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The only reason your brother does not visit is because he cannot "deal with it" - it being the decline in your father's health and a reminder of his own mortality.

I experienced a similar thing with my own brother and my widowed father, so you are not alone.

If your father is still cognizant and asks why your brother does not visit - be honest. Tell him that it is "too painful" for your brother to see him in his current state of health - so he avoids coming.
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Invisible Apr 2021
That's kind of blaming the victim.
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It probably makes your brother too sad to see his father decline. Hopefully, your father is just dealing with whatever is happening in the moment and is not particularly distressed by what or who is not there.
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I have a suggestion for relations who find it difficult to visit aging relative, send a greeting card or letter. Keep it generic but caring. Elderly can reread the message every day and it warms their loved one’s heart
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Try not to stress about it. We all deal differently and it sounds like your brother can't face the reality of it. Lots of people are like this but you can't change it. All you can do is be there for your dad and control your own feelings about your brother.
Do you update him? If so, consider stopping temporarily and see if that prompts him to act to find out on his own. Sometimes we provide people with enough information for them to feel involved, so that even though they don't participate much, they feel like they are do.
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My husband rarely calls his mother - who has dementia - in Hawaii. She has a full time caregiver and rarely gets out of her little, efficiency condo. She doesn't really remember her oldest son, and last phone call she cried saying he was dead (her husband is dead and she miscarried her first male child). The phone conversations are always short and always the same. He feels frustrated with trying to communicate.

If your dad doesn't remember like my MIL doesn't, they guys may feel it is not worth the effort. They may also feel helpless to change his situation. Seeing dad this way may also remind them that this may be their future. Of course, the only way you'll know is to ask the guys and hope they will give you an honest answer.

If visits are tough for them, encourage them to reach out in other ways. My MIL appreciates that we send her fruit arrangements for the holidays that she and her caregiver can enjoy together. I send her long, chatty letters with pictures of ourselves, our children, and outings. I am fairly sure your men might be up for these kinds of activities. May one can trim his hair every couple of weeks and give a barbershop quality shave with hot towel treatment and neck rub. Maybe, they would be up for bringing dad a treat to enjoy with coffee and read the news to him.
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My sister and I live in the same neighborhood as my parents and she hasn't been there since Christmas despite my dad needing constant care. I finally had to accept that she isn't coming, she's not going to help, and Im on my own. It helped me a lot to just accept it. It hurts knowing that a sibling could leave a parent to die alone. At least he has you. Be thankful that you can still have some experiences with your father and that he isn't completely alone.
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I am the only person in the past two years who has been inside the ALF where my parents live. I am the only one who has stood in the parking lot talking to them on the phone while they stood on their balcony or at their window in cold weather so I could physically see them during lockdown. My out of state sibling has FaceTimed them many times which has helped keep their spirits high. However local family members drive past all the time. It is very disappointing. It can be overwhelming when you are someone's only social contact with the outside world. Lower your expectations. Don't tell your brother when you visit. He can arrange his own visits. You haven't said what your relationship with your dad is so I would say visit your dad and keep it light and pleasant. Leave if it gets unpleasant. If dad asks about your brother just say you don't know and change the subject. Live your life.
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This could be a form of grieving for your brother. He may not be able to emotionally handle seeing his Dad this way. When i was young, I couldn't handle seeing my Granddad that way. I would feel like crying and get very upset and depressed after each visit. I didn't want to spend the visit crying in front of my Granddad and others. I don't think I had the maturity or emotional fortitude to handle it back then.

You don't mention if your brother is local or if even is interested in updates about your Dad. If he is local, you could offer to go see Dad together for a brief visit and then you two could do something fun afterward (or before and after). If that goes well, you could make it a joint visit from time to time coupled with some fun together to make it more tolerable to him and help him get more acclimated.

If he is not local, you could ask him to come and visit you for a week or a few days. Once there, you could suggest one or two brief visits to Dad in between all of your fun together. He may agree with your belief in his ability to handle the visit, and the promise to keep the visit very short (like 30 minutes). Best wishes.
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You need to let this go. My brother has not visited my dad for a couple years. He calls him a few times a year but my dad doesn't know who he is anymore. We talked about this recently. He is grieving his loss of the dad he used to know and this is how he chooses to deal with it. I respect his decision. He prefers to remember him as he used to be.
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My sister swans around visiting friends/vacationing. She has visited our mother 2 times in 5 years. Mom is hurt and angry about it. My sister says she dislikes our mom and did her share for her already. I think she will regret her attitude when mom is gone, but that’s her problem. You can’t make someone be the person you want. Do your thing; you only have your own conscience to control.
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help2day Apr 2021
I wouldn't count on your sister "regretting" she didn't visit your Mom. My sister lived ONE mile from our Mom and would MAYBE visit on Mother's Day or her birthday (which was 2 weeks apart) so the two visits in May were it for the year. Our Mom was very lucid and knew her only other daughter didn't visit and I know it hurt her feelings. I was angry but thought after she died, my sister would have regrets. Nope. I just don't understand. I was our Mom's caregiver and I know I don't have any regrets. Make peace with it. She won't change and it will only naw at you and make you miserable. At this point, I rarely see my sister and it no longer bothers me. Her loss.
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in a family every sibling has their own private relationship with a parent that each of the other household members are not privy too. You may feel good about your relationship with your father, maybe your brother does not.
Me: even though I am caring for my parents, don't feel close to my parents, my history with them is mine and for me I did not and do not find it one that has proven to be a warm, fuzzy relationship. On the other hand my siblings might feel differently, towards them, I don't know. There are many private moments we experience with our parents that form our history with them. Personally mine was not one I cherish :) I still love them, but, I think that if they were elsewhere, I would avoid seeing them also.
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Actually this is a question for your brother. My one brother told my DH he just couldn't see Mom that way. My other brother, I tthink may have felt the same way. But then neither went out of their way before her Dementia, so really not surprised. And she was a good Mom. We had the house all our friends gathered at.

Its hard to watch a parent decline. I watched it every day.
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This is what some people do. You cannot change your brother’s actions by being upset about them yourself.

“Promises made” become either “promises kept” or “promises broken”. It took me over a year, and several sessions with a good counselor, to understand that one of two POAs selected with trust and confidence by my LO would be 1,000 miles away for the hard stuff and the long haul.

I’m not sure it’s actually possible for any of us who have been locked away from LOs in residential care to assess how well or how poorly the folks in this situation fared, but whatever their situations were, we who love them MUST pick up the pieces wherever they’ve fallen, AND MOVE ON.

Don’t overestimate how much your father’s welfare depends on your absent brother, and for sure, don’t UNDERESTIMATE how much your contacts mean to him!

Your energy and love and strength are what your dad needs, whenever you can get to him. Don’t waste them on your brother’s conduct. This is what it is.

For your welfare AND YOUR DAD’S, LET IT GO.
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My uncle was in a nursing home for two years and one of my cousins never went to see him.

No one knows why my cousin didn’t go visit him.

I truly feel that some people can’t handle it emotionally. They want to remember them as they were when they were well.
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Daughterof1930 Apr 2021
My brother used to say that bringing his children to the nursing home to see my mom was too hard on them and he wouldn’t do it. Truth was he couldn’t handle it. Nobody bought his excuses, but we accepted that we couldn’t control his decisions. My now adult children are quick to say they learned tremendously from those visits, it grew their character and helped them learn to think of others
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Well, we can all try to guess why your brother doesn't show up, or you could just ask him.

Three dates he's let go by in less than two weeks. Depending on how firm the arrangement was, how far he has to come and what else he has to organise, that doesn't sound like he's determined never to let your father see him again.

Pick up the phone and call him. There's probably a good reason, and you can encourage him in a positive, cheerful way to drop in as soon as he can.
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It’s hard. I have a daughter who seems to be still angry about my breakup with her father in her younger days, and by regrets that my DH2 doesn’t live up to the standards she thought I should achieve, status-wise. She is very very image conscious, in the medical profession which is riddled with snobbery. I haven’t seen her for 3 years. I can’t understand it, DH2 is a qualified experienced engineer, far better qualified than she is (as am I), far better off (as am I), also both than her father DH1. Her father had the most beautiful BBC accent, but fewer brains or achievements. For whatever reason, she just doesn’t want to know about me and DH2. My other daughter says that she loves me, but she certainly doesn't show it. It breaks my heart. I can’t fix it, just cope with it. You may need to do the same thing. Commiserations!
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JoAnn29 Apr 2021
So sorry Margaret.
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My brother lived first a mile from my mom's nursing home, then lived IN HER HOUSE (also a mile away), and still never went to see her unless I was there, too.

I can't explain why he acts like that because he does care about her, but he doesn't handle old people and their infirmities well, I guess. I don't worry about it anymore. I moved Mom closer to me (I live an hour from her last place), and he's been to see her a total of four times in two years.

I can't control his behavior, and I'm not going to stress myself out over it. As with many things I can't control, I just say "it is what it is" and move on.

Don't tell your dad your brother is coming to visit, so he won't be disappointed. If Bro shows up, it'll be a nice surprise.
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