I need some advice! My mom has lived with my husband and myself for the last 2 1/2 years. We both agreed to have her come live with us since she was so unhappy in the nursing home. How to I tell her I don't want her to live with us anymore? It would mean a nursing home for her and that would probably just about kill her. She DID NOT adjust well the last time she was in a nursing home. Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Sometimes it is healthier if a parent goes into another community. They thrive with the socialization, sometimes responsibilities of watching out for another resident. It makes them feel better. Sometimes a one on one is not good. So examine your reasons why before you accept the guilt of your sister's lack of doing.
Best of luck, don't waste your life like I did. Only go to see her once a month so that she knows she is not in control of you anymore.
What do I do? Didn't report them for theft and credit card fraud...couldn't do that to them, yet, look at what they did, took everything I had financially. God forgive them.
You have been taken advantage of by your children - and they are felons. Report them to the authorities with all of the appropriate documentation. It's the right thing to do. Keep your emotions out of it - just do your job.
Thank you for sharing the "other side of the coin". Makes me see things in a different way,,, hugs across the miles..
"heavyload " has not had any activity on AC since August of 2009.
So maybe we can assume she got rid of her houseguest?
Ha ha. Very funny, huh? Well, I am trying to take "the higher road" this time around. I am just trying to survive it, too:) hugs, Christina
How's your BP? I didn't even think of that and it ended badly w/a stroke, as a result of the stress. Fortunately, I've fully recovered so that noone but myself notices the lasting side effects. Now I'm on BP meds and anti depressants. Never thought it would come to that but I'm determined to outlive her and be in good enough health to say I survived the hardest trial of my life and get some enjoyment out of retirement in a few years.
We sound like we're in a similar situation, only you're ahead of me by about 9 yrs... When we are so close to our loved one, it seems like we can never do enough, eh?... It's because we love them unconditionally... I think it's been a Blessing that you have taken care of your mom (and, you still will, only with additional care that she needs... so, she doesn't harm herself), and that you've given so much of your own life to do this (like me)... (other people who are not in our 'shoes' are oblivious to what we have given up and what we go through)... Even though my mom can still get around (though her balance is a problem), I am exhausted with 'merging' her schedule with mine... Very difficult to do... I'd like to see what other caregiver's say in response to your question. But, I believe you have made the right decision... One that I'll also have to face in the furture... Try to be easy on yourself and know you're now alone in this difficult situation. Your mom is so lucky to have a loving daughter like you, even though she doesn't understand what you are doing is for her own safety. With much love... Lynn
She is a woman that KNOWS everything, she a negative attitude, never has anything nice to say, I am a professional cook and I have NEVER cooked ANYTHING that she thought was good, she is always telling me what I did wrong. She has the answer for everything.
This is what I have always wanted : I wanted to set my mother up to ENJOY the rest of her life as carefree as I could make it for her, she lives here rent free, we pay for her lights, phone, water, cable, garbage, food ( other than what she chooses to buy) before I took over the company she went out and bought a new car and passed that to us to pay for and we did, when it was paid for she wanted me to keep on taking that amount out of our account and give it to her, I said no, she got mad and pouted, she ran up a credit card bill over 5000.00 and passed that on to us, I made her pay 1/2, I NEVER wanted these kinds of problems, I wanted her to go out and have friends and meet people, she claimed that my daddy was the only reason she didn't, 8 yrs later she is still at the house, I want to be a kind / loving/caring daughter, but I am finding that I am starting to HATE her and I don't want to, I don't want to think in my head, OMG here she comes again, I don't want to roll my eyes when she drives up under the carport. I am finding that EVERYTHING she does is driving me crazy,
She will draw you into conversation and then she will pick something you say and just go on and on about it, We have found that we can't do anything nice for her because if you do it ONE time then you have to do it forever, ( My husband took her car and washed it for her one day and then 3 week later she came in and said you need to clean my car again it is dirty) she is like a person that you try to avoid at all cost.
I really don't think she nor I deserve to be in this, but you can't get her to change except if you pitch a fit, then I have to hear that I'm just like my daddy, NOW I understand why he was that way.
WHAT can I do ??? I really want her older years to be happy and NO ONE in this house is ever happy and it is even effecting my children
SOMEONE PLEASE HELP !!!!
My mother was a narcissist. From what I have heard from her I think I know what went wrong, but back in the day, they did not diagnose depression or such. My dad was there to always kind of be her guiding force. I never knew if there were any problems. But as life changed for her as she got older, she got miserable!! I believe that dad could no longer control certain aspects about her narcissistic behavior or depression. And when dad had his stroke and life took another drastic turn... oh my!!
She was miserable and dad was a handful with having dementia. Being an only child, I tried to do things for a while after I had gone back to work. I could not do it. I had to get assisted living to help. Knowing my mother as I had and my dad with dementia, there was NO WAY I was going to live with them and I had my own household to take care of them.
Sometimes caregiving means doing what is best for them. I needed people around to give dad the stimulus he needed so mom wouldn't provide the stress level for dad. He couldn't handle it. Mom raised me (due to narcissism) to believe that I was her "slave" (not in those words), but she made it perfectly clear. I ended up having to make it perfectly clear I was not there for her.
So I ended up having to put them in AL because there was no other way. Don't get me wrong, things did not end up real sweet there either. I still had to be there frequently, but it was a lot less than what I had been doing. I had to work with staff to understand a narcissist and mom's behavior.
But in the end, I knew she was not going to be happy whatever happened, so I had to do what would provide her the care she was entitled to as a human being (not as a nasty mother), and what was best for dad with dementia and lastly what was best for me too.
Not easy, but I was raised by a generation that you take care of your elders. But to me I learned that taking care of elders does not always mean I have to do it personally. My parents are both gone and I miss my father terribly, but not my mother. I lived an intense life under her hand and to be free of that level of nasty intensity is freeing!!!!!
Relax (try) and do what you need to do. If she is miserable regardless of what situation she is in, there is nothing you can do to help her. Give her the best of what you can at a distance and that does not negate your love for her. It just keeps sanity and health in tact!
It is important to set boundaries even in sharing a home and you need to lay those down regardless of what her reaction will be. You have already seen what happens without them. Don't let her take the best part of you. Maybe you have to remind her that this is not a walk down memory lane where you are 12 and she's got authority over you. Sometimes a reminder can snap them out of it, but if she is narcissistic like mine was over a lifetime, it took a little more bluntness.
She sounds depressed. Has she been evaluated by a geriatric psychiatrist for depression and/or mental illness?
Is it FOG (fear, obligation and guilt) that keeps you from finding an alternative living arrangement for her?