Family has always been so important to mom. Since young adulthood I've hosted family events to bring us together and in doing so created lovely memories. I never let on that these parties were a way to "forced" my siblings to visit my parents b/c they were clearly not coming of their own accord for any holiday i.e. Mother's Day, Christmas etc. Long ago mom and I discussed her wishes for her elder years. Her health has been declining for the last 5 yrs and gotten much worse over the last 2. Caring for her is tough but I feel it is the last gift I can give her. My siblings rarely visit and live 3 hrs away. I handle every aspect of her finances and care. When we had a family meeting about her health last year I respectfully asked for them to visit b/c she misses them. Nothing changed. During all of this I have not been able to devote time to my husband, children, home and have missed time from work. When I felt I was going to break I called and directly asked them to coordinate their time to come every 3 months to give me one weekend off - reasonable? No! Now they won't speak to me, have blocked me on social media and blame me for changing everything b/c of "the phone call". I understand their own guilt drives their behavior and that blame is a way of easing thier feelings, even so this is so undeserved. I will never feel the same about them. I have shown them so much love and have even made excuses for their lack of involvement. But now I am full of hurt. That me, the one who has done so much and is now doing everything for mom is so meligned...it is heartbreaking.
However you chose a way that will work for you in getting it out and letting it go. Good luck!
I would not encourage any further contact between your mother and these siblings as it may cause even more hostility as a reaction to whatever conscience they may have left. Parents tend to create rivalries to get a reaction and more attention. They are only human and now regressing emotionally as well as physically. Sorry, I'm not good at delicacy.
It may help to unload your feelings to each sibling in a letter to each of them maybe even quoting things from here and then when you are up to it, instead of mailing them, put them in a metal can, burn them and cast the ashes to the wind as a symbolic way of letting go of any expectation of them being any different that they are at the present time.
I think this may help you unload your emotions by putting them on paper.
I say this because the anger, resentment, and bitterness that we hold towards others, even when it is justified, is like a poison that only hurts us and has no impact upon them. Take care.
This is an all too common problem written about on this site. I would encourage your mother to be in direct contact with this no show children. If she is also given the run around, then she will know exactly where she stands with them. I would make no excuses to her about their neglect.
Meanwhile if you chose to continue with the direct care of your mother. Continue on but work a plan that allows you time for your husband and children if they are under aged. If they are of age (21 and up) they need to pitch in to the amount of time they can. I would use mom's money to find a paid caregiver who can be with her each day or at least weekly, so you are not there 24/7 if that is what you are doing presently.
While having supportive siblings would be ideal, I would not bother with reconnecting with them if they are "fair weather siblings". Consider yourself an "only child", focus on your mother, your family and your needs. If at some point the siblings begin to offer help or visits or (God forbid assistance in paying for the home health aide costs or equipment to keep Mom home--take it). However, they seldom reconsider and step up to the plate.
Good luck, be kind to yourself and your mom. Don't spend time or energy on those uncaring siblings.
Okay, let me state the obvious. Just because we make these suggestions doesn't mean these options are actually available to most overwhelmed caregivers, at the beginning or the process or at any other time. If my mother could afford assisted living or paid help, or if there were resources available for free in the community, I would not be taking care of her, and I would not be resentful of siblings who refuse to help. The reality is, there aren't free services available to most people in most places (at least not the type the parent needs) and many people can't afford assisted living or hired help. We checked into all these things in my mother's case. Either not available or not affordable. Many, many caregivers are in this position.
Its not just my siblings too.. its my Moms siblings (who are much younger then her) who swore to me that if my parents just moved in closer that they would do this and that for them ... spend time with them.. well none of that has happened.
This is really changing my view of family.. at least my family. I really had an idea that when the going gets rough family will be there.. and that belief has completely been shattered for me. I just don't get how they can put there head in the sand and allow members of their family.. their flesh and blood to suffer in this way.
Like you... I am not asking for them to take over their care.. just to step in so I can have a day off, just to care and recognize how difficult my life and their life has gotten. I am asking for minimal assistance and care. I am begging for them to visit or even call.
I am at the point that I realize their help is not coming. Thankfully, my parents can afford to pay for some home care.. so I am in the process of finding outside care for them. Its still going to be hard for me and mom... but we cannot do this ourselves.. and neither can you.
Just wanted to chime in because I see a few posts defending these sibs with their heads in the sand... Chin up ... you are not alone! ;)
The further reality, I think, is that nobody makes these decisions in a vacuum. Aubrey's decision to step up allowed the other siblings to step back. Their refusal to step up leaves her stuck with no opportunity to step back, even temporarily. Siblings can't make these choices independently - what would happen to Mom if Aubrey made the same decision as her siblings?
The issue about putting a parent into care is sometimes valid but often a red herring. It doesn't sound like Aubrey's siblings are favoring that. My own siblings aren't favoring that at all, because Mom can't afford it, my siblings would have to contribute financially, and nobody is willing to. It sounds like Aubrey's siblings just don't want their comfortable lives (or ideas) disrupted. They believe Aubrey will and should take care of Mom without help, and they don't want to reconsider that because it doesn't work for them. I can't respect that as an "independent" decision that they're entitled to make as adults. They know somebody has to help Mom every day - they just don't want it to be them.
if youve chosen to care for your mom , you cant guilt or coerce siblings into helping . theyre jealous and want to see you crash and burn . i think pretending NOT to need them resolves that crap once and for all and they will soon slink in to continue their relationships with their mom in the way that theyre most comfortable with . when they do , give them space and privacy . every kid has a different relationship with the parent .
My heart is in my boots reading your post and then your further responses. The thing is, what's new? I don't feel your siblings have changed very much. You propped up their creaky relationship with your mother, you can't do it any longer, you ask them to do one small thing in return, they walk away.
They are rubbish children, and you are not.
And why are they being so vicious to you and self-justifying about it? Because your example makes them feel bad.
It is really sad, and I echo the suggestions that you MUST find support elsewhere, but I don't feel you've lost anything. They were never there, and they're still not there. No change. Your siblings have lost out; but then that's their choice and their problem. Forgive them if your faith asks that, and then put them to one side. Leave it to them.
Also, for sure, if my siblings tried to set up forced family meetings, you would have seen World War III! Thanks, but Mom is an adult, I'm an adult and we will conduct our relationship ourselves, so if you are playing Mommy's little helper, you can butt out. I know this is harsh, but I've seen too many dysfunctional families where one sibling has been favored, the others resent it, and frankly now that they are adults, the family should fracture. It could be the "nice" memories are nightmares to others in the family.
Now, if we are talking about fairness in necessary financial support, that is a different matter. But I believe that the decision to go "no" or "low" contact should be respected. Best thing to do here it seems to me is to look into respite care options. Would county office of aging have any options for low-income seniors? Day care for adults? Church groups? You might have more success going this route, than trying to rope in siblings.