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?
Until state legislatures and the US Federal Government recognize these inadequacies, what's really taking place, and make a sincere effort to spend the money to fix our broken system, nothing is going to change. And, more harm than good will continue to befall abuse victims at the hands of authorities allegedly tasked with protecting them.
I wish your husband, you, and the rest of your family best of luck as all of you continue to deal with your situation. Hopefully, it won't result in a situation similar to mine and will have only a positive outcome for all of you.
Another comment to throw out there - I was a mandated reporter a number of years ago when I worked as an administrative assistant for HeadStart. We all went through training and also discussed California's laws on this issue. When the question and answer period came up I posed the following: I have no personal knowledge that a child is being abused, but I am told by a relative that abuse is occurring. I do know that this person is a troublemaker and that it is quite possible that I'm being lied to. What am I legally required to do in this case? The people conducting the training were unable to tell me!! To this day, I have been unable to get this resolved (I'm retired now). Any thoughts on this issue?
If you've never been abused as a child, maybe you can educate yourself more by reading true-life stories of the abuses an adult went thru as a child. I grew up thinking our family life was normal. I only recently learned how truly bad it was from therapy - the look of horror from my therapist - and her amazement that I came out normal (not drug, alcohol addicted or in prison, etc...) I still don't think it's that bad compared to other real life stories I've read. Like "The Boy Named IT." {{shudder}} He had it really really bad.
Your comments about child abuse are interesting. I want to read them more carefully and may have some comments, but not sure. I think bookluvr addressed your questions well, and especially so because these comments came from someone who has been a victim of child abuse.
If your mom asks why you have detached from her, you also need to be very, very careful of how you state it to either her or to your brother (and maybe others ) so it's not construed as a threat, accusation, intimidation, etc, etc. . There were many times in the few months after my mom's death where I wanted to tell my dad exactly why I was limiting communications to writing. He already knew that his statements to authorities were the reasons for the AAG's threats and accusations. But, given the precarious situation my dad has placed me in with that state's legal system, I couldn't find (and even now still haven't found) a way to state it such that it wouldn't come off as an accusation and cause him to report that I'm intimidating and scaring him. When I received an email from one of his associates, soon after my mom's death, telling me that he was telling others that he didn't understand why I wasn't phoning him (this is BS because of how recently the situation had occurred, my having spelled it all out for him so recently, and his having remembered and bringing up the situation recently at my mom's funeral), I thought about asking this associate to tell him the reasons since she was already aware of what had happened and my dad's part in it. But, I didn't think it was appropriate to involve her. I also thought about suggesting that she have my dad contact me to directly ask me why I wasn't phoning him, instead of asking others. But, knowing him as well as I do, I figured it was fruitless given of the likelihood of his not following through on the suggestion because he wouldn't get any mileage/pity rewards from it--- i.e., pity from others because his daughter isn't phoning him.
Also, in my early notes to him, I could have been more specific as to the reasons without directly blaming him--- e.g., “because of the AAG's threats and accusations of coercion, meddling, mental abuse, I'm now in a precarious situation that any of yours and my phone conversations could be misconstrued. With there being no witnesses to our conversation the AAG could once again threaten me and possibly even follow through by incarcerating me next time I go to visit you. So, it's safer for me to limit communications with you to writing letters which I can save on my computer.” Just about everybody I mentioned this to strongly discouraged me from doing it and to just let sleeping dogs lie because there was even too much risk in making this type of statement since my dad would know that I was indirectly accusing him and would likely be even more driven to report me. So, I've kept things very high level, giving him only enough information that he'll know what situation is putting me in a precarious position-- I haven't mentioned anything about the AAG or detective in my letters to him. In your mom's case, another approach you can take if/when she asks you directly or through your brother is to say nothing at all. In some situations, silence is more powerful than words. I've figured that by not phoning my dad and keeping my letters to him high level-- mainly talking about the weather and letting him know that everyone here is doing well-- the only accusation he can make about me is that I'm not phoning him. Any AAG or other authority who would go after that should realize that they wouldn't have any legal leg to stand on with that they'd only make complete fools out of themselves.
Basically, what your mom is doing with her slander and lies, just as with my dad, is betraying you. For your own self-respect, dignity, and integrity, don't allow yourself to be treated with this type of respect. Even though she's your parent, it doesn't give her the go ahead to treat you disrespectfully and to treat you like an adult (none of which my dad does). It's best for you to set some boundaries with your mom. Otherwise, you'll be living with the emotional scars of her unconscionable behavior for years. I wish I had set boundaries with my dad way earlier. Maybe I wouldn't now be trying to heal the emotional scars/injuries he's inflicted on me and maybe I wouldn't be seeking help from a mental health professional.