Hello. First-time poster here; not in the US. I hardly know where to begin, but here goes...
Nine years ago, my husband's mum was put on a ventilator and was expected to die. She pulled through, so we sold up and moved back to my husband's county, as he's an only son. He got another job but I didn't, thinking that I would look after my MIL for her last few months. Two years later, we'd built our dream home in the same village as my DH's home place and, five days after moving in, my FIL had a heart attack. Both of DH's parent's moved in with us. DH has an Aunt, who is widowed, childless and difficult. Almost without my realising it, I was given 'jobs' like collecting her pension, cooking, cleaning, etc. These 'jobs' got more personal and she was very belittling of me. When I tried to express my dislike, DH explained that she was elderly, had had a tragic, childless life etc...
This went on for seven years. Then, two years ago, my FIL died at home of kidney disease in April. That October, the Aunt had a suspected stroke and moved in with us. Things got harder. I felt like I was failing. I saw a counsellor.
Last October, I lost the baby we'd tried for years for. The next week, I was Matron of Honour to my SIL, with my six-months pregnant sister as the other attendant. Lots of people knew about the baby, but not about the loss. It was hard.
In January, Daddy got sick. Then Mammy had difficulty swallowing. Mammy was kept in for a biopsy and I brought Daddy in to visit Mammy and get his test results. We found out that Daddy was dying on the Monday and then Mammy died on the Sunday. It doesn't feel real, even now.
The Aunt was in the hospital for Rehab that she refused to comply with while Mammy was dying. I visited her on the way back from seeing Mammy. Once she was home, and immobile, my MIL had three successive hospitalisations of acute COPD exacerbations, which ended in her death last month.
Which brings me to today. When I began to care, I was a chatty, open, loving person. Now I am silent, angry every moment of every day, hateful and depressed. My doctor has prescribed sleeping tablets and anti depressants and I must meet with a counsellor.
My question is this; is this my life now? Is this who I am now? I feel that there is only death and pain and loss in my future and I'm so hollow inside that I don't really care. I'm afraid for my Daddy and for myself. I feel like the woman I was before caring has died too and I'll never get her back. Everything is so bleak and difficult and I can't even call my Mammy anymore to cry and be comforted and have her good advice.
I found this forum looking for advice on dealing with grief, so perhaps Mammy was prompting me to ask you for advice, as she can't be here. Please help me.
Jenny
Countrymouse is right. You need to grieve the loss of your baby and mammy, plus seeing your father get worse. You have so much grief in your heart that has turned to depression and anger. Grief can come out in many unhealthy ways if it isn't worked through and expressed. I wish for you to find a gentle, tender soul to listen to you and care for you.
Please know I am sending you all the love, light, and gentle presence I can and hope the light surrounds you with the love you need to heal. You are broken right now, but you need strength to become whole again. Listen to some of the advice you have been given by the others and know we all care about you.
Tricia Riley Schneider
One other thing we have in common, when I lost a baby in a miscarriage, I was leaving the hospital the morning my first husbands family was arriving to celebrate the birth of his cousin's baby. I felt so ashamed that I had a miscarriage and that my husband didn't arrange for my privacy while leaving the hospital like going out the back door so I didn't have to face his family. There was nothing to be so ashamed of. I was my grieving for the child I had carried and lost. I live my life with a commitment to God, to embrace the faith I adopted and to live by truths in the Bible. I have two sons from 2 of my 5 pregnancies to my first husband. . 3 of the babies were miscarriages. They are waiting in heaven for me. I am 35 years older than I was in those days and am beginning to get over the shameful feelings I had then. It took me time to heal and to grow in faith.
Inform Auntie that she is on her last chance so no more lies about you [she has to correct the ones she told] nor snipes at you - by the way there is no shame in her going to a nursing home - you probably didn't meet her until you were in your 20s so why put up with it - also maybe she would be better off with professional caretakers -
Go to several nursing homes in your area & look at them - bring the brochures back then show Auntie so she knows that you are not going to let her walk all over you anymore - remember you are doing her an enormous favour of letting her be in your home so she should keep this in mind -
Insist on a few 'please' & 'thank you' & reward her with a nice dessert - all you need to do is make her favourite dessert once but because she didn't say 'please' or 'thank you' that day, she gets jello then she'll improve her tone towards you quite a bit
In a nursing home they change the staff 3 times a day so that fresh people are there all the time - no wonder you are burned out - tell DH that his shirts go out to be laundered so that you aren't doing the ironing of them - lighten your load anyway you can
I think Auntie should be paying YOU a stipend so that you can save for your retirement too otherwise these are lost earning years for you - invest most of it & have a bit of 'play' money for yourself - you'll feel a lot better about yourself & life will be much more positive too - hope this helps
You have no more reserves.
Time to grab your life back.
Do this without guilt (I realize that is nearly impossible) but if you don't, you will have given your life for others ... and I'm not hearing that is your choice.
I've learned we only go around once. It's wonder to give; however, sometimes it is absolutely essential we take. Take your life back now. Seek help while you do this to work through the anger, grief, isolation, and hard work ahead, but please, live your life now. Our lives are gone in a flash.
.....I know what I'm talkin about, the old me, came back.. sure, a bit scarred, a bit ragged, my energy level had some readjustment, and all frivolous dreams and concerns are now thinned down and weeded out ...so now, what's left of the me I once was, is now an emotionally trim version, I'm now more condensed into pretty clear goals, plans, and I don't put up with bull sh*t, nor do I say I will do what I don't want to do, any-longer..... oh, and all that Florence nightingale crap, the " i can do everything for everyone" side, was the heaviest collateral damage, and that's a loss thats was worthy of loosing. I'm very selective now, very protective of my 'life, meaning I'm now protective of my time, my limits. I don't know you, but I could almost bet you're not "clinically depressed, but rather just situationally depressed... meaning the old you, will come back out of hiding, when it's all clear. Ciao
You are supposed to be depressed and angry after all that's been thrust on you. Please skip the depression and sleep medication--you can't fix real problems by running chemicals through your body. You can get more benefit by taking time for yourself no matter what anyone says. Get outside and be in nature. Go for walks, take lunch to a park or field. Look at the birds, squirrels, trees, leaves and flowers. Do this or something that you enjoy every day. The aunt is not your responsibility and you don't have to be around her any more. Her being mean to you in private and sweet when others are watching is called "Sweet to Mean" by psychologists and is a sign of narcissistic personality disorder. The people with this character disorder have no conscience or ethics. They don't change and they get meaner with age--never better. Please protect yourself.
I am so so sorry for your loss.
As an RN and having been clinically depressed myself.
You definately seem the same.
How could you not?
You need to be hospitalized.
I went to an adult program for depression. They wanted me hospitalized but I had a husband in a wheelchair that needed my help at nite.
So i just participated in the day program.
If this means placing your husbands aunt in a convalescent home for the duration so be it. She may come back more pleasant.
However I also feel that placing her in a home would be BE t for you. Your husband needs to understand that you can no longer mentally or emotionally
Carry this burdan. Talk to councillor about this and if she knows of any place you can go
That has a good program for clinical depression.
I wish I was near you so u could have one shoulder to lean on and ear to talk to.
Pls let us know how your doing.
My deepest condolences and sympathies. I'm so sorry for all your losses. I know its an extremely difficult time. I'm glad you will start taking a little more time for yourself. It is much deserved and needed.
Now you be sure to stick to your guns on these new changes, as we all know, words are words, but actions are Actions! You will need to stay on top of it, and increase your caregivers needs as things progress with her decline and increased needs too!
I hope this makes things must easier for you, that it will alow you and your hubby to spend more quality time together, as well as your Dad.
You know all to well how caring for others is ever changing, but you have needs too!
Super happy for you, and enjoy your free time, and don't forget to come back here and let us know how things are going! Good luck!
While I was caring for my father at his house because of strokes and dementia my BIL got West Nile Disease. My husband joked about my taking care of his brother too. I told him I couldn't take care of his brother. I have no guilt for not for caring for his brother. His brother died two years later because he never really recovered from the West Nile. I still don't have any guilt because I didn't take care of him.
I would look into a grief support group. My father died in October of last year. I am in a support group from a local hospital. It helps a lot. Please take care of yourself. Love to you.
I am so sorry to hear of all that you have been going through, it sounds very tough. I think the things you are feeling are valid and understandable giving the circumstances. My parents went through ten years of IVF to have me, and my mum cared her FIL and two ill parents on top of that. It was very stressful, tiring and depressing for her. I think you need to talk to your partner regarding the feelings you are having. It is okay to reach out for help. Additionally, there are services you can make use of. I know finance may be an issue, but reaching out to social services, or organising a home visit with the GP for your MIL may help. Even somebody to come in once a day and assist with MIL's personal care might take the strain off of you. You can finance this yourselves if SS can't assist, which I understand may not be possible, but even once a week, you should see her compliance with mobilising improve. Additionally, talk to your husband about maybe arranging some rest bite care, a week where you two can live alone as a married couple, and talk about things openly, and arrange a fairer plan that takes into consideration your needs too. Let me know if there's anything else you want advice, support, or just someone to talk to xx
When DH came home, I just cried and cried and told him that I couldn't do it anymore.
I ought to have been upfront and said something when I saw the counsellor that first time, before the baby was lost but then Daddy got sick and everything went on the back burner. I suppose I just thought that I would get better, she needed a different tack, I was hormonal after the baby - lots of things.
Long story short, DH believed me! He spoke to the Aunt and said he had put two and two together from oblique references that the day lady and neighbours had made about 'Jenny having her hands full'. He asked her to choose between the NH of her choice, or to stay here with us and attend day care in a nearby town, initially once a week, increasing to three days a week by Christmas. He has also promised to arrange two week's respite for us to take a holiday before the end of Summer.
The Aunt wasn't happy, said she wasn't wanted, better off dead, lots of things. She called me names and DH said he was happy to see her true colours. Once she had exhausted all her spite, she apologised.
I feel a Rubicon has been passed. I know now that my silence gave assent to her treatment of me. DH said she has always been a controlling person and, housebound and coming to the end of rather a tragic, difficult life, she's exerting that control in unhealthy ways. With Day care and the activities there, she'll have more to occupy her that Judge Judy and whatever I'm doing!
DH also called the Aunt's SIL, to whom she had been telling lies about me. She told her I went out for hours and left her soiled, that I gave her cold porridge - none of it true! I never leave this house unless DH is here, or the Day Lady, in a pinch.
This morning, she apologised again, and I hugged her and said we'd make it work. I'm not foolish; I know who she is and what she does. Even so, I'd hate her to end her days in a NH. She has many health issues and a 7.5cm inoperable AAA, so I hope, when her time comes, it will be at home.
I couldn't be more grateful that I found this group. I wish I'd known about it in all the year's I've been caring! I suppose I've fallen into the role of 'The Carer' and I should take some responsibility for that. I'm a 42-year-old, educated lady - too old to live for a pat on the head and universal good opinion!
Thank you so much to everyone who replied. It was good, hard sensible advice. Exactly the same kind that Mammy would have given, were she here. Bless you all for your help. xx
The part of my family that is from Ireland is quite fatalistic about life. Things are not to be changed, they are to be accepted. According to my mom, when I was young and talking about feminism...."Ah, it's the life of woman to accept pain and suffering....it's the way of the world, ordained by God for the sin of Eve".
Um, no.
I think you need to have a private sit down with your lovely, understanding and supportive of everyone husband and tell him what the score is...that this caregiving gig has made you ill and that you will no longer be able to do it.
If he's really the lovely guy you tell us he is, he'll understand.
I too lost 3 parents in only 14 months time 13 years ago, and my FIL immediately moved in with us.
Will things return to normal, will you find yourself ever again? I hope so, I truly do. I do know that things can and do get better, but we are continually challenged at every turn, as the go to caregiver.
I recommend you stay with finding a counselor to discuss all of your many losses, and your Auntie needs to go. Find her a nice Assisted living place or more likely a Nursing home, as she is bedbound. This is all too much too fast for one person to take, and until you do this, you will struggle to find your new normal. I'm so sorry!
Please know, that you have found the most Amazing website here, as the folks on this site are so caring and generous with their support! We all need to have a place where we can jot off a quick note, and get such incredible advice and friendship! You will love it here!
I know you will continue to get great advice, and I hope you take it to heart, perhaps share it with your hubby, so that gets can see the caregivers journey from many different sides. Good luck, and yes, it does get better with time! Sincerely, Stacey B
You and DH need to talk.
With everything else and losing a child you need a break. There r many reasons why u may have lost the baby but I would say it was stress and your age. A 42 yr old woman should be taking it easy when pregnant. They found with me, I didn't make enough progesteron (hormon needed in early pregnancy) so I got a shot every week. I had. MiL that was one way in private and another in public. Tape the Aunt and let husband see hoe she is to you. You don't have to take it. When she gets going tell her u no longer are putting up with it and walk away. You r entitled to a life of ur own.
Your husband is a lovely man, with key qualities such as loyalty and industry and compassion. That's very good.
You left your home town and moved to where he comes from. You gave up your job. Bit by bit, you became his family's go-to caregiver. Very sadly, the baby you and your husband had longed for was not to be; but life went on around you with your SIL's marriage and your sister's pregnancy. When your parents fell ill and your mother so abruptly died, you had to journey to spend the little time you had left with them as a couple. When you returned, the aunt immediately expected you to refocus your attention on her. You feel your personality has changed, so that you have become withdrawn and cut off.
The thing is. Where is the compassion for you? Where is the focus on your needs, support for your priorities, respect for you as a person deserving consideration?
It is lovely to be welcomed by someone's family; and it sounds as though your family has welcomed your husband's side too. Normally that is a very good, productive thing. But as things have fallen out, it's not so much that you've been included, as that you've been absorbed.
You need time to mourn your lost baby; time to mourn your mother; time to regroup after the loss of your FIL and MIL after years of your caring for them; time to spend with your father as his daughter, not his nurse. What you don't need is to spend any more time being taken for granted as the live-in companion and - forgive me - sucker.
Now, I don't know how your husband's aunt has swung this. I have encountered a couple of characters who get away with similar cuckoo-in-the-nest type strategies, and from their point of view it works, and good luck to them. But I do think the parent birds, if you'll allow me to stretch the metaphor rather, should be encouraged to take a clear-eyed view of what is actually going on so that at least they can make an active choice about whether or not they are prepared to carry on.
Your husband is a good man who wants to do the right thing by his blood. Nothing wrong with that. But he needs to wake up to what his aunt is taking and *think* about what is really due to her. And more to the point, he needs to be a lot less generous with your time and compassion. An hour a day is a nice gesture, and I'm glad you have a canny, alert lady coming to help you, but that's all it is. What about the other 23 hours? Did anyone ever actually *ask* if you were content to give them up to other people?
A great many terrible things have happened to you one after the other, much too fast, and you need time to recover. You also need time and space to adjust to what's happening with your father, and decide what involvement you can cope with.
But then there is anger. You don't mention anger. You call yourself bitter. Does it occur to you that you might have things to be angry about?
Please stop with careing for HIS Aunt. She elected to be alone, with no children. She should have planned better for her golden years. Not your problem. Your husband needs to place her in Assisted Living or skilled nursing home. She refuses? Too bad - she has no say in the matter.
You have "hit the wall" and need time to heal both physically and emotionally. Rest and a Vacation are due ASAP.
Say NO, NO, NO! No more stress, no more caregiving. Time for YOU and HUBBY to spend quality time together and you take care of your health. You are truly an Angel and my Prayers and Best Blessings are sent to you.
I'm in Ireland and I'm 42. I know I'm depressed, and my doctor has given me some Lexapro and Zimovane, and made an appointment with the counsellor I saw before the baby was lost.
The Aunt lives with us and my husband is all the family she has. He's an extremely loyal man and I love him dearly. His Aunt is very difficult and treats me one way publically and another privately. I've never known anyone like her before. May God forgive me, I wish she had left and my mother stayed.
Because she's immobile (by choice - she refused to cooperate with the staff at the rehab hospital), I can't leave the house unless my husband is here. He is a wonderful man and has arranged for a lady to come for one hour each morning. She helps me get the Aunt up with the hoist and then we chat over tea. She's the one who made the appointment with the doctor for me.
I know I'm grieving and that the last two years have been hard but is this it? Will I ever be like I was? Or, once I'm no longer caring for anybody, will my heart always be small and hard and bitter?
So where's aunty now?
And how old are you?