I don't want to be free of caring for my 94-year-old mother. I love doing for her what she cannot do any longer. But when I hear that my older sister or brother talk about how wonderful their travel experiences or dining-out experiences are, I get resentful and jealous. Now I never want to talk to them or see them ever again. They both live out of state. Am I being a selfish brat? I feel like I am so evil. I know it is jealousy, but I feel it more and more when I learn they are having fun. My life is consumed with taking care of my mother, and neither of them have ever offered to help in any way. I cannot get over hating them more and more each day.
Sure you feel jealous. I would as well. I am done with my direct caregiving but I do have responsibilities that are difficult to get away from and when friends or relatives go on vacations I feel envious.
Can you get caregivers in to help out for a few hours once in a while? Mom should pay for this with whatever funds she has. (the idea of spending their potential inheritance may spur some extra help or at least conversation)
Have you looked into programs that can help provide caregivers.
I can tell you from experience that even a few hours a way a few days a week can mean a lot. It does not sound like much but a few hours for yourself does amazing things for head, heart, soul.
I do believe in karma to a certain degree.
Your brother and sister may have challenges that you know nothing about.
I am the sibling that is the recipient of your ill feelings. I moved away from home over 25 years ago. My siblings still live in the same city as mom. When mom developed dementia and needed assistance, my siblings said "I should force her to live with me." ~ I am the only girl. Mom is still aware of her home and everything about her house. When I would bring mom to stay with me, one-week a month, she would ask every day, several times a day, when are you taking me home. Bottom line is I had to arrange in home care for my mom. I got tired of receiving phone calls every day, several times a day from my siblings that live in the same city as mom, and in one case WITH mom, saying how unfair things were to them. When I moved away 25 years ago, no one resented my move. My parents were healthy. Now the relationship with my siblings is estranged. We barely talk. BUT, I am taking care of mom. I talk to her caregivers several times a day and visit her monthly. It is not fair that only one child shoulder the responsibility of caregiving. Hopefully you can use resources within your community to assist you. I started with the caseworker a my mom's doctor's office. She guided me in the direction I needed to go. I pray your siblings step up and assist you because it's the right thing to do. But resenting or hating your siblings is not right. They did not move away and leave you in a situation to be the primary caregiver; they were already gone when the need surfaced. God Bless
1. Neither of your siblings have ever offered to help in any way. Have you asked? If you have, and they've refused, let it go. "A grudge will soon rot the pocket you carry it in."
2. If listening to them talk about how wonderful their travel and dining-out experiences are makes you resentful, you can always say, "Sounds like you had a marvelous time! But taking care of our mom makes it impossible for me to do those things any more, and as much as I'm happy for you, I'd prefer that you not mention them again."
I'm not making these suggestions flippantly or callously. It's just that sometimes we overlook the simplest solutions.
I've been in your position, though the circumstances were a bit different - I was my mother's sole caregiver, and my sister lives over 800 miles away. Sis has been in poor health for years (including a bout with breast cancer, chronic incontinence and pernicious anemia that almost killed her) and there was no way that she could assist me, except with the advice she would give me as a retired RN. But for a long time I resented her, mainly because she didn't experience what I did as a caregiver - Mama's irritability and irrational behavior, the daily drudgery of toileting assistance, the sleepless nights, the picky eating... the list goes on. And Sis tried to tell me that she did indeed understand because of her own infirmities, but wouldn't accept that taking care of yourself and taking care of someone else are two completely different things. She even maintained that she was just as frustrated as I was with not being able to go anywhere or do anything. (Guess again, Sis.)
I even held onto that resentment when Mama died, simply because Sis wasn't there. I was completely alone. My husband was out of town with his job, the pandemic was still rolling along, and I had not one shoulder to cry on, not one person to give me a hug. I think at that point, I hated everyone and everything, and continued to do so for the next three months. It was terribly self-destructive.
One day, I finally woke up and realized that if I didn't change my outlook, I would die a premature death as a bitter old woman. I made a conscious effort to see only the positive side of things. I asked God to forgive me for my hatred and resentment, and to show me the path toward a happy life - and He did. I'm now immersed in moving our household to another town, and starting a new chapter in life with my husband (who, though he never really complained, suffered just as much as I did through the difficult years of caregiving).
It's easy to let yourself get dragged down - sometimes literally - when you're the sole caregiver. As the journey continues, do everything you can to make it a positive one (I hope you've found the respite care; it'll help), and concentrate as much on your well-being as you do your mother's. If your siblings irritate you, limit your contact with them and restrict it to updates on your mother's condition, and by all means, avoid conversations that may reawaken hard feelings.
Sorry to have written a sermon here, but once I get started, I can't stop. Best wishes, and I hope you can find calmness and peace. I finally did.
But seeing what it is, I’ve just stopped expecting or be even anticipating any help from them. I still love them but sometimes it’s best to live from afar.
You would have thought that they might be a bit more considerate of your feelings than to go blathering on about their luxury leisure activities when you're probably grateful if you even get to pee in peace. You would have thought that.
But what we caregivers forget is that these people have not been there and Do Not Have A Clue. Not one. It never enters their well-fed heads that their enthusiastic narratives might be just a wee bit galling - even if you have willingly surrendered these years to your mother's care. Willingly isn't the point. It's about having some %!-F!&*%$$** tact!
They can learn, though. You never know. Is there anything specific that would help you that, realistically, they could manage?
do you have all necessary paperwork needed to care for your mother ?
have you seen a lawyer for help and suggestions to become her sole caregiver ?
if you are completely covered to care for her without interference, write off your sibs. Pretend they are her friends if they want to visit. Pretend what they do is not related to you.
If you do not want to hear their suggestions ... just in case they may have something worthwhile ... ignore them. Call the office on aging for suggestions and advice for caregiving help. do not restrict your sibs from seeing your mom unless they upset her and If they get spiteful use three words ... call my lawyer.
heres another three words ... they dont care.
they will if theres money involved. Otherwise ... they. dont. care.
im not saying this is easy. Im not saying you wont be resentful. Who wouldnt be ?
but try to stop the cycle.
just make sure, as i said, that YOU are covered legally and are doing the best you can.
2. They can send some money every month so you can hire. Someone for respite care for you. Give them the two choices and no more. Must choose now or never see or hear from you again that includes any updates on your mom. Never know when she does.
I wonder if some of these feelings are due to being just tired and drained from taking care of the elderly, and having to deal with anything else, which requires extra emotional effort, is too difficult, because we have reached our limit.
If you were never all that close with your siblings before taking mom and dad in, why would that change because you took them in?
Taking the full responsibility of your elderly parents into your own house makes both your siblings lives possible.
Because of you, both of them are off the caregiver hook. They don't have to a thing other than rest easy at night because they know mom and dad are being well cared for by their sister.
Your feelings are not about being tired and drained. Though I am sure you are both. We all are.
It's about having pride and respect for yourself. You did your siblings a solid because you take their share of the responsibility. No way do you have to entertain them with a chicken dinner on Sundays because they're willing to visit mom and dad. Your house isn't a nursing home with an activities room for families to visit their loved ones in. It's your damn house and you make the rules.
Tell them they can take mom and dad to a restaurant. Or to either of their homes for a week-end visit. Or with them on their next vacation. You're the one doing right here. Don't forget it.
And I also understand that you love caring for your mom and you want to do this- don’t let all the people who tell you you don’t completely love caring for your mom, after reading your one question on this thread, bother you.
Remember that you are caring for her “for her” and “for you” - if you start thinking that you are doing it “for them” it will become more painful when they are not appreciative.
It is also okay to hate them.
I am one of many kids. My parents are gone now and I only have a meaningful surviving relationship with one sibling. I also have great relationships with many (but not all) nieces and nephews. “Losing” those other siblings is not sad — it is fine. The others are not worth having relationships with. They were not nice to my parents and they were not nice to me and there is no loss. My past love for them, I have learned, turned out to be fictional and it was definately one way.
Tough times like these show you what people are really made of. Anyone can be nice during the good times. You were the one that showed up when needed.
My siblings were terrible at the end of my parents’ life. They got even worse after my parents died. They wanted the world to believe they were devoted and dedicated children. They sought sympathy, publicized their loss and began to fight over money and things. They even initiated a lawsuit over stuff. At the end of my parents’ lives, they couldn’t find the time to call or visit.
Send a message to me anytime you need encouragement. Everything will be okay and you will know you did the right thing.
They will slowly and privately suffer for their own mistakes.
You are not an only child. You have two siblings and she is their mother too.
Everyone here understands where you're coming from. I certainly do. I did not choose to be my mother's caregiver and never wanted to be. I am the convenient choice for everyone. My sibling does absolutely nothing except enjoy her life and chastise me if I have a moment of resentment towards our gaslighting, narcissistic, unreasonable and cruel mother. That's mom on a good day.
Please don't give up everything else in life because you become a slave to the caregiver role. Get outside hired help to come in so you can have a live away from your mom and her needs. Tell your siblings you're going on a vacation, and leave it up to them to arrange your mom's care while you're away. If they refuse to help and ignore you, mention care facility placement for mom. Nothing gets the attention of siblings better then the possibility of losing some of their potential inheritance. They may even pay for some homecare expenses for your mom too. You sound like a wonderful caring person. Resentment will destroy this in a person and in a situation like yours resentment is inevitable. Bring in outside homecare for your mom.
you wrote:
“Tell your siblings you're going on a vacation, and leave it up to them to arrange your mom's care while you're away.”
—
i know quite a few family situations, where still, siblings would do nothing. the result will just be elderly parent alone at home, abandoned.
and for this reason, some sweet caregivers can’t/won’t take a break. the parent would simply be abandoned.
as for organizing homecare, many siblings won’t help with that either. the siblings prefer to do nothing.
My husband’s sister HATE us w/a vengeful passion, because we haven’t “helped” in the way THEY wanted us to. We did help: we took mom to medical appointments, sat w/her, visited her, took her to church & lunch on Sundays. My husband ran interference on many occasions & went to her home to calm her down during the middle of a work day. She has plenty of $ for A.L. and soon Memory Care, so our hands-on help is no longer needed in the same way.
We aren’t her POA, nor allowed on the 2 person visitation list when she’s in the hospital.
This “derangement syndrome” hatred from the siblings is all about control. Many times my husband has invited them to sit down and talk it out...but no.
Im not at all saying that you resemble this remark, but if hatred is heaped up verbally on the other siblings...it chases them away.
Hopefully your siblings are nice people and you can have an honest discussion w/them about how they might assist you.
you wrote:
“Now I never want to talk to them or see them ever again.”
—
i understand.
If they refuse to give you that, ask if they will pay for a caregiver for a total of 8 weeks a year (be prepared to negotiate that amt of time).
It is very difficult to listen to siblings talk about how they go here and there without even the slightest consideration that you aren't getting to do those things. I don't think siblings who do this even listen to themselves talk. One sibling told me she phoned in-law siblings to 'set them straight' about how unfair it was that her hubby wasn't getting help with their mom. Really???? I'm not getting help either. They talk to talk. Yep, it creates anger, but for me it is not worth the big blow out and creating a great divide between me and the siblings. Not to mention, my anger only upsets me because these people think being a caregiver was all your own doing so not really their problem. And, I suppose it was my own doing. Just never thought they would be able to watch me doing 24/7 all alone or unable to participate in my own family/life on the other side of the state. Easier to just do one day at a time. We all have to make our choices based on what our hearts say we 'can live with'.
I call my brother, his wife and his daughter and her family ufpos. Useless, freeloading pieces of sh^t.
They never come down to help but always have their hand out whining for money. Mom is stupid enough to give it to them. Meanwhile I do all the work and get nothing.
Perhaps it is time to put your foot down and inform your mom that if she refuses to demand they start helping out, she needs to look for a seniors home.
It is unfortunate that the majority of times one sibling does all the work while the rest are no help at all. We are not appreciated for our commitment.
Bing on the site for a while I hear this scenario repeated over and over again. It does not matter what country you live in.
Start with some self-searching. What has changed from "the usual" when your started caring for mom? Be as specific as possible: earlier mornings, no lingering over coffee and the paper, no more going out with friends on the weekends, decreased sleep, intimacy changes... Decide on which of those changes are things your really desire (travel, eating out) and which you really need (more sleep?).
Help! How much time would it take - weekly and monthly - to get back some of that "usual"? Now, ask for help: family members, friends, faith community, paid help for weekly and monthly help so you can get some of that usual back - especially those that impact your physical, mental, and emotional health. Try to get help weekly and monthly to do things without mom - dine out with friends, take trips... since you need to have a a complete life - things your experience with her and life you experience with others. If you need to hire a sitter, pay for it with mom's finances. She would pay more in a nursing home or assisted living.
Do not feel guilty about "non mom time" since burn out is a real problems for caregivers as well as isolation. "Non mom time" builds resiliency in you. It will also get rid of those uncomfortable feelings when siblings share about their experiences. Now, you can share with them about some of your own! Many caregivers feel a bit adrift when caregiving is no longer the mainstay of their lives. You will rely on that "non mom time" when you no longer need to be her caregiver and all your time becomes "non mom time.".
Every person makes choices that will impact their lives. You have made a better choice. God bless you and all who make the choice of caring for their loved one in their time of need.
It was difficult caring for my mother with Alzheimer’s, but my brother told me I will be rewarded in heaven.
I agree and I never regretted taking care of her. It was and is the most rewarding accomplishment of my life. We will all need help when we reach the stage later in life.
Yes, I'd have to say I am sometimes resentful, because alot of things can be done online, and anyone who can call can also arrange for things she might need--it is a digital world now. But no one offers (did you expect otherwise???). Alot of my resentment comes from the fact that my mother is not easy to deal with, and ( I discovered this is pretty typical) she is much more pleasant with the 2 sons who live far away.
The way I dealt with my resentment, which is now ebbing, is that 1. I realized after having a good talk with one of them, that he just couldn't handle her decline emotionally, and moved away. Yes he was not being responsible, but I felt much better when he acknowledged how much I had taken up in doing what I do for her. It did damage our relationship, but after going through open discussions with him, things got alot better. 2. I realized that a simple thing such as a daily phone call made my mother so happy, that it takes alot of the burden off me as far as her mood. Very important in avoiding burnout!
3. I finally realized that even if no one else seems to appreciate me (superficially), underneath they really do and 4. When they talk about the good times they are having, they are trying to get me out of my (chronically) bleak mood, and cheer me up. 5. I finally realized I am not perfect and well, that's the way it is. I'll do my best, as well as I can. and 6. Even if no one in this world will reward me for my efforts, ultimately God will, and it is all worth it....
One day, when our loved ones pass, and we were the ones caring for them, with next to no help from anyone else, we will know that we gave as much as we could, and will feel satisfied with that choice in our lives.
Hope this helps. You are not alone!
I hope you can find
What helped me was: 1. Realizing I am not perfect, but that I am trying my best 2. Her moods were giving me burnout, but I realized it is part of her dementia and slowly this helped 3. My brothers seem not to care superficially, but after some really good talks, it seems they realize how hard it is, and they could not handle it themselves--and underneath all the telling me how great things are for them, they do understand and in fact seem to be trying to cheer me up. 4. Yes I did feel resentful for a while but now realize that when our elderly parents pass and we have done what we could--with no help, it seems--God will reward us in the end, even if no one on earth will. and we will feel satisfied and happy about it all.
Be easy on yourself. If you are doing your best, then just acknowledge that about yourself. Try asking your siblings to pitch in, maybe a small thing at a time (maybe they can call her more?), and if nothing else, try to give yourself a much needed emotional break by talking and laughing with them about some cheerful topic, to get you away from the present just for a minute.
Like respite---but just brief, in your own head.
Hope this helps....
I have disowned my two sisters.
One lives 15 minutes away, the other in AZ.
I may sound like I'm a bitter person, but I'm not.
I am angry, hurt & betrayed &
others should not judge unless they have walked a mile...
I have helped my Dad for 8 years & moved in with him for the last 3 1/2yrs. after a fall he took.
My husband lives at our house & comes over nightly for dinner, does all the honey- dos around my Dad's & does everything at our house.
We have reasons why he cannot move in with us but we do what we have to to make our life work.
I truly have an amazing husband!!
I have zero regrets of taking care if my Dad.
He & my Mom took care of us, now it's our turn well my turn.
My Dad started having heart issues 2 weeks after my Mom's passing in 2011 he also has lung issues due to chronic pneumonia/bronchitis since I was young. His macular has progressed to almost no vision & now he is weak & unsteady.
My one sister would on occasion stay "the weekend" arriving around 5 or 6pm after she "took a nap"
She would either leave by 9am the next morning (not even 24 hrs) or if she felt generous she would stay until Sunday morning which was far & few.
All she did while she was here was sleep. No engaging in conversations with him, in fact most times she'd arrive in her pajamas & leave in them.
My other sister would come to visit 2 times a year spending an hour with my Dad & then all the other time at her in laws, her children wouldn't even bother to stop by, IF my Dad went to dinner that would be the only time he would see them & basically they'd be talking to everyone else & not him.
AZ sister was really great at armchair cheerleading telling me what I should be doing.
They have not stayed up for days taking care wondering if he would be alive, watching to see if he was breathing....she wants to stick him in a home.
Which IS NOT ANYTHING MY DAD WANTS/WANTED.
He should be in a home, really why?? So he'd be away from HIS home where HE feels SAFE, away from his beloved cat that I hear him thank God for nightly for???
So he can be ignored by his daughters & their families even more????
They never call just to see how he is, sometimes 6, 7 months will pass before he gets a call & that's usually prompted by something THEY want.
My AZ sister reported me to adult protective services, because she didn't like that I didn't put him in a home.
This upset my Dad, not to say myself.
I asked my sister who lives close 3 months in advance if she could stay 1 night, so I could do something special for my husband's 60th birthday.
(which by the way they went on a weeks cruise to celebrate my brother in laws 60th)
All of a sudden my AZ sister came out that very night & the both stayed over.
I asked my sister multiple times for over a month when my other sister was going to be out & was lied to.
I asked other family members & was never answered but they took him to dinner that night, so they ALL knew
Actually this bothered my Dad because he was unprepared for it.
My family has been pulling this crap for YEARS & now uses the virus for an excuse.
You can't catch the virus by a phone call or by sending a card....
The words tired, sick, in pain, vacation & day off are NOT in my vocabulary! & yes I still work full time! now from home...I was just taken by ambulance to the ER for an illness & my sister never asked once how i was, she was throwing a hissy fit that she may have to come for the night to be at my Dad's.
Fyi...I was released & was to rest, but the next day I was making meals, washing dishes, doing Dad's laundry, & grocery shopping.
Tell your family to go to hell & then never look back, you nor your Mom need or deserve family like them.
I no longer call them & keep them updated on his Dr, medical & it's made life for Dad & myself harmonious.
If they really wanted to know they'd call & keep track....they do not.
Your feelings are justified!!!
Stay strong
My 84 year old mother with dementia has lived with me for 4 years. My brother (lives 7 miles away) and sister (lives 2.5 hours away) do almost nothing to help her or to provide respite for me. I never could have imagined that they would abandon her. My dad died of Alzheimer's complications in 2015 and they were more involved then, despite him being somewhat absent in our lives. I have begged them to please either call or text our mom every day because it definitely still registers with her that she has talked to them. Almost every day she asks me if I know why they are angry with her and why they've abandoned her. Recently I checked her phone and it had been 12 days since my sister had called or texted her. There is no excuse for this. She works very hard full time but has zero other obligations in her life other than to herself and her cat. I asked her several years ago if she could spend 2 of her 5 weeks of vacation each year taking care of our mom. Her response was, "That's not how I choose to spend my time off." I recently told my brother's wife that my brother should think in terms of what kind of relationship he hopes to have in 20 years when he's 80 years old and his only child (daughter) is 40 years old. Does he hope she will call? Stop by? He will be devastated if she does to him what he's doing to my mom.
I am still working through what kind of relationship I want to have with either of them after my mom is gone.