FIL and MIL lived in same community as us for all our married life until last year and one-half. FIL passed away 18 years ago and MIL became more and more dependent. My entire married life has included helping inlaws out in many ways from finances to caregiving to house repairs to have them live with us to bailing FIL out of jail for DWI to bailing out MIL financially from Gambling Addiction.
My spouse, their son, and I have been married 52 years and all that time my inlaws have been a constant source of disputes in our marriage. My husband's siblings lived a few hours away most of these 52 years. As long as my husband complied to everything inlaws asked of us, everything seemed to go okay. When we could not or would not comply to what they wanted, they would tattle to the rest of the family that we were not good to them. I was always the bad person, they would say or imply that if it had not been for me, that my husband would have done what they wanted. Untrue things were said by them to my children my family or me. Now my SIL can't handle her 93 year old mother any more and wants to send her back this way. I have so much resentment toward SIL and MIL that I don't want to have the 24/7 care of MIL in any shape, form or fashion.
My husband will have to do it and he does not want to give up his hobbies, guy trips, sports, etc and I have no faith that he will. None of the siblings want MIL to live with them but none of them want to put her in skilled facility to take care of her needs. The situation would not be good if we all had a good relationship. I am 72, my husband is 74 and we can't physically or mentally take care of her anymore on a 24/7 basis. 40 plus years of caring for his parents is enough. It is time the siblings made some decisions. In my opinion MIL would be better taken care of in a facility that is equipped to take care of her 24/7 needs. I have no say so in this matter but if she stays with us, I will end up taking care of her the majority of the time. I WILL NOT do this again.
I don't want it said that I am the reason MIL goes into a facility but if it is said I am ready to say SO BE IT. My husband and his siblings need to accept the responsibility of MIL's care. She has refused to go to a facility so far. I guess I have written this just to vent. I am tired of my life being turned upside down and I now have made the choice to just be a bystander to her care. I refuse to have no input and be an unappreciated caregiver. I feel like I am fighting for my life. HELP!!!!
Going into care isn't going to jail - look at some places NOT IN YOUR TOWN otherwise you'll be the 'go to' person again - tell SIL to look for a place near her for respite for her mom & hopefully MIL stays
When in your 70's you need help not becoming a caregiver - tell them you are too old to take on that responsibility given your own health issues [which you do not need to explain further because it is nobody's business but your own]
There is still a lot of caregiving needed by people who are living in nursing homes or assisted living facilities. She needs to be near her daughter.
You dont want to find out after the fact, as MIL is being wheeled into your house.
Dont tell them you are using grey rock method on them. Watch vids on narcissist and malignant people and their tactics. That way you are aware of their manipulation tactics. Just maintain calm, and say no. No I dont think so. Interesting but no. As you look at your phone and not at them glaring at you. You can do this!
Wishing you the best possible outcome... and we breathe
My mother is narcissistic and has borderline personality disorder. Early in my adult life, she came to stay briefly with myself and a girlfriend "while she looked for other accommodation", She then proceeded to contribute nothing, expected to be waited on, and did not look for other accommodation, So I sat down with her every night with the newspaper and went through ads for rooms until she got mad, said I didn't want her there (true - like two young women in a small apartment want one of their mothers sleeping on the sofa), packed up and flounced out to stay in the Y which suited her very well. I then made it clear that staying with me was never an option at any point in her/my life. I even cut out visits to my house after one time she insisted in coming up, though it didn't suit me, took the bus up, then refused to leave unless I drove her back -5 hours drive and I was working full time. I drove her back and she was not permitted to stay at my house again.
I have had to develop a thick skin about what family says and thinks about the boundaries I keep. It is not just in-laws that get criticized. Those that know me and know mother understand. Those that don't don't understand unless they have an experience with her too. It has happened a few times and was quite gratifying for me, Those that never get it - whatever. My life goes on.
"I WILL NOT do this again." Good for you!!!
You and your husband have no responsibility to do the impossible! Too bad if MIL doesnt “want” to go to a facility!
It’s not up to you to fix this problem.
And, PS, based on what you’ve said about the unkind “family gossip”, I would suggest that unkind things will be said, no matter what you do or don’t do, so you might as well do what’s best for you, your husband, your marriage and your sanity.
Its probably going to be tough, but hang in there and stand your ground!
You sound like a smart woman whose already identified all of the problems that would land in your lap if MIL moves in with you. Please speak up for yourself; no one will do it for you. Let your husband know exactly what you will and will not do for his mother. No person is a mind reader.
I have been in your shoes and have had to be blunt. And I know that members of my husband's family talked badly about me - she's so mean...unfeeling...blah blah blah - so you might as well just accept that there's nothing you can do to stop it. Not everyone is going to be happy that you grew a backbone and established healthy boundaries for yourself.
And I had plenty of conversations with my SIL when my in-laws went to stay with them for a visit. SIL was pretty clueless but I educated her. Sounds like your SIL may need to vent before she can be helped to come up with a plan for MIL that works for everyone.
I said NO. End of story.
Well, actually not the end of the story. My husband and I remained married for 23 years until he passed away of cancer. We had 3 wonderful children and a wonderful life. Traveled to other countries and different states until he retired from service. We had a full happy marriage....
Hubby does not have to stand up for you (altho it would be nice). Stand up for yourself. Draw the line. No negotiation.
Your sanity matters. Your life matters. Your privacy matters.
They CAN arrange alternate care for MIL. They’re just reverting to old patterns. They’re reaching for what’s comfortable and convenient.
Call bullsh*t on all of it. Repeatedly.
This will be so uncomfortable for them. They will deflect. Shift blame. Try to guilt-trip you. You will entertain none of it. Got it? None of it.
HANG TOUGH.
For the past 25-ish years, I’ve lived the “lite” version of your in-law jumble.
My journey started when I was young and full of energy. I’m affable and low-maintenance. And I was naive enuf to view them all as harmless kooks.
It evolved into the manifestation of an old fable: the frog slowly being boiled alive.
All of my in-laws (parents-in-law & sibs-in-law) believe that every problem can be traced to Somebody’s Awful Spouse. Like drawing names out of a hat. Need a scapegoat? Voila! Here’s your A**hole Of The Day.
And - get ready - the daughters-in-law get raked over the coals way more than the sons-in-law.
My guy subscribes to this fallacy, too. Ohhhh the blank stare the 1st time I said, “You DO realize they say the same sh*t about ME the minute the door closes behind YOU ?”
I’ve repeated this mantra. Not excessively. Usually when a successful “family fill-in-the-blank” (holiday; celebration; resolving a crisis) hinges on me believing the false dichotomy that our household is the only one that can host or contribute meaningfully.
Five adult kids (including us) live a mere 5-10 miles away from MIL & FIL. (Now just MIL.) And my guy & I are the only ones who know how to operate the stove and open our door to others? FALSE.
My guy & I are the only ones who show up at a funeral home? Or visit when parent/sibling is in hospital or inpatient physical rehab? TRUE, unfortunately.
Though I myself backed away from such gestures a while back. Why? Their dear brother/son was once laid up for 10 weeks, post-accident. Not a one of them offered him (and by extension, me) one iota of support.
BTW, his accident was a near-death experience, if any of them gives a f**k. Which is when I realized they don’t.
Their brother/son was literally re-learning how to walk. Bored to death. No income. Yet siblings/parents were all “too busy” to call. Or stop by with a pizza. Or offer transportation. Or even offer to mow our grass. Radio silence.
Remember the 5-10 mile radius? It gets better. One brother lives a mere half-mile from us. A sister drives past our house every day on her way to/from work. Screw them all.
We spent years bending over backwards for these clowns. We showed up for everything. And this is their reaction when our lives were turned upside-down. Duly noted.
And yet. Our phone rings when someone has car trouble. When something heavy needs to be moved. When they’re too cheap (always) to pay a handyman, plumber or HVAC tech.
For the parents alone, over the years: We helped them navigate IRS, building code and landlord/tenant issues. We intervened after a house fire. We paid for lawyers. We contributed to funeral expenses.
The last straw for me? I have parents, too. I’m an only child. I lived a 4-year marathon of escalating elder issues w/my aging parents. Capped off by 2 funerals and exhausting estate issues.
Through it all, barely a grunt from the in-laws. When I buried my last parent, two of my guy’s four siblings did not acknowledge it. No call, no text, no card, no flowers, no-show at the funeral.
Medsister: The point of my long-winded cautionary tale? You are not alone in this bizarro world. (You’ll find many more AC Forum.) And - it’s all on you to fight the good fight. Be on guard always. Don’t give an inch. Stay strong and BIG HUGS. 💕
I am the black sheep with my lovely in laws and I say bah-bah!
Beats having to pretend that we are all lovey dovey when I know my back has a target that floureses (sic?) In their eyes.
I say family is by love, not blood.
I hope your husband is completely recovered and you guys are enjoying your life.
Manipulation was done to me by my mother and sibling so this hits close to home.
You can do this! Let us know how it went, and your VICTORY. DO NOT feel guilty because you stood up for yourself. Good luck.
Manipulation cannot work on someone who doesnt allow it and sees it for what it is. Being bullied by people who are narcisists and controlling, and toxic! It is not normal behavior, it is malignant and destructive.
You are not a pushover, or your house the dumping ground for MIL because the family feels like shirking their responsibility. They dont want the guilt of being the "bad guy", sending her to the nursing home. Too bad.
Tell husb and family they can pay for 24/7 home health or nursing home. That is the only decision their going to make. You will not move her into your home or husband will be looking at a divorce and picking out his future apartment alone.
So what if you come off as the bad guy?? The family already has been using that for years to manipulate you and your husband. Thats not love, that is abuse. Call their bluff. Your not having any of it. If they try, cut off all contact. Stand your ground.
He tried guilting me & then bullying me into agreeing, but I stood my ground (thanks to this forum). I did agree to help but only as the last on the list, not the first. When he realized that he would have to give up so much of his fun things, he changed his mind. The final straw was him imagining having to clean up his mother after her many accidents. So we came up with a plan on how to handle the “suggestion” when it came. Basically, it was asking his siblings to outline exactly how they will help.
When we had the “what should we do with mom” family discussion (I insisted all spouses be involved in the discussion) and his 4 siblings all agreed that it would be best for their mom to move in with us, we were prepared. Instead of flat out saying no, he said that before we agree to it he wanted to know exactly how they would help, how their spouses would help because they were expecting me to help, and how their own adult children would help because they were expecting our own adult children to help. Oh my, the excuses started to fly as to why they couldn’t help, with no concrete specifics as to what they could do.
He let them talk & give their reasons, not interrupting just saying “I understand” (we practiced this for a long time). When they were done, he calmly informed them that since none of them were going to help, her moving in with us was not option. He had to keep it short because he knew he would be interrupted.
As soon as he said “not an option”, all of them exploded. Name calling. Berating. Any dirty tactic they used in the past to wear him down into compliance, they did it. I am so proud of him for standing his ground because he has always been the doormat / people pleaser / martyr of the family. (He told me afterwards that what helped him to stand firm was the visual of him cleaning up his mother after an accident.)
He did suggest Assisted Living — we had already visited 3 nice options in our area — but the 2 sisters said they would “never put mom in a home”. Well then, the only other option is for her to stay where she is — with them (they live together). He even came up with a list of how he would specifically help them. Nope, wasn’t good enough — it was either all (we take her in) or nothing (“don’t want your help”). OK, your decision — live with it.
That was 8 months ago & we actually have a life! The mother & 2 sisters don’t talk to him or the 2 out-of-state brothers who “took his side”. I know this won’t last forever; meanwhile, we are enjoying our less-stressful lives.
All this to suggest there is a way to set your boundaries to your husband so he can set his boundaries (again, thanks to this forum). Yes, DH & I fought over it but that was while we still could. Getting past that, then we came up with an approach together as to how to say no. Yes, you have every right to decide who lives in your home. I just now remembered when it was suggested my grandmother come live with my parents (because they had the room & all the children were on their own). My father was retired & made it very clear to my mother it was her decision. However, he made it equally clear that he wouldn’t be helping with anything and HE came first like he always did in their 45 years of marriage. Mom tried it & didn’t last a week — she was torn between the 2 of them & almost had a nervous breakdown. This is oddly comforting to remember this.
The advice of others here is spot on. You DO have a say. Good luck. Stay strong. Believe in yourself.
Tell your husband that if his mother moves in you are moving out and taking your half of the marital assets with you.
This is the only life you get. I hope you protect it.
If there is even the "remotest" chance that it would come to that, you better open another banking account somewhere under your own name and transfer whatever you intend to take BEFORE ever saying anything like that. And actually, if it would come to that, better just doing it, and not saying anything.... as far as the banking goes.
Sit down as a family with a mediator and get everyone to come to a group decision. Explore the options of in home care through skilled care. Set and keep careful boundaries so you can take care of yourselves as well.
I wish you the best. This is a tough situation and every one of them is different. Being supportive and loving of one another will be a better insurance that no one has regrets about the choices made.
I'm an only child so just my husband (whose parents have passed) and I make the decisions about what we can and can't do for my mother who is almost 92. We don't know what the future will be, but being on the same page really helps us get through each day.
Tired? After only 52 years of it? Well I never did.
It is not for your SIL to dictate who moves into your house. It is for your DH. Actually, it should be for both DH and YOU, but as you say you have no say so - really? How come? - let's agree at least on definitely DH. So don't blame SIL for whatever gets decided.
You are absolutely right - you should refuse to have no input and to be an unappreciated caregiver, and you are fighting for your life, and your husband's quality of life, and your long marriage, and most of all for simple common sense and fairness.
There's just one thing. I hope you feel better and stronger for venting here, and that is good. But you need to say all of this to YOUR HUSBAND.
How about printing it off and sellotaping it to the Sports Section?