I am always surprised at the number of people on this forum who are unable/unwilling to set boundaries with a parent. Is it because of a lifetime of conditioning by the parent or do you feel it is disrespectful to just say NO to a parent?
My father was terrified of his mother. I am sure this was due to a lifetime of conditioning by her that she was always to be kept happy or there would be heck to pay. And as a child, you have no choice, but once you are a fully functioning adult, what is your excuse? He was a businessman, married with a child and a nice home. He lived 50 miles from his mother. He did not rely on her for anything, yet he was terrified of displeasing her. And he expected my mother and me to follow along. My mother was a very tolerant person, she did not get mad very often so she put up with a lot. I was a mouthy kid so I would say something to my grandmother if I felt she crossed a line. I found she didn't run roughshod over me as much as she did others because I would push back. Didn't know it at the time but I was setting boundaries that my father couldn't.
As an adult woman, I did not rely on my father for anything. I was not afraid of him as he had no power over me. I set a lot of boundaries with him as he aged. And he tried hard to break every last one multiple times. On occasion he was successful and I was mad at myself for allowing it. But that would just reinforce the need for me to have boundaries. He was well taken care of in his last years but not at the expense of me sacrificing my life (although on some days it did feel like it).
Why are boundaries so hard to establish?
My husb is afraid of his mom. She verbally attacks the other wives. I havent seen it, but saw how they act around her. Not one son would stand up to her. One wife keeps her head down and says nothing at family visits and meals. The whole 4hr visit. I refuse to do that. I havent seen her in years or go to family functions. Im not doing it. She insulted me once in front of the other wives and grandkids. It was just my turn. She made sure her husb and sons were out of the room and couldn't hear. All 3 sons told me get over it. That i have to endure it. She's like that. I said no.
Husb was supposed to go to lunch with his mom, and then do something for me in the afternoon I needed help taking it down. He knew about it days before the lunch. It needed to be done that day. I had to drop it off at a persons house to be fixed. I thought he's gonna tell his mom in passing, and she will make sure he doesnt come home. Sure enough she planned his whole day. Driving her all over. It was to late to do it when he got home. And I had to apologize to the person I couldnt make it. It was an appt. He tried to start a fight over it, and I said nothing. I didnt want a fight for a week. So I decided side step all of it. His mom would have loved knowing she caused a big fight. I'm afraid since he's retired, she's going to start making him her servant. She is that type.
It's also weird when he talks to her, he has to go in another room or outside. I never did that when talking to my parents. I had nothing to hide. Sometimes after being with her, he'd start a fight. I think she picks his brain and sees where she can poke. Her sons cannot stand up to her. Not 1. Even the grandkids ignore her at family get together. They disappear like we are not there. They scarf dinner in 2 minutes, get up and leave the table in the middle of the meal and hide in their rooms. I've never seen anything like it. This happened every Thanksgiving/Christmas.
She flipped out one year that her 6 yr old granddaughter played with a toy my husb bought her for Christmas. She demanded the child stop playing with it, put it away, and play with the sewing machine she bought her. The child wasn't interested. Not one of her sons said let her play. It's Christmas. She made a huge stink over it. Was screaming and carrying on for 5 minutes over it. I thought Christmas toys were to play with? She was that jealous the child chose my husb toy over hers. She made a big production of showing her granddaughter sewing some fabric. The kid wasn't interested in sewing. Not at that moment. They all walk on eggshells for her.
It will never change. So you can't win that battle. I tried. It's not worth it. You have to side step the arguments because she wins then.
I suggest watching crappy childhood fairy on youtube. And how to spot a narcissist and how to deal with a narcissist. And how not be be narcissistic supply on youtube.
When an entire family is like this, it is maddening and I truly feel hopeless about my future with them.
As of today, I am not allowed back in her house to see my FIL because I refused to be her puppet. It makes me very sad and I am sure that is exactly the price that she (and all of them I suppose) wanted me to pay.
But I have some really selfish, mean, narcissistic siblings who proved themselves to not be worthy of my time or effort when my mom got old and sick and they were nowhere to be found. After my mom's death I put up solid boundaries with them cause I feel I have nothing to be gained by letting them into my life and a whole lot of possible hurt if I did.
So, as I said in the beginning of my post. Boundaries are dependent on each individual relationship and what you stand to gain or lose by having them or not having them.
Most parents are willing to spend an extraordinary amount of money, time, and emotional energy to foster feelings of belonging and togetherness. There is nothing wrong with that and it can help build a healthy, tight-knit family. Sounds like your Mom was there for you Gershun.
Psychology is not science and should not be the only voice we listen to.
imo. Thus, the term psychobabble.
BUT death came on 27th March, after hospital admission just after Christmas. I simply couldn’t have done it for longer. This is so different from coping around the clock for months and years – for her and for me. She really needed me, she knew it, and she was grateful. Without that, I don’t know how or why people turn themselves into doormats rather than fighting back. I think that negotiating on time-length is probably under-stressed.
I think as adult children we step into new roles and there is no rule book for this.
I feel some can not or do not fill those roles adequately. It may be due to conditioning, quilt, shaming or maybe even brain washing ( smiles). But, when one travels that journey it’s eye opening for sure!
They same way our parents sacrificed, set boundaries, made arrangements for our well being etc… So must we!
With your mindset you may be able to reach out and help those who cant handle the journey and are struggling with ill and unhealthy feelings and so on. It is not healthy to live that way, and when I say healthy, I’m speaking of mental and emotional health!
Best wishes to you 💕
Years of observation mixed with my own screwy experiences have brought me to some maybe faulty conclusions, but this is all I’ve got on this subject for now. In a couple of years I may learn to think differently.
Parents are our first encounter with god. We trust, we must trust that this giant is a wise, awesome, benevolent, loving thing and it exists to dedicate itself as the absolute source of all our personal good and welfare. And it lives because we live. Not the other way around. We are its god too.
We expect from them righteousness in our favor, food, comfort, protection, and the best guidance. After all, aren’t we who they live for? We are born selfish creatures, naturally, to survive. It’s normal.
It is a train wreck to our emotions and minds when the parents are themselves damaged.
Beside imprinting on these beings, (parents), our attachment is compounded because we are, on the most part, creatures of habit and the familiar, even if it is not in our best interest.
I knew someone who worked for a car service company that had a contract with the Dept. of Social Services. Social workers were driven to homes to remove neglected and abused children. As a driver he saw malnourished and neglected children fighting and screaming as they were being taken away from their abusers. They were taken away from the familiar.
The hope is that if we grow up in unfortunate unhealthy circumstances we learn to reason for ourselves. We read, observe other families, judge, branch out, stand comfortably tall and strong and not afraid of going it alone and making our own tribe, and oasis' according to the ideals we've come to admire. Hopefully we create a family of solid, responsible and respectable level headed friends in the least to replace the void, but often we take what the heart needs without thinking for lack of good examples. No one taught Boundaries 101.
I’m not sure but emotional health may be the better springboard to mental health rather than the reverse. That may be correct because we are emotional beings first. As babies we haven’t had a chance to collect information to intellectualize our condition. Our boundaries are set, loyalties instilled via that basic of all glues, the familiar.
Habit and brainwashing is a tough thing to break regarding family, politics, religion and many other things that, actually, wouldn't end our lives if we didn't follow in lock step. It’s perplexing.
I clashed with my parents. They were rough in many ways. I heard that I was a hardheaded kid by all accounts including other friends of my parents who found it admirable and funny. I was more rebellious than my European severely damaged also harshly raised parents could manage.
Over the years I became more aware of their wounds. This has nothing to do with love, and so I didn't put in place many boundaries out of pity. And though I solidly knew better a very tiny part of my heart thought that I might see in their end days a soft look, and maybe kindness would beget kindness but reality was my stalwart and I was not disappointed. Too sad for them.
Why is it difficult to set and maintain boundaries. Everyone wants a mommy and daddy. Everyone unconsciously hope that if they keep giving, Mary Poppins and Robert Young may appear.
Many people need professional counseling regarding this as many rather think wrong of themselves than their parents.
In the beginning we all live and breath for parental affirmation, love, compliments, praise & appreciation. Some people continue to suffer from never having that hunger satisfied even those who have achieved personal success will perpetuate their own pain. Mourning pain that comes from this awakening, & letting go of the needy child within is far more frightening than maintaining the familiar and so we never grow up, and never, in an adult manner and without malice, set boundaries.
I also think the reason why boundaries are so hard to establish is because it is like learning a difficult lesson. First you have to be aware that a boundary can or should exist or should be taken down. Then after that, you try, observe the consequences, try again, observe more consequences, repeat until satisfied with the consequences.
As life evolves and changes, the great part about forums like these is the fact that we get ideas of how we might be able to change our boundaries, and ways to enforce them or notify others that the boundary has changed.
It was my “normal” from the day I was born. And I learned tremendous survival skills. My husband is constantly astounded at how much I can read from body language, spoken tone and nuance. It was necessary.
I knew I did not like how I was mothered, and decided to parent very differently, which brought on mocking and criticism from my mother. I have discussed some of my mother’s behaviour with my older kids (20ish) to give them context.
But it took me until my 50s to truly understand there was nothing “normal” about my childhood or our relationship.
Dementia poked holes in her few filters and she eventually expressed herself freely to me, in front of others. “Do what I say, or I’ll make your life miserable!”
She’s been in care for a year and I am trying to wrap my head around a lifetime of damage. I cared for her longer than I should have (to keep her safe through the pandemic) and my conscience is clear.
Your grandmother was a bully and at the heart of every bully is a coward. That's why she didn't go after you too hard if you spoke up to her and called her out on her behavior.
It's very sad that your father could not have done the same. It often happens like that when parents are abusive to their children. The children fear the parents when they are kids. Then they grow up and spend their lives tolerating atrocious behavior from them because they are forever trying for that validation, love, and respect they long for but will never get. So they never set any boundries with their abusive parents.
I set serious boundaries with my mother and others very early on.
I grew up in abuse and as a family scapegoat. I was able to throw that off in my adult life though. I do not tolerate abusive behavior from anyone. I don't care what their story is, how old they are, or what their reasoning is.
Your father set a good example for you about setting boundaries and respecting yourself. You grew up watching your grandmother's abuse and your father jumping through hoops to try and make her happy. You learned a valuable lesson.
Generally, if Peter seems to have very healthy boundaries in relationships, and Paul seems to have serious problems with boundaries in relationships, usually, Peter is better at boundaries than Paul. But not always. In some cases, person Peter may just be very *lucky* to be surrounded by decent people who *respect* boundaries, while Paul is surrounded by impossible people who stomp on them. There are cases where it is entirely by chance.
I changed the example from 'person A' and 'person B' to Peter and Paul, and missed one change, in case anyone's wondering about that odd language
Cut her down. Let her have all the anxiety and panic attacks she wants. Let her throw as many tantrums as she can. Ignore her crap.
This is what I finally had to do with my mother who has a long history of untreated mental illness, anxiety, and panic.
She is also has extremely controlling personality and will work herself up into either tage or hysterics if anyone disagrees with her or she doesn't get her own way.
You need to start by learning the following phrase:
'Shut the h*ll up. Nobody cares what you think.'
Then start ignoring her. The walking on eggshells crap has to stop today. It doesn't matter how old or young a person is. No one has to tolerate abusive behavior.
Ignore her. When she's acting up and disrespecting your boundaries, completely ignore her. Pay her no attention whatsoever for any reason.
It's hard to keep up those boundaries, but you have to do it. No matter how much crying, tantrums, or acting up happens do not give in.
I have boundaries!
Just like my temporary garden fence outside, my boundaries are collapsible
and moveable.
Boundaries are for you, not the person(s) who keep trying to breach your boundaries. Once established, you need practice and awareness to maintain a boundary.
1.
like you, i only very recently understood that my brother is a narc too!! identical to another family member narc. i had never noticed before. but in 2020, like you, my brother said some things, and suddenly i saw that he’s exactly the same. (i thought he was a bit better).
by the way, narcs like to defend other narcs, AGAINST YOU. it’s like they work together. like they’re a team against you.
2.
different topic: you asked:
“Can you have both-your own life and care for someone else?”
SUPER IMPORTANT question.
i think it’s not possible. (i don’t mean caring for your babies, etc.) —
let me therefore rephrase the question:
Can you have both-your own life and care for your elderly parent?
(i think caring for your elderly spouse is different: you married, you promised, you agreed on whatever you agreed on).
soooo:
Can you have both-your own life and care for your elderly parent?
i don’t think so.
UNLESS you’re very lucky (parent is kind, loving, easy, appreciative, not many emergencies, not many admin problems/mess to solve).
it all depends on how many problems per day.
even with the sweetest parent in the world, if there are millions of crises/problems to solve, your life will start to suffer…
regardless of whether your parent is at home/or in a facility.
in general (with some exceptions), i therefore think it’s not possible to have both:
your own life and care for an elderly parent.
and since you CARE, very likely you’ll (unintentionally) put your own life 2nd place…until things get very bad for you, and you make a change. it can’t continue like this, because it’ll lead to self-destruction. your survival instinct will kick in, and you’ll try to find a way to change things.
i don’t think it’s possible to do both: have a thriving/great/productive life AND help your elderly parent (unless, as i said, there aren’t that many problems to solve: for example many siblings helping, so your list of problems to solve is quite short).
but many of us are helping alone, and of course your life will suffer: especially after years of helping.
if you want to excel in your life, you need the right conditions:
peace of mind
time
good mood
not chaos after chaos, stress
3.
a caring elderly parent doesn’t want to destroy your life. a non-caring elderly parent might even take great delight in destroying yours.
4.
i think OP’s question of boundaries is excellent.
i do think that some people are in very tough situations where there aren’t many alternatives.
i wish us to find great solutions along the way. be kind, but don’t sacrifice your life.
and if you’re a girl:
scream it from the bottom of your heart:
“you’re not going to sacrifice my life.”
When you start conditioning your kids in childhood it's a hard thing to break.
I moved across the country, however my mother is vengeful and I was worried if I did not acquiesce on certain things she would take it out on my sibling. I still call weekly and when I do go home to visit I have to spend 1/2 my time with them or she'll harass my sister.
The only reason why your father refuses care from anyone other than family is because his family enables it to be so.
If you and the rest of your family refused to do care for him and instead hired in-home caregivers he would have no choice but to accept their help.
Many families have tp throw down the gauntlet with needy, elderly LO's and just let the chips fall where they may.
Either they accept outside help or they end up getting placed by the state.
If your father still fears his mother, think of it as part of his psyche and try to accommodate him when this relationship impacts you. He may have had a really rough childhood he doesn’t want to talk about, But that doesn't mean you have to acquiesce to your grandmother’s tyranny if she is still behaving the same way.
Your father may experience very troubling emotions or finally feel free for the first time when she dies.
They chose to have sex and make a baby. No one makes tat decision for their parents. No one gets points for meeting the basic needs of the children they create.
My great, great grandpa was a bigamist, fundamentalist Mormon who married sisters. I’m not quite certain what caused his son to marry only one woman. Pretty sure his daughter (my great grandma) was a Baptist.
BUT, the FMormon belief of “keep sweet” and “women are caretakers” has been passed down through the generations, even as society and the world changed.
My parents passed on the belief that I was meant to work/caretake 16-18 hours a day. My brothers had chores, but theirs were “as needed” chores. Mine were daily. My brothers played more sports than I did, so their after school jobs were maybe 8 hours a week total. Meanwhile, I had a paper route and was babysitting every Friday, Saturday and often on a weeknight when I was 11.
Inadvertently, I married (and eventually divorced) a man who had the similar belief. Not exactly the same, but very close.
I was not able to establish boundaries when I turned 18 just because I was legally an adult. My parents were still very controlling - best guess is one of their biggest fears was that I would become pregnant, you know, something that wouldn’t happen to my brothers.
My mother has a spotty memory now. How events played out are now vivid and very detailed…but often wrong. A couple weeks ago she came to visit me with a friend and we had a difference of opinion how I reacted to no longer taking dance lessons at age 14. She said I cried and sobbed, meanwhile I know I was very, very relieved because I was terribly clumsy, unskilled and in a class with 11-12 year olds and felt like a overgrown ape. I made my case, she argued about it and I decided it wasn’t worth the effort. But as I told her friend, “If I don’t concentrate, I will forget I agreed to this rewrite of MY life and there will be a second argument.”
That mentality of just giving in and going along with the gaslighting isn’t good for boundary setting. The dance class story is inconsequential, but it springboards into more serious issues of what I said and agreed to.
I call my mother out night and day and anyone else who tries to rewrite history. No way. I don't care if it makes an awkward moment or whatever.
You should have corrected your mother in front of your friend.
A stable parent is reassuring. Is safe. An out of control yelling parent is scary & unpredictable.
Certainly before I started school I knew how to smooth my world somewhat, from distracting a crying baby, or toddler & listening to & soothing a venting yelling Mother.
Also, religion clouds some children's ability to move on, they have been brainwashed by the churches must do's and interpretation of the written word, they are conditioned to follow the churches lead without questioning anything.
My mom doesn't want me to wear "revealing" dresses or other outfits which I think is stupid so I'm going to the therapist today to learn how to set boundaries