it. So, she gets angry. She needs compassion. She can't help who she is becoming. Believe me, I lack patience. Its not easy dealing with a desease that so precarious. Never know what will happen from one moment to the next. You could be sitting having a nice visit and then something sets them off. Paranoia is a big thing with Dementia. Its not easy, but your wife cannot take things your Mom says to heart. She needs to let it roll off her back. Easy, no. But she has to realize your Mom has no control. They lose their filters, the ability to empathize and they become self-centered. Their world becomes very small. It becomes their comfort zone. They like familiar things and places. Right now she is not where things are familiar.
Helpful Answer (10)
Report
Angie60 Jan 2022
Thank you for your positive and obvious in depth knowledge and opinion. You eased my soul. Helped me remember she is not who she used to be.
Thank you
(1)
Report
See 1 more reply
That happens often when relatives try to become care-givers of sick people that need professional care.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

"emotional incongruity?"

Yes. I get it.
No. Not a horrible person -
a normal person, feeling the full spectrum of emotions.
Helpful Answer (9)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter