My dad has had a long-standing mental illness, which has gotten worse with age. It's characterized by an obsessive need for attention, praise and pity. He's very good at manipulating people-- he's an extreme narcissist and also very good at hiding his mental illness from non-family members. When my mom became demented, my dad executed the successor part of my mom's medical power of attorney(POA) and asked me, the successor, to assume the role of her medical POA. This included interacting with caregiving staff and making sure that her care and medical needs were being met, mainly long distance via phone sinceI live 1200 miles away, so had to do the POA and be a liaison long distance. My dad refuses to help out, even though he lives in an independent facility near my mom. His and my interactions are mainly via phone. I've tried to be patient and understanding with him, never threatening him and always trying to be supportive of him, understanding, and encouraging. However, when legal authorities, who were investigating alleged abuse of my demented mother by her care manager, went to talk with my dad, he made the conversation all about himself in order to gain the authorities' pity. He made false statements about me, portraying me as a meddler into his finances and affairs and also portrayed me as an elder abuser of himself, none of which has any merit. Refusing to listen to my side of the story or to take the time to verify my elderly dad's statements or verify his mental status, an assistant attorney general threatened me with criminal prosecution for taking on the role of medical POA after my dad falsely claimed that I had coerced him into handing it over to me. Furthermore, she accused me of meddling into his affairs and strongly implied that I was mentally abusing him. As a result, I had to hire an attorney who strongly advised me to sever communications with my dad because, now that he's crossed the line by making these false claims, he'll continue to cross the line and tell his facility staff and/or others that I'm meddling and mentally abusing him. He had already done similar with someone else once before. My attorney warned me that if I say anything to my dad that even remotely smells like meddling or mental abuse, he could very well report it to facility staff who, by law would have to report it. Authorities would then once again believe him and not listen to me, and I would again be accused and threatened. So, I've pretty much detached from my dad, limiting communications with him to writing and keeping to very neutral topics, with no phone calls because there would be no witnesses to our phone conversations. He's now telling people that he has disowned me, and has taken steps to write me out of his will. Given his ability to manipulate, everyone believes him to be totally mentally with it and believes everything he says. Am I right to protect myself from him and his mental illness by detaching in this way and only limiting communications to writing? The assistant attorney general is very arrogant and cannot be reasoned with and refused to listen to my side,and strongly implied that I'm a liar when I tried to explain my side of the story. To her, I'm guilty before being proven innocent instead of vice versa. What are my other choices? After an initial phone call to my dad right after the threats and accusations were made to me, I told him about the threats and accusations and that they were a result of his statements. In subsequent notes, I've only mentioned it at a high level without directly accusing him for fear that he'll report me to his facility staff who will be required by law to report me. Legal authorities have no jurisdiction over me given that I live out of state. But, my attorney told me that they can make my life difficult, my legal costs to prove myself innocent could go sky high, and in the worst case, if I went to visit my dad and am in their jurisdiction, I could be arrested on the basis of his false claims. Given how disrespectfully my dad has treated me over the past 6 or more years and given his betrayal, I've decided to draw the line and set these boundaries with him. But, should those boundaries be to totally stay away from him given the situation? I'm conflicted because he's an old man with no other family but me (he has a good support system in his city to watch over him) and maybe I should be there for him. But at the same time, his total disrespect and betrayal and putting me in an untenable position with legal authorities is intolerable and unconscionable. If I reattach with him, I risk being pulled into his mental illness and manipulation and being retraumatized by a corrupt legal system in his state. Am I wrong to remain detached from him, continue to limit contact to only written communication where the topics are very neutral, and not even visit or phone him?
You should remain detached from him. Me personally? I'd have no further dealings with him at all, in writing or otherwise. If you must, send him best-wishes greeting cards signed only "With Love." When the AAG gets involved, it's time to take it very, very seriously. If you don't detach, if you continue writing to him, in my opinion, it's only a matter of time before he claims harassment or some other false charge against you.
When you beat your head against a wall...guess what? It hurts. Stop doing it. Now.
I wondered if your father has dementia. Some of the things people with dementia come up with sounds so much like what your father did.
So, I'll just say: "I second that motion." Great advice.
P.S.. about that open door... if your father has dementia, and is two-faced (one way to you, and another to others)- he can sincerely tell you that he's sorry, he misses you, etc... and then when you come to visit, Wham! He accuses you again. I'd be very, very careful about that 'open door.'
Where is your mother now? And have I got this right: the current situation is that you have POA for your mother, which your father has resigned to you as his successor on the original document, and your father therefore has no further official involvement in her care. What happened with the investigation into her facility's manager?
Your father, meanwhile, is sitting in his own place playing silly buggers with his local authorities, among whom is this officious lady who thinks she's sunk her teeth into a juicy Protection of Vulnerable Adults bone and is having a high old time with it at your financial and emotional expense. Oh thank God for welfare regulation, eh!
As regards your father, I would be guided by your lawyer who sounds as if he might as some point have had contact with the normal human world. Cool! - where did you find him? Can you have him cloned and distributed, please? Oh, and what kind of communications have you, in the past, had with his facility's staff? I realise that he is their main concern and their responsibility is to him, but if you had a good relationship with them prior to this they may be important witnesses to the reality of your behaviour. Which would be a comfort.
As regards your mother, it depends on what's going on with her now.
As regards yourself, one or two things. Your father has hurt you very deeply, over a long, long time. But you *know* why, and you *know* it's nothing you've done wrong: it's not even personal. Hey, from his point of view, this is fun! He is, bluntly, a head case. Pity him. And stay away from him until you feel ready to express any residual love you may have. The other thing is that you are handling this with really exceptional aplomb and should give yourself credit for enormous sensitivity, intelligence and focus on the things that matter. Take a medal.
caregiving environment to a memory unit at the facility my dad was at (he was in the independent living unit) where it was 1:8 or 1:10
care giving. She basically starved herself to death because she didn't want to be there. Years ago, she confided to me that she couldn't
stand my dad, but couldn't leave him out of a sense of loyalty. So, I can imagine that she wasn't real happy at his 5 or more times a day
visits. Plus, I was told by someone that my dad truly didn't understand my mom's dementia and was saying and doing things that weren't
appropriate (which had been the case even before this). After my dad having told authorities that I had coerced him into handing over my mom's medical POA, my mom's new care manager contacted me to tell me that my dad was incapable of doing this job and that he admitted it and wanted me to take it over again and be totally involved again. I refused, telling the care manager that my dad is now completely on his own to deal with my mom's care and do the medical POA duties and that I won't help in any way. I explained to her about the threats and accusations and that my dad had been the cause and that I wouldn't risk any more accusations, bullying, intimidation, or being arrested and jailed on false premises. I have a clean legal slate and have no intentions of allowing my dad to sully that. I have more to write, but have some errands to run, so will continue at a later time. One reason I'm posting this stuff, in addition to getting feedback because I'm conflicted as to whether I'm taking the right path, is also to make people aware of the horrible problems their elderly parents can cause them and the horrible consequences, both legally and in terms of familial relationships. If this helps just one person, I'll feel like something good has come out of my experience.
The profound ignorance of the AAG and the investigating officer are, I'm sorry to say, no big surprise. I no longer even turn a hair when nurses, GPs, OTs and even social workers give me their potted definition of dementia and have it most wondrously WRONGGGGGG!!! I just sigh briefly, smile if I'm up to it, and recommend they skip through a layman's guide to the various types.
Patience, patience, patience… Perhaps we need some kind of leaflet that we can hand to these people with a gentle smile and request that before we continue any discussion they have a quick read of it.
It doesn't help that dementia comes, of course, on top of any existing problems with mental health and/or personality. One of my mother's less attractive characteristics - I remind myself not to blame, but to try to understand her - is her sideways approach to getting her way. She wants me to do something. Does she ask me? No. She will despairingly tell one of my siblings about it. Sibling will naturally assume that I have obstructed this wish, although usually the first I've heard of it is when they then - understandably - storm in all guns blazing and demand to know why mother is being deprived of xyz. "Er, because she didn't mention she wanted it…" You'd think we'd all be wise to it by now, but she's so (literally) pathetic in her manner that it is hard not to believe that she is too sad or frightened to stand up for herself.
It's this desire to have whomever they're speaking to "on their side" above all, regardless of the actuality of whatever they're describing. A straight story, a clear request, a rational argument you never get. So your father, RR4, couldn't possibly admit "I'm becoming too frail and tired to cope with my wife's admin." That would make him look either weak or lazy. So there had to be a reason that didn't reflect poorly on him. I know! "My daughter insisted. I didn't want to hand over, but she Made Me."
I'm gritting my teeth thinking of it. It's incensing, but - as so often - if you try to see it through his eyes there is a form of logic to it, which at least makes it understandable if no less frustrating and problematic. No thought to the consequences, of course: his priority was for everyone to think he was brave and wonderful and a brilliant husband and loyal to his daughter even though she is such a control freak blah blah blah.
Ugh. This is a good heads-up. I'm looking forward to hearing more.
I am so sorry for the loss of your mom under these circumstances. That was so wrong!
If he's as screwed up as you say he is, he'd enjoy watching you go down in flames, while he's getting sympathy for being a poor, abused old man.
This isn't going to be something anyone can answer for you. You're going to have to make a plan, sleep on it, and see if you still feel it's something you can live with, do it, and just make peace with yourself over it.
I'm a friend he took in.He had me fooled to,had me believing all these horrible things.NOW i know why they cut him off. And now i'm the recipient of his abuse and lies. He has the authorities trying to throw me out of here.He never asked me to move, even said he was glad i'm here.But when i made the mistake of telling his doctor about his memory issues,he went to the A.P.S. and told them i'm always yelling at him and abusing him and that i told him i would not move out and all sorts of lies. I'm disabled from cancer surgery and not working these people are ready to throw me out on the streets and talking to me like i'm some horrible person.What you said about your dad's mental issues and narcissitic ways are exactly like this guy. Your story could be mine except for a few things. I'm really sorry you are in this mess.I KNOW what you are going through.I've looked after for 6 years now this!.
The authorities didn't like that I refused to jump on their bandwagon, especially because nobody had personally witnessed what had caused a small cut on the corner of my mom's lip. There was also the fact of the timing of the report made by two caregivers to the police and their apparent motives in making the report. First, one of them was upset at the care manager because she (caregiver) hadn't been given the number of caregiving hours she wanted. The number of hours she was asking for were excessive and I had directed the care manager not to give the caregiver (or any other caregiver) that many hours given how labor intensive the job was (my mom wasn't helping the caregivers to transfer her, so she was basically a dead weight, which is physically very tiring for a caregiver). I was concerned that working so many hours at such a physically demanding job could result in physical exhaustion to the point of it becoming a safety issue for both my mom and the caregiver. The other caregiver wasn't doing her job and was often late getting my mom to appointments or to visits with my dad, something he complained to me about. The caregivers told police that they had suspected abuse 2 weeks before making the report to police. Yet, they waited to file the police report until later on the same day that the care manager read the riot act to the one caregiver and informed the other
that she wasn't getting the hours she demanded. I made my suspicions very clear to both the APS person I spoke with and also to the elder abuse detective. The APS person even told me that she had told the caregivers that they could be held responsible for having waited so long to report the abuse and leaving my mom in potential danger for 2 weeks. They pleaded ignorance, saying that they didn't know what to do--- complete BS in my book. Furthermore, the one caregiver had made statements to me that she felt that we didn't need the care manager and that she (this caregiver) could do the job just as well, if not better. However, the care manager is an RN and the caregiver is not. So, I realized right away that this caregiver's motive was purely financial--- get a higher salary by taking over as care manager. But, she didn't have the medical background or expertise like the care manager, as an RN, has to take care of/address my mom's many medical needs and act as a liaison between my mom's drs and the caregivers to make sure those needs were adequately and appropriately met. There was no way I was going to let a caregiver without the medical background that the care manager has take over. I was very open in expressing my opinion to both the APS person and the detective that we were dealing with disgruntled employees whose motives were purely financial. And, I also expressed my displeasure to the detective about the caregivers having left my mom exposed for 2 weeks before filing the report. To further add to this situation, the one caregiver took a cellphone video of my mom allegedly saying she had been abused. The video was taken without my family's or my mom's
consent (my mom didn't have the mental wherewithal to understand that she had a right to refuse to be videotaped) in the privacy of her bedroom while she was in bed. My mom's other cargivers who saw the video told me that my mom didn't name anyone and just said she had been hit. I made it very clear to the detective that because nobody had personally witnessed the abuse, I didn't want false accusations or assumptions to cause my mom unnecessary trauma. The detective initially agreed with me about the disgruntled employees and stated that maybe it was time to get some new ones. She also told me that she didn't see anything that raised her suspicions about abuse, that even
if my mom named someone specific they couldn't use that to charge anyone because of my mom's dementia, and that she (detective) was likely going to close the case but needed to check one more thing. I believe that the one more thing was to talk with the caregivers, who as the drama queens they are, were able to put on a good act of crying like they really cared about my mom and to lie. A few weeks later, the detective completely reversed everything she had told me previously and informed me that she had enough evidence to arrest the care manager. I asked her on what basis she had enough evidence and was told that on the basis of the cellphone video alone, she had enough to arrest the care manager. I brought up the fact that cellphone videos can be doctored to make an injury look worse than it is and that the video could also be
turned off, my mom coerced to say stuff, then turned back on as my mom was making statements that she had been hit. I asked the detective if her police department had a forensics photography division. She told me that they do, and I then asked her why that hadn't been used to take pictures of my mom's mouth (it's likely because by that time, the cut was totally healed) and told her that I would believe a photo from Forensics before I would believe a cellphone video taken by an obviously disgruntled employee. When the detective told me
that my mom had named the care manager, I knew she was lying to me because, while my mom recognized her caregivers and the care manager,
she didn't know their names (plus, the other caregivers who had seen the video had already told me that my mom hadn't named anyone). The detective told me that I needed to name the one caregiver as my mom's care manager. This is the caregiver who had told me she could do a better job than the care manager. At that point, I realized that either the detective was such a stupid idiot that she had fallen for the caregiver's BS or that she was in cahoots with the caregiver, or both-- I'm going with the latter. I subsequently did a Google search of cellphone videotaping and found a statute in the state my parents live/lived in that specifically says that cellphone videos can't be taken without a person's permission and particularly not in the privacy of their bedroom while they're in bed. I also know that there are federal laws prohibiting taking of cellphone videos without permission. I then phoned the detective and told her this and gave her the statute number in her state. I told her that the caregiver had committed a crime. The detective hesitated, then got nasty with me asking me
"You want me to investigate those caregivers now?" When I said "yes", she told me I'd have to do it myself. The detective also told me that she had gotten the AAG involved. After that, I was completely left out of the loop, but one of the caregivers informed me that a search warrant had been issued for my mom's apartment. This was unnecessary drama that I believe was just for the AAG's own purposes for her to flex her muscle. My thoughts about the AAG and the detective cannot be put into print here because my language to describe these
people wouldn't be appropriate for this post. They created unnecessary trauma and drama for my mom and it took its toll on her.
I believe the staff's attitudes were based on the AAG portraying me as a horrible person and a criminal. Fortunately, I had a chance to tell my mom that I loved her before the phone was taken away from her. I also learned that the AAG and detective were visiting my mom everyday. It made me wonder about these frequent visits--- i.e., didn't they have anything else to do or weren't they busy with other cases? One of my friends has pointed out to me that they likely were visiting my mom alot because they knew they had done wrong with their actions toward both my mom and me and were scared, especially once they saw that my mom wasn't doing very well in her new and strange environment. Also, both the AAG and someone who witnessed it told me that the AAG was hugging and kissing my mom. This AAG was a stranger to my mom. Even in her non-demented days, my mom would never have allowed a stranger to hug and kiss her. Given how powerful touch is, I can only imagine how frightened and confused my mom was by the AAG's actions. With this action, the AAG demonstrated her complete lack of understanding of dementia and invading peoples' private spaces--- something she clearly did with my mom. The AAG's disrespect of my mom's personal space is unconscionable and despicable to me. I'm sure she did this all for show for the memory unit staff as a way to put on a show of how she's such a caring person and advocate for people. I truly believe that she didn't give a darn about my mom and that it was all about her and promoting her career. If she had cared about my mom, she would never have traumatized my mom in the ways she did. And certainly, if she and the detective truly cared, they would have notified my dad and/or me, before removing my mom from her apt, that we needed to find another place within a
certain time period and that if we didn't, they would take the actions that they did (i.e, protective custody, etc.). Out of respect for my mom, the AAG and detective should have afforded my family this much information so we could react and protect my mom from being further traumatized. Then to make matters worse, even though the AAG and detective and the memory unit staff knew my mom was on her deathbed, none of them had the decency to call me to inform me of this so I could rush down to be at my mom's deathbed.
The idiot AAG and detective just couldn't set aside their issues with me to respect the sanctity of a mother-daughter relationship.Given how close my mom and I were, I know that she would have wanted me at her deathbed as much as I wanted to be there. As a result, my mom and I never had the closure with one another that we both needed before she died. We never had a chance to say goodbye to one another. And, I can say that a good part of their disrespectful behavior toward my mom and me was all based on my dad's lies to them.
didn't want to spend the money for a cab to take him the 2-3 miles from his place to my mom's. He was very good at pleading poverty and asking me for financial assistance, all of which I reported to his financial advisor because I recognized that my dad was trying to manipulate me-- he one time told me he wanted me to completely take over paying my mom's care bills and didn't care if it bankrupted my husband and me just so long as he didn't have to spend the money from his own pocket. Yet, he turned around and accused me of meddling into his finances--- what a bunch of BS for the AAG and detective to even have fallen for that. About 8 to 9 mos. after my dad had betrayed me, when I started to receive phone calls from the AG's office in that city, I ignored them, then later contacted my atty to deal with these people. It turns out that they wanted to know what I was going to testify about at the care manager's preliminary hearing. Interestingly, the AAG who was calling me wasn't the same
idiot who had threatened and accused me. I suspect that the idiot AAG was afraid to talk to me, so had someone else do it instead. My atty told the other AAG that their office had completely and totally burned their bridges with me, that I would never answer or return calls that came from them and that I wouldn't talk with them or help them in any way. She told this other AAG that all future communications with me would have to come through her (the atty). She also told them that given that I live 1200 miles away and didn't personally witness anything, I wasn't a viable witness anyway and couldn't testify on anyone's behalf.
I believe that she would have lived longer, maybe even still have been alive today. In the few years before my mom had the stroke which resulted in her dementia, she had commented to me on several occasions that everyone thought my dad was so wonderful but if they knew how horribly he treated his family, they may think otherwise. She also told me that my dad always shirked his responsibilities,leaving them to others. But, when things went wrong, he was so quick to point the finger of blame at others. While I heard what my
mom said, when she became demented I decided I had to take a calculated risk in order to help her and protect her from my dad. Unfortunately, her words rang true for me and ended up adversely affecting her.
To illustrate the corruption in that state's AG office: In doing some online research, I discovered that the AG, himself, was being investigated by the county atty's office (in the county in which the state AG's office is located) for election fraud, vote tampering,and inappropriate sexual relationships with his AAGs (i.e., threatening them with loss of their jobs if they didn't have sex with him). In my opinion, when the head honcho operates on such a low ethical standard and sets such a bad example for his employees, you can't expect much from those below him.
Please know that you didn't do him wrong or make a mistake by telling his dr. about his memory problems. You were acting in good faith as a friend for his welfare and benefit. If you told his dr. of your concerns without your friend being present, then his dr. betrayed a confidentiality by telling him what you had reported. I had that same thing happen to me when I called my dad's primary care dr. to express concerns about my dad to her. She treated me with utter disrespect, telling me that I knew nothing about my dad since I live so far away. I very pointedly reminded her that given that he's my dad, I have a much longer history with him than she does and know him far better than she does or ever will. She changed her tune very quickly. I didn't think I had to tell this dr. that our conversation was confidential and that I didn't want it shared with my dad. She shared it with my dad who became very angry with me for "tattling on him". It took alot of explaining to him, but he finally realized that I wasn't tattling, but rather talked with his dr. out of concern for him. Lesson learned: never trust a dr. or other professionals to keep a confidence. You have to specifically tell them that you want the conversation kept confidential. Even that is no guarantee. If your friend wasn't present when you expressed your concerns to his dr., then the dr. acted very unprofessionally. You might want to report your friend's dr. for his/her unprofessional behavior in betraying this confidence. I don't know how far it will get you, though. Anyway, I hope only the best for you as you deal with the authorities.
My mom's dementia wasn't to the point where she no longer recognized me. In fact, while she didn't remember my name, she recognized my voice each time I phoned her and recognized me by sight when I'd travel to visit her. Her caregivers, even when she was in an adult care home, told me that when she'd hear my voice on the phone her face would light up and she'd have a big smile. Interestingly, the last time I spoke to my mom after she had been traumatically removed from her apt. by the AAG and moved to the memory unit, when the memory unit staff member told her that her daughter was on the phone without mentioning my name, my mom greeted me, using my name.
So, even though my dad controls the finances, because my mom still recognized me, I couldn't have cut the ties with her. She had a moderate dementia, so moved in and out of lucidity depending on the situation and the day. And even though she couldn't express herself verbally alot of the time, she could express her feelings and likes/dislikes through gestures, facial expression, and body language. Given all of this, I wouldn't have been able to sever ties with her and/or turn my back on her. Plus, with my dad's mental illness and his history of having mentally and verbally abused her, I couldn't step away as the POA because he probably would have moved her into his apartment to save money and would have refused to allow any live-in caregivers. My mom would have suffered as a result. By being the successor POA, I was at least able to keep the care manager involved and know that someone was watching over my mom and keeping tabs on the care giving, both when my mom was in adult care homes and then when she was in an apartment with 1:1 care giving. Had I terminated contact with my dad while my mom was still alive, with his mental illness and ability to manipulate people, he likely would have seen to it that I would have been barred from being able to stay in contact with my mom at any level (phone calls or visits), all in anger and as a way to punish me for severing ties with him. As an extreme narcissist, it's always all about him without forethought to my mom or her needs. I couldn't risk this happening while my mom was still alive. Now that she's gone, I've been able to put my dad at arm's length, staying out of his life and sending him only one letter per month that sticks to very neutral topics-- e.g., weather. This has angered him he has also gone to his estate attorney and written me out of his part of the will, deluding himself into believing me to be the culprit. Unfortunately, his estate attorney, like everyone else, has fallen for his pity party and BS hook, line, and sinker. Re: your comment on him having some sort of organic brain disease in addition to the mental illness: I don't know if he does. However, I would say that his mental illness is exacerbated by a degree of dementia or vice versa. And, he's definitely delusional. As you and others have suggested, I'm staying out of his life because I've been forced to protect myself from my own dad. The person inhabiting his body is definitely someone I no longer recognize. It's like the movie "Invasion of the Body Snatchers". And, as you and others have stated, it's in my best interests legally to stay away from this monster.
What possesses an elder to destroy their child on their way out is beyond me. There have been times when I thought my mother would dance on my grave if given the opportunity. Compared to your situation my persecution has been mild. Your father obviously has set you up to be the sacrificial lamb. Do not oblige him by being party to your own demise. Leave him to his own devises.