I would really like some feedback on this question.
Why is it that the adult child who grew up being the scapegoat and whipping post for their parents in the family unit, is the one who gets the job of being caregiver to the abusive elderly parent put on them?
It seems like a cruel irony to me that the adult child who gets treated the worst, gaslighted pretty much since they were toddlers, and downright bullied in their own family is the one who almost always has to "step up" and become the caregiver to the mom or dad who always hated them.
What a situation to find yourself in. To be expected to have an endless supply of love, patience, kindness, and compassion for a person who had absolutely none for you at any time in your life.
Is it unfair to believe that an elderly person should not expect more from their adult children then they were ever willing to give? Or ever did give? I don't think it is. Thanks for listening. I just needed to vent for a minute.
If your parent was abusive to you, and remains abusive, you owe them nothing. You also should not feel guilty for walking away.
You may forgive your abuser, if you wish, but you need not allow them to continue to emotionally abuse you as an adult.
Ask yourself what it is that you expect by taking on this duty?
If it is that your mother or father will finally treat you better, or apologize for the abuse, or neglectful treatment....that will likely not happen.
Maybe you can take this elder to visit the favored child, then walk outside, get in the car and drive away, or walk away.
Let that favored adult child deal with the person.
Also, as others have mentioned, please get counseling to address your childhood abuse or neglect or both.
Hugs
I no longer expect to earn her love, but still act more out of guilt and fear of what others will think if they find out that I really wish my mum hadn't moved to just down the road from us (her idea, not ours)!
My husband is much 'kinder' to my mother than I am because she favours (i.e. relies on) him and he wasn't brought up to doubt his own value or whether he was loved, as I was. This caused a great deal of friction between us before lockdown, but it seems he is less willing to be her errand boy now after eight months off!
I am a Christian and it can sometimes make the dilemma worse, as you can be led to feel you are bad for not 'laying down your life' for your parent. But that is a misreading of scripture, I think. I too have had counselling this year and it is helping, but it will take ages to undo the erosion of my identity over 50+ years and I doubt I shall ever be truly free till my mother passes.
Christianity doesn’t mean that we forego our common sense!
If a person succumbs to believing that all Christians should be martyrs they are sadly mistaken!
You are an intelligent Christian! Good for you!
Wishing you all the best in life.
Take care.
I think the answer to your question is that they molded you with their abuse. Maybe you are very compassionate, but in their eyes they see compassion, empathy and sensitivity as weakness. Until they got sick. Then your gifts of compassion and empathy are used against you by expecting you to be the caregiver.
My advice. Go live the life you want and deserve. If you want to care for them, do so. If not, don't. They made their bed by destroying you with blame, accusations, and gaslighting. You don't owe them anything. You paid your dues with the affect their abuse has had on you. You paid with your happiness and sanity. Buy an RV, grab a dog, and hit the road. Travel, meet people, create your bliss. Call them on holidays and if they try to guilt you, tell them "Oh...let me call you back. Someones at the door or I have another call". Hang up and call a month later.
I'll go with you bc I have had it. LOL. Kidding. My Dad passed and my brothers don't care about me so I'm grieving the loss of my life and my family. Trying to find treatment so I can live. Than I will be carefree again, I pray.
I wish you happiness and joy!! You deserve it!!
Wishing you all the best in life. You deserve it.
You are kind and compassionate. Your brothers sound very much like my brothers. I sought out therapy to help me heal from a lifetime of pain in my family and chose to go ‘no contact’ with my brothers. It is the right choice for me.
I love your response to this question. Keep sharing your wisdom!
Take care, dear lady.
I think it is because we always think If I just do this, or that, they will love me. People have a great need to be loved by their parents. I did, not that it did me any good. As my mother said, "I never cared about you. I never cared if you had food or clothes, I just didn't care."
I had about 6 years of therapy, it helped a lot. I saw to her care, never with me again. My brother (the Golden Child) would see her about once a year. Before I sought help, my husband had her come live with us in a Granny apartment downstairs. It helped break up our marriage. After awhile, I could stand to touch her, To the day she died at almost 95, I could not stand for her to touch me.
I highly recommend therapy, not so called "Christian" type, but someone who can really help you get a backbone.
Thanks for sharing this painful and intimate information.
I also got to the point of saying, ‘I can no longer do this!’ My mother always favored my brothers over me.
I also sought out therapy. It definitely helps.
You are correct. It should be a ‘professional’ therapist, not religious counseling. There are a million differing religious opinions!
Christianity has nothing to do with good therapy.
A person has the right to be a believer or not believe in anything, but it doesn’t have to be an essential part of therapy. It can be left out of therapy all together unless the person seeking therapy wants to discuss religion.
It is important to meet a person where they are. It is offensive and futile to push Christian views down someone’s throat if that person is not a Christian, or they do not believe in ultra conservative religious views. That is NOT the role of a therapist and no therapist worth his/her salt would ever do such a thing.
That favored child is the one who is the principle caretaker of our mother, not the least favored, though we also assist in her care. In every case we each do what we choose to do for Mom. Although we do not agree on what Mom needs or should have, we sort of mash out an understanding of who is doing what, when. Except the brother, who does nothing. (This is so often a thing, I wonder why.)
I think something that happened in our family that does not happen in all families is that we grew up, left home, and redefined ourselves as adults when we were still in our 20's and 30's. At various times and distances we each had long periods in our lives when our principle influences and acquaintances were completely unrelated to us. I really do believe that most families are dysfunctional on some level and that we do ourselves a big favor to learn who we are when we are not in that family situation that hurt us when we were growing up. The scars are still there, and some of the memories from my childhood still hurt when I think of them. However, I learned that I am not that hurt child, I am the person I choose to be now, instead.
In our 50's we started coming back together again, very gradually. It was a rather tentative process, but we each learned who the others had become. We sisters are now family again and we can enjoy some of the memories of happy times together, though we don't identify the same events as happy times. It is good knowing each other again. We will always be getting over our childhood and our struggles, but we will also always be accepting of who each of us is now. That is the keystone of our family happiness now that we are quickly moving into our 70's. Two sisters are already in their 70's, I turn 70 in December, the youngest in 2.5 years.
That may be more about me than you wanted to read, but I put it all out there to get to the next point: it is never to late to become the person you want to be instead of the child who reacted to whatever was dysfunctional in the family. No, it is not your mother's right to demand of you what she never did for you. Neither would it be her right to demand things she did do for you. She made her choices and you get to make your choices.
Set aside time for yourself to discover yourself, relate to friends of your choosing, and enjoy the person you want to be. You may no longer have decades to bring that adult in you to its full power, but you do have time to reclaim the most important parts of yourself.
Do what YOU think that YOU want to do with and for your mother and do not feel any guilt about leaving some slack in her life. You may have had no choice about your life as a child, but you do have choices now. You could even choose to stop caregiving altogether if that is what you really want. At this point, it is not about your mother's wishes as much as it is about what YOU want to do for her. It is neither a good or a bad thing to care for your mother's needs. It is a good thing for you to do what you choose to do for her and a good thing, also to do what you need to do for yourself. Whatever you choose to do, pat yourself on the back and tell yourself that you make good decisions for yourself.
However, I made the choice to care for my parent in her elderly years. I am in charge and no one is allowed any longer to tell me what to do or when to do it. I am trying to tell you to be bold, take care of your sanity and show yourself self-love. If your parent is abusive, it is likely time to look for alternative living conditions.
I am lucky. My parent realizes that I came through for her. Yes, I am happy to finally be in charge, and I am happy to show that all along, my siblings were self-absorbed, They are performing true to form. For me, there is some redemption in being the reliable child, in being the responsible child. I needed that so that I could come out of the rut of self-criticism and doubt I had learned as a child.
I.
Am.
Speechless! :-0
I've seen this time and again and in my own family. I was neither the scapegoat or the favorite in one setting, but could have done more to help. I regret I didn't. In my husband's family, he was the scapegoat and we were the ones left standing when everyone else deserted the old dear. It isn't fair or right, but it is how it is. Don't let it ruin your life. You may have to make hard choices, but put you and your family first. The least the others could do is pay you. Yes. Pay you as they would a caretaker. It helps with resentment and is really only fair. All the best.
It's because we have the "caring & responsible genes turned on"...and the others...don't...it is that basic.
I will write more later....but don't take it personally, that is a treatment that you are asking for or something you need. That is just textbook, easy way out approach, and most every situation is NOT textbook... in my humble opinion. : )
And once you’ve set those boundaries, stick to them.
My elderly father tried once to yell at me. That was once and won’t happen again. He knows I’ll walk off. I choose not to be a scapegoat.
I care for both parents who still live in their own home. Meals, housework, meds etc.
Took me a long time to learn this and it's still hard not to respond but no reponse dowses the fire rather than fueling it. I wish you the best Burnt Caregiver. Believe in yourself and take your power back from those unworthy to hold it. Your life has value regardless of how they view you. You are caregiving while others are critcizing. You are the better person. Bless you.
you with it for the duration. Once you make the commitment, you won’t get a reprieve unless you actively refuse to do it any longer and/or take steps to rid yourself of the parent any way you can. I’ve seen dozens of posts on this forum urging caregivers, without compunction, to do exactly that.
You need to tell your relatives NOW that you have no intention of taking care of your abusive parent and walk away. Get counseling, if necessary, to make the decision stick and communicate it to your siblings and other potential caregiver relatives. Because of your history and your current attitude, you are at higher risk of becoming an abuser yourself. Do not put yourself in that position by attempting to care for an elder you may resent or actually despise. Being a caregiver is hard enough for folks who love their parent(s); it’s almost impossible if you know your parent is going to continue a pattern of abuse while progressing daily to a more and more dependent and vulnerable state. For your sake snd the sake of your parent, make it clear that you are not going to do it. Even so, you must be prepared for the consequences when you do.
Interesting - my mother quite often offers financial help to my brother, the golden child of the two of us, who earns far more than we do, even though *we* do all the routine caring jobs such as collecting prescriptions, making and taking her to medical appointments, ordering supplies, etc. I don't want or need the money, but the unfairness does get to me.
Get with a social worker, and get her on Medicaid.
I'm lucky. I'm employed after mom died, and I'm also in school. I'm trying to resume my life. However, because I love mom so much, this love causes considerable grief...and it is a basic understanding only the living suffer. Mom's suffering is over. Despite her extremely advanced Alzheimer's and many other illnesses such as insulin-dependent diabetes, she lived to be 90 with 15 years of Alzheimer's. Other diseases (chronic kidney disease and liver issues which she had for decades) from the complication of long-term insulin killed mom and Alzheimer's disease had nothing to do with it. In fact she did extremely well with tube feedings--she completely forgot how to swallow and drink, and I did not want her to die of dehydration which can take weeks. Mom did very well with her peg tube, never bothered it, and I got a "tube top" from Amazon to cover the tube. You have to put a covering because turning her could accidentally pull on the tube out--the "tube top" kept that from happening and is much more comfortable than any kind of abdominal binder. Her feeding tube took A LOT of care, but she never had a problem with it.
Did you know hiring a sitter is $20 an hour? They just sit and watch. Hands-on care is even more expensive.
If you are not willing to be caregiver, she will have to go to assisted living or a nursing home depending on their level of function. but DO NOT do it if you feel you are being forced into it.
But hey mom lived to be 90 with 15 years of Alzheimer's. I kept her going as long as I could and he was only bedridden for 2-1/2 months. She forgot how to stand and could not focus on that task. SO I made use of the Hoyer lift, and I had to change her about 5-6 times a day...and even had to manage her bowels with lactulose. You really NEED a Hoyer lift. Mom was on hospice for TWO YEARS. She never needed any narcotics or psychotropics. She only had symptoms of liver failure for one week before she died and did so very peacefully as hospice came over daily to make sure she was comfortable.
Of course you will grieve. For some people, grief never ends. The waves of grief are really tough and come frequently at first. They slow down as time goes on but never completely go away. You will always love and remember your mom.
Please know that this is your time now. Your dear mother would want that for you.
I have no doubt that you will do well in school as you did in caregiving.
It’s easy to see that you are a committed and goal oriented person.
Wishing you all the best, cetude. Take care.
Everyone vents and needs to vent. However, examine your true feelings, if you do not want to caregive, get help.
My dad was mean to me 7 months ago. I made a decision to Caregive anyway. I got meds for him that helped his moods. I joined 2 support groups for help. I have read 2 books on Dementia now.
I join a Zoom group every Tuesday for support.
You must either, get out of caregiving or get help.
What Zoom mtg do you participate with? I am interested in finding one. BTW excellent advice given to BurntCaregiver.
I know that a divorce isn't quite the same but I had a lot of emotional abuse for 38 years. After the divorce and lots of therapy and self-reflection I came to a basic truth. PEOPLE TREAT US THE WAY WE TEACH THEM TO.
You have allowed this to go on. Do you think that at some point the family and your parents are going to wake up and see what a selfless person you are; if so you are so deluded. They will just keep on taking until you are a shell of yourself. If that is how you want to live your life that's up to you. But in order to change you need to cut ties and let someone else bear the burden for awhile.
We do have to stop allowing people to abuse us. You said magical words, ‘CUT TIES.’ Well thought out words, thank you for inspiring others.
It is a journey. It takes time process emotions and make plans to move forward.
Happy to hear of your progress! You deserve it. We all do!
Take care.
You may need skills you have to develop, resources you need to draw on, a way to make a living free from virtual bondage. Can you do that?
If not now, then when?
Basically you have two choices.
Option 1: You can walk away. Let everything hit the floor. Your siblings will step in or the state will step in when it gets bad enough. Option 2: Take the high road and make arrangements to place your parent in a clean safe assisted living facility or long term care facility...whichever one they need. You can manage their care without having to get too emotionally involved. Make decisions when they need made, pay the bills, etc. If your extended family start offering their unsolicited advice, and trust me they will, just tell them you are more than willing to step back and let them do it. That's all you need to say. Don't debate anything.
You are an adult and you are in charge of your life.
There are those that will never understand and think you should step in and care for your parents because “they are your parents.” There are those that think healing will happen and you should easily “forgive.” That is what healthy families do - not our families. If we step back into the line of fire we are inviting misery and abuse back into our lives. Forgiveness for us means we move on with our lives and leave the misery behind.
I take care of my mother’s finances because there is no one else to do it. But I have no communication with her at all. I only speak to staff and medical providers. I have no expectations from her at all. It’s as if I’m caring for a mean stranger.
Good luck and thank you for posting and letting us share our own thoughts!
My parents trained me into the complaint, self effacing sibling. The others were free to be themselves, encouraged to be themselves!
As the daughter and the eldest, I was told to be what they thought I should be - compliant and responsible.
One thing I learnt late in the day is not to hate myself for not struggling out from under this. I tried but ended up succumbing. This thing is we have to remember that being manipulated from early childhood makes it very difficult to resist. Like all kinds of abuse it is formative. Like all kinds of abuse we are not at fault. Look after yourself and give yourself credit for identifying what is happening - it is a step towards control. x
AND stick around to take care of us! This is changing but way too slowly. <All siblings should contribute, not just “Cinderella”!!> Believe me, I know the resentment. Do what you can and try to forgive them, for your own peace of mind.
Of course, I have a difficult time caregiving the abusive parent in my life. My parents divorced and my dad will have nothing to do with me. He is cared for by public health and correctional facilities in the state he resides in.