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My mom has been living with me since 2019. We made the decision to move her in because she lived 2 hours from me and I found myself taking care of two homes. When she moved in with me, she was independent, relatively healthy, and was planning to still work. However, once she got comfortable, she found she liked the retired life and became a permanent fixture in my home. She literally never leaves, and her health started declining in early 2020. Since 2020, she has had three strokes, a major seizure, a terrible bout with pneumonia, a lung cancer scare (she underwent a biopsy and lung resection as a result), and the latest last week: she fell down my stairs and severely sprained her ankle. I have two siblings that do nothing. I've been estranged from one for a while and am now heading toward estrangement from the other (she is retired while I work a demanding job as an architect, but she refuses to contribute). My aunt occasionally helps but she more-or-less often makes the situation worse. So, I'm essentially alone. I feel bad referring to myself as a caretaker, because in between these medical events, my mom is generally independent and even contributes a lot around the house. But like I previously said, she. never. leaves. I'm finding that I resent her and am living in a daydream future fantasy world where she is no longer around. I haven't been on a date in 6+ years, I let my friendships slide over the years when I was busy taking care of my mom or her home, my family ties are almost gone at this point. I got a dog last year for socialization and fun, and that's been great, but my mom undermines all the training I do and he's started to become overprotective/reactive, so I have to now be careful where I take him or who comes into our home.
My mom is stubborn and selfish. She's always been antisocial and only calls on people when she needs something. She's isolated herself from everyone which has contributed to the isolation I feel now, since I suspect my family thinks I'm "on her side." I come home from work and she cries that she missed me all day, if I leave for a few hours on the weekend, she cries she misses me. She tells everyone I'm her ANGELBABY and she'd just die without me. I'm the only person in the whole world that she likes to be around. It's too much for me. I don't want to be her one and only.
I guess the big question is: my mom is not yet dependent enough for assisted living, but I think independent living could result in my having to care for two residences again. I also know she'd be terribly lonely and while I'm currently angry and tired, I still love her and want her to have a good life. We've recently hired some in-home care since she's less mobile with the sprain, but I've been adamant that my mom pay for it, so I don't know how long it will last because she is very frugal and wants to keep her savings to give to my siblings and I when she retires (another source of resentment and anger for me). It's also been inconvenient for me because I have to bring my [now] reactive dog to work, since we have strangers entering the home. It is working for now but I do often have to attend site meetings as part of my job, which will be scheduled more often now that the weather is warming.
I know many have been in this situation. How'd you deal with it and what was your best outcome?
Signed,a 39-going-on-40-year-old woman who has always deeply loved her mom but currently doesn't like her at the moment.

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Move her out and get therapy. You sound like you are trying to earn her love. If she is a horrible person that will never happen. It's OK to not like a horrible person. Do not become her POA or guardian. Leave that to the other siblings or other relatives. Set down concrete boundaries and do not budge. It's time to wake up and do best for yourself before you need care yourself. It's also a good time to set up your own retirement plans which should probably include a POA you can trust that is younger than you. Give her a deadline she has to move out and don't give her an extension. If she has another health scare she needs to contact your siblings, not you. Time to stop allowing her to guilt you into helping her. It's six years late in coming at the very least.
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Reply to JustAnon
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If you do decide to keep her there with you, you should absolutely work out a working arrangement with her for you. You should be getting paid for what you are doing. You probably can't get paid retroactively but the way to avoid being angry about the inheritance being split evenly when you did all the work in life is to get paid now.

It is very possible that if you ask to be paid now with a caregiver contract, she will get mad and it could lead to an easier move out for mom.
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Reply to SamTheManager
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I was shocked when I saw you are only 39, and was expecting someone in their 50s at least. You are YOUNG and have a life ahead of you - please require your mother to be the adult in the relationship now, as she has been depending on you like she is the child. Why did you have to take care of her home 7 years ago to the extent that you had to move her in to stop? This sounds like a co-dependent relationship to me, and you are doing all the giving. Please find a good therapist who specializes in these issues. You sound like a lovely person who needs your mom's validation when she only gives it to you if you're caring for her as if you're her mother. You deserve to have a better life.
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Reply to AgingREstart26
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You have the right to a life. Don't let her keep taking over yours. Tell her she has to move. Heck, tell her you're moving and she can't come with you.

The longer you let her stay, the more you'll resent her and destroy ties with other people. It's better for you both for her to live elsewhere.
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Reply to LastHurrah
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If your mom is cognizant you tell her that she has to move. That can be to any of the following.
Assisted Living
Senior Housing
A siblings home.
Now you may have to have her legally evicted.
What you might want to do to put a fire under her is begin charging her. (and she should have been contributing financially since day 1)
she pays 1/2 of ALL household expenses. (that is if there are 2 of you, if there are 3 then she pays 1/3 and so on)
And you give her jobs that she has to do. (with the ability that she has...laundry, light cleaning, she can make dinner while you are at work.)

But it is time to have a sit down talk with her and express boundaries that you need to establish. Once outlined don't back down.

OH.... If she is hospitalized for any reason before you can get her out you need to tell the Hospital Social Worker, Discharge Planner that she can NOT be discharged to your home. It is unsafe, you are no longer able to care for her safely. Please memorize those lines.
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Reply to Grandma1954
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Ugh! I have to say, this part made my skin crawl:

“I come home from work and she cries that she missed me all day, if I leave for a few hours on the weekend, she cries she misses me. She tells everyone I'm her ANGELBABY and she'd just die without me.”

I agree with others. You are admitting the truth to us here, which is a decent first step. Now, you have to break the truth to your mom. It’s time for her to go to a continuum of care place. You can research the options, identify the best ones and what the waiting list and application process is like. Take her on tours of perhaps two. They will assess her and what her needs are in terms of type of care. They would prefer their clients are happy if possible, so they are going to figure out if she has interests that fit in with their offerings. (Puzzles, church, gardening, etc).

Some may offer “respite months” for when caretakers who are going out of town or whatever. My guess is, this would only give your mom a loophole.

Figure out what a reasonable deadline is for her to bee relocated and then aim for it. If you can get your siblings onboard beforehand, so much the better. Otherwise she may try to manipulate them into joining “her side.”

In my opinion, you have already sacrificed way more than enough. You deserve your own life back!!!

i wonder whether she might benefit from from antidepressants. Any adult who cries when left alone for a few hours, and never has the least inclination to amuse themselves?!?

Though I will add that my mom is similar (though she doesn’t live with me and doesn’t cry about my leaving her alone thank goodness) and she refuses to consider meds.
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Reply to Suzy23
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Enough is enough! She has manipulated her with her neediness for six years. You have given up your home, your social life, your dating life, and control over your pet for her for six years, and even before that while you were "taking care of two homes." Why did she need you to take care of her home? If she was in need of your care for her home that long ago, she is certainly ready for Assisted Living. If she goes to Independent Living, she can hire cleaning people, get groceries delivered, and order whatever else she needs from Amazon and other sites. You will NOT need to do a thing for her. And she has the money for it. So, out she goes. Tell her she needs to go, and then turn a deaf ear to her whining.

In the meantime, the weather is nice, so stop catering to her and being her social life. After work take your dog to a park. Have dinner at a restaurant with a dog-friendly patio. Contact some friends from before your mom took over your life and invite them to join you. Let your mother fix her own meals, order her own groceries, and whatever else she has been expecting you to do.

I know all of this is easier said then done, but you can do it. Don't let her manipulate her anymore. Think about this. She has placed so many demands on your that you've literally given up every pleasant aspect of your life for her, for YEARS and YEARS. How can you really love someone so selfish, who only cares about you in relation to what you can do for her?

Let us know how things go. Declaring your independence, and following through, will be so worthwhile. You truly deserve so much more than this.
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Reply to MG8522
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Independent living in a facility will NOT result in your having to take care of another home. If she enters a continuum of care home, she starts out in independent living in an apartment on the premises, then steps up to assisted living when it's time. It continues through memory care in the same facility. Rehab facilities may be offered in-house, then once rehabbed the person moves back to their own independent or assisted living apartment. This arrangement would be ideal for both of you.

She'll have entertainment, three meals a day in the dining room, snack bar or her own apartment, and beauty salon and 24/7 nurse in the facility. You're off the hook and can enjoy your dog (not to mention your life) again.

"But Mom won't" and "I promised Mom" and "She'd hate it there" and…..
If you refuse to keep doing what you're doing, she will have no choice. Go visit some of these places. They are not hell holes or torture chambers; they are planned around the wants and needs of the elderly. My mother loved hers. It was elegant with a grand piano in the lobby and a DJ a couple nights a week in the lounge where the bar and the dance floor were.
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Reply to Fawnby
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Mom is MORE THAN READY for Assisted Living! If you wait any longer, she'll need Skilled Nursing care!

She cannot have everything she wants, unfortunately. She's usurped your entire life whether intentionally or unintentionally, and that's no longer working for you. She is in no shape to live in Independent Living, and needs AL at this point. Tell her you love her very much but the living arrangement is no longer working, you're needing her to move into AL by June 1st where she'll have lots of folks to hang around with and plenty of activities to keep her busy. Help as needed too. Help her find a great place!

Go back to being a daughter again instead of an Angelbaby indentured servant who's resentful, and understandably so. Before long, you'll start arguing and the air will become thick and toxic around your own home. That's what happens with these types of living arrangements. Mom has overstayed her welcome. Come to terms with that.

Best of luck to you.
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Reply to lealonnie1
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