I am on disability & my husband is also ill. I have 2 siblings who don't help as much. My mother makes me feel guilty after I have been helping her most of the day & I attempt to go home to rest or make dinner for my husband. She will say let him wait. She says things of this nature even though she has care at home. She tells me not to call any friends. She will even tell me not to go to physical therapy that is much needed. If I attempt to make plans with my husband to go to church, she will try to sabotage the day.
I visit her least two to three times a day and call her every two hours when I am not with her. If I don't call her by a certain time, she becomes mad at me. She criticizes me by saying I should get a job, even though I am an attorney who was hurt in WTC Bombing and had to go on disability due to 2 spinal fusions in my neck. I am now getting increased pain in my neck. She will say very hurtful things to provoke my anger. When I do get angry, she always smiles. But then I become very guilty. No matter how much I do I always feel guilty. I always feel badly. I know that I'm doing more than enough, but I always feel badly. I never feel good about what I am doing for her. Of course, when I do lose it, I feel badly about that. Is there a book about patience when the elderly parent/patient becomes too demanding?
I will pray for you, hang in their.
It sounds to me like she is manipulating you with Fear, Obligation and Guilt also known as emotional FOG.
You could google "emotional FOG or emotional blackmail" or you could get Susan Forward's book, Emotional Blackmail: When the People in Your Life Use Fear, Obligation, and Guilt to Manipulate You
Has your mother always been manipulative like this? If so, then she has groomed you since childhood to just take this.
Thank you for helping me realize this!
If you feel guilt, does that mean you think crazy mothers are allowed to abuse their children? Would you abuse your children if you were demented like your mother and your children should just take the abuse?
Please do think about these questions. You really need an adjustment in your thinking. Once you change your thinking, your action will change accordingly.
How cruel and sadistic of her to smile as you get mad! She still sees you as her small child and she enjoys torturing you. That's abusive and just plain mean. Dementia or no, she sounds like she's been a horrible person her whole life.
Next time she tries to boss you around, push back and tell her no. If she gets ugly, pick up and leave. Retrain her to treat you better. And if she can't then you spend less time with her. It really is that simple.
Once I had the courage to attempt to leave when she was acting very badly and in front of someone new. When I said I would be going, she called out no please don't. But when I stayed, that just gave her more time to be abusive again. I should've just walked out. And then go back the next day.
I like the word. "Retrain." That is what I have to do because right now I am just "reinforcing "her bad behavior. Thank you very much for your comments
No. I think not.
But if you are interested in trying a radical, transformative solution; and seeing as your mother has 24/7 care at home and therefore is completely safe; may I recommend that you prescribe for yourself a complete break of nine days, starting from Friday evening? From Friday, when you go home after seeing your mother, you do not visit or call her until the following Sunday evening. You take a planned, deliberate and total break.
Tell her care team that you are doing this. If you can detach and be cool enough, you can tell her, too, calmly and as a matter of fact, making it a statement and not a request, but you don't have to risk doing this if you fear it will change your plan. You need to get out of the line of fire; because until you do that you have no hope of being able to hear yourself think.
Your situation is about power. Your mother demands that you give it to her, and you comply; perhaps out of habit, long-established and deeply ingrained, and certainly, I agree with other posters, out of Fear Obligation and Guilt - in your case I would guess especially Fear. You have been deeply shocked and traumatised, and you continue to undergo daily attack.
But your mother is the one who is old, frail and mentally frail; and you are the one who is in fact a free agent: where you go and what you do from day to day is for you to decide.
Not all of your mother's intentions are necessarily bad or even selfish. Some of it, I don't doubt, is about her own fear of losing you, maybe even of your coming to harm away from her, and her own fears around life in general. The reason you need to detach completely, for a fixed period, is that her perspective is crazy and you need to recover your own.
You mention physical therapy; do you have or have you considered psychological and emotional therapy as well?
Read the book. And as CM says, look into seeing a therapist or counselor who can help you maintain a bit of healthy detatchment from your mom, so that your health and marriage don't suffer.
It is not because of what you don’t do because to your point, you feel you do more than enough. It is because you’re conditioned to think that you never do enough and that your should devote yourself completely and tend to every need of your mom. Even if this requirement has never been said out loud, if you search deep inside I think you’ll find it is true.
Many people conditioned to think and feel this way, come to the realization that something is out of balance as soon as they become adults and more so when they have their own family; yet for others like you and me, it takes much longer, but it should happen when we switch roles with our parent(s) and become the ones responsible for their wellbeing. At some point in the journey we realize we are in a new position, we mature as daughters or sons. We also realize that at this point in their life the way our parent(s) behave is not proper of a healthy person in their mind or body, so we need to place ourselves in sort of a higher level, kind of like how a parent feels towards their children. Which is the reason why, for example, when a child throws a tantrum because they aren’t getting something they want, the parents don’t feel guilty for not giving the child all he or she is asking for. The parent is not failing as a parent, it is the child’s unreasonable demands that cannot, and should not be met.
Well, now you are the adult, almost like the parent, and you know the difference between a need and a want, or worse, an ‘I want it right now!’, therefore you shouldn’t get upset or feel guilty for not giving your mom all she asks for, when she asks for it. You know how the order of things should be, you know when you’ve done all you could and should, therefore a ‘want’ doesn’t need to be met, unless it is a ‘need’, and guilt has no role to play.
However always remember that this change in your way to handle the situation does not mean you love her any less. A mother always deserves our respect, love and consideration, ALWAYS, but in a case like yours you need to change the dynamic so you can indeed keep respecting her, treating her with consideration and with love; because if you continue doing what you’re doing you’ll end up resenting her so much that when she is not with you anymore then your guilt will multiply itself, not because of what you didn’t do for her, but because of how much anger and resentment you harbored in your heart. So it is critical that you learn to manage the situation soon.
Maybe you’ve been so overwhelmed with all you have in your plate that you haven’t realized that your role in your relationship with your mother has changed and that she has also changed as a result of aging and illness.
It is time for your own wellbeing and to better help your mom, to realize that you are in that parent-like level, which doesn’t mean treating her like a child because she is not a child, just that you have the right and duty to discern what is right and needed, without guilt.
In a nutshell, I think guilt can have only two possible origins: A well founded one and one fueled by psychological and emotional conflicts.
When the reason is the first, corrective actions are necessary and should be enough to get rid of the guilt and to do what is right; but when the origin is psychological and emotional it is much more difficult to deal with and it requires a lot of self awareness, courage, maturity and love, love towards yourself and also towards others. I think it is imperative that you get started with the journey of working on your guilt, understanding why it is there, realizing that objectively, the reason why you feel guilty is not really valid, and of course if you find that there is in fact something you need to correct, then do so. I started that process a while ago, it is not easy, but it is absolutely possible.
A hug to you and may God bless you!
If you just take an excerpt from the first part of your comments...
I attempt to go home and make dinner for my husband and she says make him wait....She tells me not to call my friends....She tells you not to care for yourself....when you make plans she tries to sabotage the day...
If you, as a lawyer were talking to a woman that was saying these things about her spouse would you suspect abuse? Either physical or emotional?
As difficult as it is it is time you told her that you will not tolerate this behavior and it is going to stop now.
Cut your visit to once a day for the first week then every other day then once a week. Work out a phone schedule one call a day should be plenty. Do not answer your phone if it is her. If she manages to use one of the caregivers phones tell her you are not accepting her calls right now and hang up.
When I was dealing with my Husband at difficult times I recited the Serenity Prayer.
God grant me the Serenity to accept the things I can not change, the Courage to change the things I can and the Wisdom to know the difference.
As simple as it is it does help!
I like suggestion of reducing the number of visits per day and then the number of calls per day. Actually, I had started that tonight!
I was able to break the cycle for the first time. After having seen her twice today with multiple calls and assuring her that I would see her tomorrow, she called at the end of the day and said that there was a certain problem. When I had reassured her that there wasn't a problem, we can deal it tomorrow, she started to scream. I had to hang up on her. Maybe that was because I was leaving the kidney doctor for my husband and early tomorrow morning I'm going for a biopsy to rule out cancer. At a certain point I just couldn't afford to "lose it" with her. She kept calling. I Iet the calls go into voicemail. Then she had the caregiver call and she put my mother on. I told my mother that there's nothing to worry about & again gave her all the reassurances that there wasn't a problem. But, she still was screaming. I realized she didn't want any reassurances. Rather she wanted me to get into the "game" with her and start screaming back or she wanted me to leave my home and not have dinner and run over to her house for the third time. At that point, I texted my sister to call her. So, that was a first. Have to work on changing my reaction to her behavior.
By the way, I love the Serenity Prayer. Have to say it more often!
You are welcome. It sounds from what you said that of all the children, your mom picked you as the chosen one. My wife and I both know what it is like to be married with moms who resent it. My mother in law was so resentful that she set up 45% of her estate to go away when she died because each of her daughters had married. It was not a matter of who they married, but that they got married. She also did not want her sons in law to ever get any of her money, but she left some to our sons, her grandchildren. Strange!
I am sort of like the Navy captain in a battle who is the face of attack said " dam the torpedoes, full speed ahead as he went on to victory. That was in the early days of torpedoes when they are not always very effective.
Another thing I would add as you work on boundaries, is "take no prisoners" but pursue your goal fully. I wish and pray for you the very best in your journey!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
You can ABSOLUTELY stay away for 9 days. The medical professionals know how to get in touch with you if there is a real emergency.
Please take care of your husband and your own well-being, just for a bit, okay?
(((((hugs)))))))
While that SOUNDS lovely, I have a friend whose mother is in this situation and my friend is run ragged by having to manage her mother's care situation. There is much more potential for abuse when you have a single caregiver alone with your parent in their home. There is no on-site medical staff; patient has to be taken out to all doctor appointments. There is no on call audiologist, dentist, geriatric psychiatrist, hairdresser, PT, OT or speech provider.
My mom, with vascular dementia, had a village caring for her. In my opinion, that's what a dementia patient needs, especially if their adult children are seniors and ill themselves.
Demented persons generally have slight recollection of the past. Your mom's recollections may be more clearer in some ways than others...Nevertheless, the "white lie" can be used effectively.. Reduce the phone calls to one a day, or at most two. Tell her you have the flu as already suggested....Next time tell her you have a dentist appointment for a major procedure....Follow that with saying your car is running badly and you have to take it to a town 50 miles away tomorrow to have it repaired. Cut back on you visits sharply....Twice a week for now and then once a week. when you do visit and you are ready to leave, say, "I'll be back..I have to go and talk to the head nurse." In truth you will be back - days from now, and the white lie is you will not be talking to the nurse.
For your own good, learn to tell yourself that when she smiles at your difficutles that she is not "herself" anymore and the dementia is acting out.
I gather she has extensive if not full time care from a paid person. They can call you if there is any urgent need....Her acting up is not an urgent need.
She is no longer the person she was before the dementia took her over. She is always gonna be your mom, but her mind is not the one she used to have.
Let her gripe all she wants. Counter with "Thank you, mother, for telling me that" no matter what she says....You can vary the reponse but in my opinion always thank her for what she says, no matter how hurtful to you it may be.
Grace + Peace,
Bob
Dementia is weird...can make such personality changes and usually, not for the better. It seems to me that it can make all negative traits much more pronounced.
My mother has rages which come and go. It makes it difficult to physically care for her when she is spitting pills clear across the room or hiding them. In the hospital, she trashed the room and even broke the cardiac monitor! And yes, she calls me liar and witch, when I am the one closely monitoring her care and trying to get the best outcome for her. It hurts until I stop and take a breath, realizing that she is not responsible for the stuff going on.
The advice you have gotten is good. People with dementia often have no idea they are saying awful things and cannot respond in a rational way. the best thing is validate her feelings, like saying " I know you do want to go home" and then redirect her attention to something else. This is pretty easy to do with dementia patients.
You need to stop visiting multiple times a day and claim parts of the day or even whole days, as mental health time. Maintaining a balance is your mission and delegating things too, is so important. Ask friends or relatives to visit on days you will not be there. I feel for you...being in the same position. Guilt is funny....it can make us do the right thing, but too much can make us sick.
- there are threads on this site regarding your mother's personality type & it sure reads like narcissism - tons of info throughout the net, even narcissisticmother.com
- searching youtube alone on that topic I hope would bring you some relief -
She's sucking your energies with her manipulations - literally, physically & psychically - its what those personality types do.
I learned online how to not give my energies... learned of my own triggers and their learned responses, how to act - ACT - like their anger/screaming etc. does not bother you one bit (yes its hard but it gets easier) - it dismantles them.. especially if all they have known is otherwise from you.
A part of their psyche needs that energy to thrive. When one learns their pain comes from their own childhood trauma and no, not everyone who has children is emotionally equipped to do so, I found some measurement of success in dealing with her taunts and tirades.
I hope this reads as I intended it as its written in a hurry before stepping out.
- being able to separate yourself emotionally will open up distance to keep you in a safe place, even in the face to face
Good on you for reaching out to this community - it was and still is soul-saving.. there are so many wise posts here, 24/7.
ps YES white lies help keep the distance and sanity... would you believe I invented a pt job, with lol... Vandolay Industries... they were in the import/export business (if anyone remembers that Seinfeld episode w/George?)
Take good care of yourself first. Easy to type, can be a challenge to live it.
To your response to Grandma1954 upthread beginning: "Dear Grandma1954: With your help ..." with you describing starting to set your boundaries, I want to scream through cyber space: "BRAVA, Sespo1997"!
With such great advice and encouragement from your friends here on AC, I hope you're heading toward a better place for you and your husband. I also hope your mom can understand that as she looks elsewhere for her "entertainment" she can be happier too.
I wish you all health and good answers for your medical tests. {hug!} Please let us know how you're doing!
You asked for a book about patience and this is one I've found helpful: Coping With Difficult People by Robert M. Bramson. It's written without the medical aspect of dementia, yet it provides a plan for recognizing different types of manipulation, labeling of such, and coping strategies.
After Spouse turned from cranky to mean, I found comfort in thinking "he's sick and old and mean and he's not ever going to be better." It helps remove the sting of so much of his toxicity after internalizing the truth of this admittedly downbeat assessment. Best of luck to you.
The Mrs. I cared for had a bully side to her. She would act in ways, or say things, that really hurt. I learned to decipher what was a real need versus her bullying.
When I stood up to her bullying she behaved better. I didn’t have to get mean or nasty or abdicate my responsibilities, I learned some healthy boundaries and didn’t put up with it by politely correcting her and walking away until she chose to behave. I got my self-esteem back. So it sounds like you need to develop some healthy boundaries with her and I pray you do for yourself. God loves you, & you’re doing a good job! Give yourself a break and take care yourself a little bit here. Especially if she has somebody to care for her when you’re not around. Get some healthy input - Love yourself! Good luck.
I say all of this because I feel it just tightens your bonds when you are advised to pray and take it, when in fact you will never have any victory in this, it is not okay for her to treat you the way she does. You can love and respect her without being her whipping girl. It is okay to say, Mom, I am not okay with your treatment of me and if it doesn't improve I will not be around for you to hurt, think about it and we'll talk later. Walk away, go home and don't answer her calls. When she has had a couple of days to think about it, go back. If she gets ugly, tell her she obviously hasn't thought about her totally unacceptable behavior and go. Don't stick around, anything that needs to be done one of her aids can do it. She doesn't like how it's done, she can tell the aid how she wants it. Or she can live with her laundry not being done to her standards. This will be her lot in life if she doesn't learn how to stop being abusive to you.
I am sorry that she guilts you so much, you have been well trained. But I am sure having a nice, loving caring husband has shown you how dysfunctional this relationship really is and how much you really take from her.
It is time to put your foot down and of course it is hard but how would your husband feel if he had to bury you because all of her hateful venom kills you? Statistically you have a 40% chance of dying before her. Stress kills our bodies and it destroys our joy and happiness. You yourself said you can't even read your bible you are so distracted, would God send anything that keeps you away from Him? No, He desires your fellowship. He has given us all we need to deal with these situations, it is in His word, read it for yourself and see if you find anything that tells you to be a scratching post, doormat, whipping girl. You won't because that is not part of His will for our lives.
Please STOP letting her treat you so abusively, you can walk away when she starts, let her pleas go unheeded in the heat of the moment, she needs time to see how her life would look without you. If she doesn't stop then turn over her medical care to a sibling and go enjoy your husband while you are still able.
She treats you terribly because you take it, there is no reason that anyone should ever have to be treated cruelly and accept it. Walking away will stop your anger and that will stop her from having fresh ammo to show, tell or whatever she does that makes you look like the instigator and the bad guy in it all. What's the worst that could happen? In my opinion you are already living the worst, why not see if you can get positive change, if not, you are not obligated to continue being cruelly abused, don't let anyone tell you that you have to take that treatment, you don't.
May God give you strength to stop this vicious cycle and the heart to understand how to love and respect her from a safe distance.
Think of that...this is your birthright in Christ! Don't hesitate to set and enforce boundaries with those--mothers or others--who purpose to use abuse of any kind against you.
This worked with her mother,
Whether in person, or on the phone......immediately when her mom said something mean, criticized her, or y'know..........she hung up (saying goodbye) or left the house.....once again.....saying good bye.
It will take about 3 months for things to be different between you two. Isn't it worth three months of "experimeting" to see if you can change years and years and years of patterns to make your life easier for you? YOU DESERVE BETTER! (and so does your husband, your own children, your church, etc.)