Need your help again, friends. If you read my babbling, you now that this year has already been a nightmare for us. Hubby was rushed to the ER on January 4th with what I firmly believe was Coronavirus. He’s been in hospital/rehab since then and will be coming home tomorrow.
I work 5 hours a day, 5 days a week at a small daycare. These ladies have become like family to me. I make next to nothing and until I sit down to figure out our financial in-come and out-go, I’m not even sure how much difference this small paycheck even makes. It’s more of an “escape” for me—a break from caring for my husband.
He wants me to quit my job. I am currently laid off due to the pandemic and the director says she believes daycares will not open up much before mid-summer. So, I’ll be without a paycheck for approximately 4-5 months anyway. Hubby says I’m “too old” (I’m 66) to work any longer. And when I come home exhausted, I know it does impact my caregiving.
However, although he is not super-demanding, he is bedridden and I do everything for him but feed him. He also has me under a microscope. He questions my every move and makes suggestions as to something else I should be doing. He thinks I need to be doing housework from sunup to sundown.
I am completely on the fence. Hubby is still not well and could very well wind up back in a facility. Do I want to give up this job and face being alone for the rest of my life?
As far as doing housework from sunup to sundown goes, hey buddy, if you're 'too old' to work in a daycare, you're WAY too old to do THAT much housework! It may be time for a heart-to-heart talk with DH once he does get home. You're not a servant and you don't need suggestions or supervision from him on what to do.
Best of luck Joy!
I think though that your husband's approach and attitude dictate, if not mandate, that you have some free time for yourself. And I think that's just as, if not more, important than the money you make.
Everyone needs time out, and especially self respect, which I think comes from earning a paycheck, but not necessarily from caregiving.
How do you feel about having a heart-to-heart talk with your husband about his attitude? Would it be helpful? Make a difference? Or be a lost cause? I think your decision turns on this.
Losing self esteem and self respect from caregiving is a slippery slope, and often hard to reclimb. And that may be a part of your husband's attitude; I don't think many men would want to voluntarily be totally dependent on someone else...macho stuff and all that.
I do know that Kroger has been advertising for a few weeks; it's hard work and probably requires a lot of standing, but you would be nominally interacting with other adults. There's always the downside though of exposure to the virus.
I don't recall...are there any options for getting in home care? That would be the ideal situation, I think, if it's financially feasible. Sometimes elders are kinder to paid caregivers, and put on displays of nicety. And it could be a break for you if you can find some good help.
I don't like the me or him/her/them approach, but it may come to that. If your husband won't change his attitude, you have more than the right to think of yourself first.
Also, please check your messages in about 15 minutes.
Thinking of you, and hoping that you're able to find a decision that benefits you, and brings peace to you as well.
Don't quit unless YOU want to or choose to. You matter and what you WANT and NEED to do matters! (though, as you and lealonnie1 wrote, you're laid off).
For someone bed-bound to demand/ask someone else to be at his beck and call is selfish. And it's not up to him to tell you you're "too old" to work. That's YOUR call.
Your profile states your husband has mobility issues. Frankly, if he's questioning everything you do, then ask him to tell you what HE can do for the house and FOR YOU. He may be bedridden, but can he handle the mail and bills, write letters, handle the finances via a laptop, maybe even fold laundry?
You are his caregiver, but more importantly, you're HIS WIFE. He has responsibilities to you too.
If it weren’t for MY escape I don’t think I could be getting out of bed. Could you use some of your “salary” to get someone in to rebalance your work schedule? Then you could defer some of DH’s concerns about YOUR housekeeping.
Maybe also it would be worth it for you to try not to think about your decision not as “either-or” but as “how can I do something for myself while also taking care of —————. You’re probably doing a VERY good job with your caregiving already, so maybe more “entitled” to reward yourself.
NOTHING LIKE A GIGGLY STICKY LOVABLE 3 year old to get you over a bad day’s bumps. And I bet the little wrigglers love YOU TOO.
Good luck with your decision, and treat yourself well!
It is complicated, I know.
Addressing only the Stay at Home orders, and the Covid issue,
you do not want to bring home an illness to your sick husband, especially from children.
Take this furlough to think this through and get legal advice about your future, long term planning.
My own husband was working part-time, and it is amazing how much money we are saving, until he can return to work. So, financially, we might make it. That part is unknown. However, it is so very important overall that he work, and if he does not return to work, maybe volunteering will help him. But he would need to work or volunteer in a safe environment, for both his needs and my needs.
For your own respite, please receive all the benefits available for home health care for your husband. Get all the help you can.
Reassure your husband for right now, that you are not working there right now, so you will decide later, in several months.
It must be like walking a tightrope, damned if you do, and damned if you don't. In a marriage, it is important that both person's needs be considered and provided for in the long term. The physical demands for his care are not sustainable for you to continue. It is good to plan now, and you are so smart to ask for help.
Sorry for the difficult road you are traveling, even before the Covid issues, making it harder. If you had not returned today, I was getting ready to go look for you. I hope your fellow caregivers will be extra kind to you, and find ideas that will help you.
Love and concern,
Send
I was wondering that too for Ahmijoy. It may be time, especially if the 'community spouse' issues could guarantee
that she would not be left impoverished.
That is why she needs an attorney consult.
Ahmijoy - those are enormous red flags. You matter. If you love working at the daycare, keep at it. Your husband, and forgive me for being blunt, sounds like an enormous entitled control freak pain in the you know what.
That paycheck, once it resumes, gives your much more than an "escape" from under his microscope. Please don't let him take that from you. If he comes home tomorrow, I hope he finds a new you i.e. a wife whose willing to tell him where to stick his microscope.
And really why isn't he going to LTC?
Again, do not quit that job. It will be ur sanity.
I know you love your husband and believe in your vows and I admire you for that. Your vows didn’t include being a doormat. Caregiving can look a lot of different ways. I hope you’ll remember that. I always wish you the best...
I am so sorry that you are struggling with this. You have a kind heart. You love your husband. You care for children and your fellow teachers.
You contribute lots of love and much needed care wherever it is needed. Anyone who has read any of your responses on this forum knows that.
This job means something to you. Obviously you make a difference in children’s lives. Your experience allows you to bring wisdom to fellow staff members at your daycare. They are blessed to have you.
Anyone who works with children comes home a bit tired, regardless of age but if the job is fulfilling to go then it’s a ‘good’ tired. If you had said, ‘I feel so drained’ I would say it’s time to hang it up. Your message clearly says that you are satisfied with your work. That’s a plus in my book!
I believe we should not say ‘no’ to someone without giving them a ‘yes’ to replace the loss but he wants to replace it with nonstop housework. Is that what you want? Doesn’t sound like it?
We don’t know him like you do. If you don’t mind, share a little more please. Is he lonely? Does he want you to be everything for him? Wife, caregiver, housekeeper? What’s left for you? Can you think of anything that will help him in his situation and not take away from your life?
You know that I tried that with my mom. I tried being her everything! I am sure that I don’t have to remind you how miserable and empty I became. I never felt like I did enough for my mom even though I did everything that I possibly could for her, and then some.
I completely lost myself until I burned out. I beg of you not to fall into the trap that I did.
If it would not have been for the support that you and so many others on this forum gave to me I would still be miserable. Everyone’s advice here and therapy saved me from completely cracking up.
I don’t have all the answers for everyone here. I can only try to help a bit and I hope I at least make a small contribution. In the end it is your decision and I wish you well no matter what that is but my vote is for you to stay at your job until YOU want to leave.
Take care and best wishes to you and your husband.
While getting up at 5AM, taking care of the pets, him and myself and going to work no longer appeals to me that much, neither does sitting here all day and having him judge me if I pick up a book—why aren’t I scrubbing floors or toilets? If I protest, he reacts with anger and sulky silence. Is it worth it? Like you, I want to do the best I can for him.
thank you again for your “air hugs” and advice...
Sadly, chauvinism wasn’t uncommon among a certain age group. What was that saying? The older people in my family said it. Oh, I remember now. “Home is where you hang your hat.” Of course, it was the man’s hat they were referring to! My grandpa wore stylish hats. Yep, the man had the last word.
The woman was expected to go along with whatever the man decided. Couples were young when they married. Often, children came along soon after marrying.
My grandfather’s brothers were awful. They all ran around on their wives. They were tall, good looking and big flirts!
My grandma told me that all of the wives had to take it because they had no way to support themselves if they left. Sometimes, the good old days weren’t so good. Like you said, they didn’t work or have any independence.
One of my great aunts was independent though. She had inherited a very large home from her parents and she and my great uncle rented out rooms.
I think they were called boarding houses back then. Those houses sell for a fortune now in our city. The architecture during that era is so beautiful. This house is on Esplanade Ave.
Grandpa’s family came to New Orleans from England and my grandma said they were very popular with the ladies. They all loved to dance. In particular, waltzing.
Well, when my great aunt found out that my great uncle had been fooling around on her she packed up my uncle’s belongings in a suitcase and brought it to his mother’s house and told her mother in law that she was done with him and that she could have her son back! I love it! Hahaha
I loved that my grandma shared that story with me. I adored my grandma! She told me all about the ‘roaring twenties’ bobbing hair, shorter hemlines, playing jazz music, women voting, etc.
She was German and told my grandpa that she would not put up with any of the foolishness that the other wives put up with.
Grandpa loved grandma but I think that he was a little afraid of her. Hahaha. She was very sweet but don’t cross her!
I wish all women could have been independent back then like my great aunt. She had enough money from her boarders to support herself. Men would have had a different attitude had their wives had more independence.
Don’t give up your independence if you still want to work. You deserve to have your own interests in life. You’re not selfish. Deep down he must know that. He may not admit it but that is his shortcoming, not yours.
I feel like you have a strong spirit and a kind heart, just like my grandmother did. Don’t ever lose that. I learned so much from my grandma. I hope that I can pass some of her wisdom along. I know that you share your wisdom. Keep paying it forward, Joy. We all appreciate it.
Housework,,, really... that is my worst nightmare.. I don't do well in that subject.. when hubbys get sick.. they focus on one thing... Why:::???
I really don't know why, but now I sense what the next thing will be, and try hard to remove that irritant before it gets noticed, or blown out of proportion...
Ask his doctor about palliative care.. or is he on that already? Maybe insurance will cover some healthcare issues for you..? It doesn't hurt to ask for extra help.. Talk to social worker.. they may or may not help..
He's not even asking you to quit your job. He's asking you to give a commitment now to a decision which you can't even make for the next two months or so, because you don't know where things will be or when your job will go "live" again.
So this is not about the practical realities. This is about his wanting acknowledgement from you that he is more important to you than anything else. And so he is, I'm sure; but the *point* is that his being the most important thing to you is not incompatible with your also being a person in your own right, with your own needs and interests and future to consider.
The job is not *more* important than him. But it is still important, and it's yours. You hang on to it. You already make sure he doesn't come to the slightest harm - by the way, don't let that "impact on my caregiving abilities" thought get out of hand; I bet it isn't true - and having that space and that purpose of your own matters. You matter.
You are currently laid off, get a hobby or a glass of wine... get some space when you need it.. Have you ever done sun up to sun down housework?Seems like his chance to completely control every single move or moment you do. That does not sound like a good situation...
He's coming home tomorrow? Yikes... Do you have a dog? Hope you do, if not, get one... That dog you love really needs walks, a few miles a day...GEt a break.. and if he focuses on something... geez... it will not stop until it's done in my situation... so DO NOT START JUMPING TO EVERY FINGER POINTING SUGGESTIONS OR DEMANDS... It will only get worse.
sorry good hubby,,, I had the water running,,, doing dishes..
Or the washmachine and dryer were on, I didn't hear you..
I am sorry, I was walking the dog...
Your tv was on too loud.. I thought it was just the television noise...
Im sorry I was watching the weather channel on the tv in other room, didn't hear you.
Im helping grandkids with homework.
etc etc.. You will know what to say at the right time.
Good luck
You must qualify for unemployment. All sorts of exceptions during this crazy time.
I'm sorry but he doesn't get to devour you with his consequences.
This is many years of him laying there giving you directions and not helping himself. Well, sorry hubby but I matter just as much as you. To much of a good thing is just that too much. Who wants to clean all day in between wiping husbands bum? Not me.
Is it possible/would you consider moving into a care community together? Then he would get much-needed help, you'd be near him, you'd be in a community of like-people and you may even be able to still keep your job (or find a similar one after the lockdown ends). I wish you great success in working out a solution and peace in your hearts as you move forward together.