My father is in an ECF for rehab following surgery. I live across the country but have been calling daily. He has been unusually weak and we haven't spoken much. There are some relatives he speaks to daily on a normal basis. However, since his recovery isn't going quite as planned, he has asked me to call them daily and say everything is fine since he doesn't want them asking questions and saying the wrong thing." I said I was uncomfortable with this as these aren't relatives I ever speak to on the phone and it looks funny for me to be calling daily. He said if I don't do it I'll make it more difficult for him. He has always been secretive and I'd like to just tell the relatives no news is good news. That I'll call if something arises but not daily just to say he is fine. I agreed to do it this week so as not to stress him more, although it stresses me more. Thoughts?
"Extreme sleepiness is a precursor to dementia."
1. Maybe. But I persoanlly am being treated at a sleep disorder specialty center for excessive daytime sleepiness. And no one has even hinted at the D word. Do you think they are hiding something from me? :) Lots of things can cause sleepiness. Surgery is high on the list.
2. The man is recovering from surgery for Pete's sake. Cut him a little slack. You can't make a few phone calls and conclude his level of sleepiness is pathological!
3. IF (please notice the caps) IF your father is in the earliest stage of dementia, dashing out to see him will not change that. You will have months and years to deal with it.
4. If you'd like to visit your father, and maybe that would make you feel better whether it makes him feel better or not, get a reasonable plan together and cover all the home bases first.
Maybe he is playing on your guilt. Maybe he is punishing you for not making the calls he asked you to make. Maybe he is genuinely tired and weak right now. But whatever is going on, it can wait until you can talk to his nurse and to him.
Try to get a good night's sleep. Resume your contact attempts at reasonable intervals tomorrow.
Hugs!
Speaking of guilt, I haven't seen him in a long time. I feel I should go visit but we have a toddler I'm home with an no other care lined up other than PT preschool. I really need to get a Plan B for the future!
"If guilt works on you, remember this is your problem, not theirs". Absolutely true!
As "they" say - "No one sends us on a guilt trip - we have to buy the ticket," and I would add, get on the bus.
I find I get weary sometimes from all the drama, the craziness... but resistance is not futile! :) (((((((hugs)))))))
What struck me when I first read your title "Boundaries vs keeping the Peace" was that boundaries should keep the peace - for you.
"You would prefer to be out of the craziness". Amen to that too. Reading between the lines, I susoect there has been a lot of craziness in your family, and you are wise to keep out of it.
This certainly is triangulation - you getting dragged in to deal with dad's problems with people he connects with regularly. Hmmm - looks like manipulation to me. My thought is that is it his business to deal with, and not yours. I do agree that if there is a drastic change in his health, calling relatives is your responsibility, but not just to keep things from being difficult for your dad. I see that as up some cans of worms.
"basically he is asking me to lie" Coming from a dysfynctional family myself, that is a big red flag, and I wouldn't be any part of it. If you do, it means you are compromising yourself, and that does not work - or not for long anyway.
Good luck, and let us know how it is going! It sounds like you have survived your family's craziness pretty well. Keep it up!
(((((((((((((((hugs)))))))))) Joan
I stood my ground and said I hoped they would still go but that I had nothing to apologize for; that if I did I certainly would do so. I told him that I thought it would be very unfortunate if she were willing to ruin his birthday because of this but that I was going and they should go too and have a good time.
They did, but she punished me the entire time and I still get 'nasty grams' on a fairly regular basis bringing this up over and over and over. She has trashed me to my family and they all just want to make it stop, so they are also all over me to just say I'm sorry so we can go on down the road! I did send her a note about 7 months ago acknowledging that we were both stressed out at that time and I hoped we could move on, and that I was sorry for my part in anything becoming escalated. Not good enough. This NPD woman has ruled the roost forever (they have been married 60 years) and it isn't going to change now. But I am no Neville Chamberlain and I have had enough. Just because someone is older doesn't mean they cannot be nasty and manipulative and you have to at some point just be true to yourself, once you have truly examined yourself and your own motives. Peace at any price is not really peace.
I didn't even realize I used right and left!
It sounds like an interesting story. I know my own response to the request would have been "that's not going to happen."
I wondered if the surgery may have had an effect on your Dad's thinking. I wondered if he is also concerned that he might not say something right, particularly if he is not feeling well and is on medication. Let us know how it all turns out, imaamy.
It is great to be able to take bowel function for granted, but with age that becomes less reliable. At my husband's geriatrician's office recently we were going over the litany of bowel issues, and she was giving advice about what to do in various circustances. She shook her head and said, "No wonder old people talk so much about their bowel!" It can truly be central how a day goes. I remember listening to my father and thinking, as you do, "I don't really need to know." And now I am listening to my husband, and though I don't especially want to know, I need to, to help him manage his health. I just try to divert him when he starts talking about it to other non-medical people.
Long distance caregiving must be challenging. It sounds like you take it seriously and want to do it well. Dad is lucky to have you!