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Hello, I am new here and I recently married my now husband three months ago I am 34 and he is 33. He has an elderly aunt has been recently having problems recovering from foot surgery that she recently had. We stopped by to see her and she was moving too much to the point that her incision site busted open with her foot just had surgery on a year ago and this foot was pussing and bleeding. I am a full-time special education, support teacher and my husband is a manager at his job and last night me and my husband left his aunt’s house both crying because we are struggling to try to take care of everything and my husband has not really had a true break in like months I flat out told my husband that I cannot continue to go to his aunt‘s house to help her and watch her slowly kill herself my father just had knee replacement surgery the same week that his aunt had a 2nd foot surgery to fix the foot that was having issues originally and I don’t know what else to do. I’ve told my husband that she needs more care than we can give her and I don’t know why and what I’m trying to ask, but I guess I would just need some support. I don’t want to do this, but I cannot continue to watch his aunt suffer and do this to herself. She has since fallen a few times and she has refused any in-home healthcare. Any help from anybody? My husband’s mother is an alcoholic and his stepfather is a smoker and alcoholic too, and they live out of state and the only person that’s able to help care for her when he can as my husband and myself, but I cannot continue to watch her de tear herself, and I have since stepped away or I’m planning to tell my husband that after the holidays because we’re supposed to go back on January 5 to go see her to check in with her. I did not talk to her at all yesterday at her home because I cannot continue to watch my husband, put himself out there and overstretching himself. I’m glad to be a part of this community but at the same time, I’m kind of sad because I did not see myself being a newlywed and having to be a part-time caregiver to my husband‘s aunt. We have been together for eight years and she was in better health when we first got together and now she’s having so many health problems and I feel guilty for feeling this way. My father told me today that he thinks that if my husband‘s aunt does not get help for her foot, it is probably infected then she’s probably going have her foot amputated. My husband was trying to get me to go with him to his aunt’s place on Christmas Day, but I’m trying my best to avoid the situation because I’ve already felt like I was going to be really upset with her yesterday because I can only handle so much my job is stressful as it is and I wanna also think about us possibly starting a family, but I don’t know if I can comfortably do that with his aunt refusing any sort of assistance or care. Thank you and I hope to find good advice and support here.

I so hope an ambulance was called abd Aunt went to ER.

Does your husband hold POA? Sounds to me Aunt can no longer make informed decisions for her care. If Rehab is recommende, send her. She should be evaluated for Dementia and the need for 24/7 care. If 24/7 care is needed, then tell the Social Worker it would be unsafe to send her home because their are no family members to care for her. This is the time to place her. If she can afford it in a nice Assisted Living or Memory Care if Dementia is found. If she has no money, tgen Longterm Care with Medicaid paying.

If your husband has no POA, then I would have the State take over her care. The Court will asign a State guardian. Your young, you should not be caring for a person with this many needs. You have jobs and a future. Let someone else do the caring. Its OK for your husband to admit its too much for him.
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MrsHearn Dec 24, 2024
Yes, we are very young and we have tried to shoulder that responsibility for a while but it’s getting to the point. It’s being very difficult. I am sorry. I’m suffering from seasonal depression right now and a lot is going on in my life besides my in law at this moment, my husband, and are going to be discussing more about this when he gets off of work tonight. For anyone that is trying to say anything negative unkind to me and I’m not saying that you’re doing this ma’am, but I would just like honest supportive, kind Comfort. I know we’re all strangers on this forum, but I am literally dealing with my father having knee replacement surgery recovering from that and so much other things I’ve had going on this past holiday season but yes, my husband does not have power of attorney yet and we’re gonna discuss more about it when he gets home tonight. Thank you for being kind. The only thing that I wanted from this form was kindness and true understanding from people that would possibly understand where I’m coming from. Thank you. I appreciate you being so nice to me.
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Get the aunt to the ER stat MrsHearn. You two are out of your league with her care and she needs professional medical treatment now. She can otherwise get sepsis and die.

Call 911 to come pick her up.
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You are ENDANGERING HER LIFE.
You explain this as having suppuration now, Thus is a peripheral infection (pus in the lower extremitie.) Especially if she has diabetes, this could be non-healing and quickly move to sepsis which would shut down her organs.

Not only SHOULD you not do this.............
But you MUST not do this.

Call the ambulance today. Aunt needs to be transported in for care and will likely be admitted for IV administration of some very strong antibiotics. Delay may kill her, and I mean to state that strongly to you.
She should then go out to SNF care until she is healed.

Not only is this something you should not WANT to do or NEED to do, this is something you ARE NOT QUALIFIED TO DO. You need to tell hubby if he doesn't get aunt into the hospital then he is playing with her very life, gambling it.
She needs social workers then and temporary placement.
If this is the beginning of a marriage you need to start it standing strong. You start bowing now to unreasonable demands to plans then you are sunk on day one. You are not responsible for this woman and need not to take on responsibility.
I wish you all the best.
Call the ambulance.
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MrsHearn Dec 24, 2024
Thank you my father said the same thing he said that if she does not get her foot looked at sooner than she will end up being sepsis and then lose her foot. I told my husband that last night and he said he knows that but he sounded very gruff and upset about it. But I totally agree. I feel like my husband is not taking this seriously, but supposedly his aunt has an appointment at the facility where she had her foot surgery from and they’re gonna open up the cast on Thursday of this week to be able to take a look at it and see what needs to be done. They want her to come in yesterday, but she didn’t have the ability to get out to the hospital and her uncle would have not been able to take her and my husband was working All day yesterday and honestly was not in the best mental state to go pick her up and take her to the hospital. I feel bad for saying this, but you’re right I feel like she’s not my responsibility and I’ve been supporting her even before we got married because I loved my husband enough to take care of him and help and unburden him a little bit with his family. Since getting married to him a few months ago, I’ve come to realize that this is too much for me emotionally and I can still talk to her on the phone, but I refuse I cannot go see her. I think I’m gonna talk to my husband after Christmas tomorrow and discuss with him that she needs to be really impatient and really get the help that she needs. Hopefully when she goes on Thursday, she’ll be fine with her foot and they’ll be able to give her the medication she needs, but I still am agreeing with everybody on this forum that she needs to help that we can’t give her and I don’t know how else to approach my husband about it without feeling like I’m accusing him or making him feel less than or telling him that we need to face reality. Thank you and I appreciate your comment on this.
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There's a reason the Aunt is not properly taking care of her foot, and this is what needs to be figured out. You don't mention how old this Aunt is, but if she's upwards of 65 (and based on the ilmited info you provided), she may have developed a UTI which can cause dementia-like symptoms or worsen dementia in someone who has it. A UTI is treatable with antibiotics, but she'd need to be tested first. She could have sepsis from her infected foot, which can also cause cognitive mayhem until treated. She may have other health problems that are creating her worsening mental state. Even if she was given antiobiotics for her foot, she may not be taking them due to confusion or short-term memory issues.

Options:

- you call the police and have them do a wellness check
- you call APS and report her as a vulnerable adult
- you go there and see she is still neglecting her wound, or seems confused and you either call 911 or take her to the ER yourselves. You tell the discharge people there that she lives by herself and is an "unsafe discharge" because no one has been able to get her to help herself and that neither you nor your husband are willing to do it. Do not accept any promises of help from the hospital: this is a lie they tell to get you take her home and get her out of their facility. Been there, done that. It's not true. They will drop you and her like a hot potato.

While in the ER/hospital you ask to talk to a social worker and tell them she seems unable/unwilling to help herself and that she needs to either go back to rehab or directely into a facility. This is the appropriate care she now needs. You 2 orbiting around her will not be solution in the long-term.

She is a sovereign adult for whom neither of you seem to be PoA for. Even if your husband or another family member was PoA for this Aunt, you still cannot force her to take care of herself if she resists.

Handing her off is the most appropriate thing you can do since she is obviously having a cognitive problem she is not able to deal with. Only a legal representative will be able to make decisions on her behalf and manage her medical and financial affairs. Handing her off to the ER or APS or a facility IS a solution for her. That is where this is all going, anyway, until and unless she recovers her faculties and can make decisions in her own best interests. Right now, this isn't the case, so backing completely away will bring about her care solution sooner.
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MrsHearn Dec 24, 2024
Thank you I appreciate the support and advice. My husband‘s great aunt is 70. She’s a few years younger than my father and she’s been living alone pretty much for most of her later years. She was actually living on her own when I first got together with my husband years ago, and at that time, she was in better health, but I really am struggling emotionally. Just thinking about that. I think the best thing for me right now is just to not go see her until my husband can figure out what to do and he can be able to rationalize the reality of what is going on with her I spoke with my father again this morning, and he’s of the same mindset that I can only do so much and I will have to step away mentally and emotionally to be able to care for my own mental well-being. But she’s 70 years old and she’s been dealing with more health issues in the last 3 to 4 years and it’s just been getting worse with mobility and things like that. She fell a few weeks ago and she got herself up and never called my husband or myself to help her. I’m trying not to feel guilty about the situation but I’m doing the best that I can with the knowledge that I have of her and the best way that I know how to handle the situation I thank you and I appreciate you for the advice that you’ve given me.
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Mrs Hearn, we have had many many posters whose marriages have been ruined by ‘mother’s boys’ who have prioritised care (usually for M but sometimes for other relations) over their wives. It often starts slow but creeps up as M’s needs increase. Like CWillie posted on another site, it's the 'frog in hot water' syndrome.

Once it gets going, it also gets to be expected, there is anger if it stops, and guilt about stopping. It gets entrenched – and demanded.

It is probably worth dealing with this sooner rather than later. If your new husband has “been gone most of my winter break” and you have “only spent a few hours with him during the time I’ve been off”, it would probably be a good idea to deal firmly with this before it gets to be ‘normal’. Certainly before you start planning a family of your own.
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MrsHearn Dec 24, 2024
Thank you, I don’t know how to approach this without getting angry and defensive. I love my husbands willingness to help and it’s why I married him, but I plan to wait till after Christmas Day to discuss with him how I feel . I think I will feel better once this coming weekend rolls around where my husband will have hopefully 2 full days to rest and us spend quality time together. My father told me to support my husband since he’s in a rock and hard place but I feel like no matter what I say he will be upset and think I don’t want to help his aunt. I do but it’s more care than we can give. He knows how I feel about it. I don’t want to stop going over to see her but I feel if it doesn’t happen I will start to be resentful and that won’t help my husband or the situation at all
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This is a really difficult situation to encounter only 3 months after getting married. There are other problems on the horizon too, as you say “his mother is an alcoholic and his stepfather is a smoker and alcoholic too”. Perhaps the aunt helped bring him up and that is why he is so involved now, but there are just too many needy relations to cope with. Your own life is in ruins if your new husband cannot put you and the marriage first.

I’m not normally impressed with ‘counselors’, but I would suggest that a session or two might be really helpful for you, in working out what on earth has become of your marriage, and what you should do about it. ‘Talking it out’ with all the complexities might help more than this site. Don’t go away though. When you make some tentative decisions about options, site members may be able to provide advice that will help quite a lot.

Yours, and best wishes to survive Christmas stresses, Margaret
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MrsHearn Dec 24, 2024
My husbands aunt was a calming influence in his life, and yes did have a hand in raising him. She had no children of her own. His moms moms and stepdad his grandparents were the ones who mainly raised him. I feel so alone in our marriage, he’s been gone most of my winter break as a teacher and I only spend a few hours with him during the time I’ve been off so far. I tried to deter my husband from getting us to see us aunt on Christmas Day and I was telling him I would rather see my parents and his grandma and dad on the other side of the family. Since my husbands aunt has had so many health issues he’s been neglecting his fathers side of the family to help care for his aunt. When January comes up I plan to tell him the next time we are supposed to see her I can’t go over there for my mental well being before I lose my self control and tell her things that she doesn’t deserve to hear. I love her dearly; but my job and the situation we are in has worn me thin.
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Yes, do not go back there with your husband. Be honest and kindly tell him that you need him to be present in your marriage, and that his aunt needs more help than he can provide, so he should call APS.
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MrsHearn Dec 24, 2024
I need to do so. I am tired of being home and staying up late just to spend a few hours with him and then he’s got to get up early to work a full day of work again. I am a support teacher on winter break because I will mainly be home by myself because my husband is working full days or caring for his aunt. I feel alone
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You have nothing to feel guilty about, you’re being wise to realize aunt’s caregiving needs are beyond what you can reasonably provide. There may be some dementia present if she’s not listening to reason about self care and accepting help. Consider reporting her situation to Adult Protective Services in her area to get her on their radar as an elder in a dangerous living and health position. Don’t start your marriage out trying to appease your husband in his trying to be a good guy here, it’s good of him to care, but he needs to prioritize your marriage and his own health and future. You both need to help out only as much as is reasonable for you
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MrsHearn Dec 24, 2024
Yes, I cannot continue to watch her put herself in danger. My husband came back and said when he left her house last night that had to reassure her that I wasn’t mad at her that I just had alot going on with my dad having his knee replacement the same week as her surgery. I just hope my husband wakes up before he’s putting himself too much out there
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Don’t start a family at this time. The situation with his aunt has brought a marital problem into your lives, and the issues between you must be resolved before you take on the responsibility of raising a child.

His aunt isn’t his responsibility, nor is she yours. Have a frank discussion with husband about how this is destroying your marriage. Then distance yourself by refusing to go to her house. If you continue to “help” him, you enable the situation to go on. Once he understands that her care is his little red wagon to pull on his own, he may decide it’s too much and tap other resources for her care.
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MrsHearn Dec 24, 2024
Thank you, my husband is currently passed out asleep. He’s so tired and he’s been neglecting showering the last few days. I know that’s gross, but I am really concerned for my husband well being. I feel at a loss of how to approach this
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