Parents should be there for their children. How do you deal with this day in and out when they expect care because "your my daughter"? It seems the natural relationship of the parent supporting the child is reversed eventually to the point where you become disillusioned. Any insights?
Even though I didn't live in the same house as my parents, I felt they were still under the impression that I was still in my 20's or 30's and could still do everything..... hello, I was a senior citizen myself with my own age decline issues. Even waving my Medicare card and AARP membership didn't seem to phase them :P
This was before I knew it was ok to set boundaries, to learn to say "no" to my parents.
It is hard caring for an aging parent. I know we all have to do what we feel is right. Always know there are options. Yes, we are the daughters but we have to remember we have choices.
For me, I was the oldest of my sibling group. My parents were immigrants and struggled their whole lives for their children. I was put into a helper role with my siblings from an early age. I think that carried over to when my parents were aging and facing health crisis.
I have a lot of anger and resentment. I always felt overly burden and responsible where as my siblings were "free." My father passed away last year and I am still guilt ridden about not doing enough. It felt like no matter what I did, I could not get any validation or acknowledgment or even make my father happy. I am trying to come to terms with my decisions. For me, I don't regret helping my parents, but I wished I had found a better balance.
No matter what, just remember to do what you feel comfortable with. And always know there are resources in the community.
Take care.
My own mom - told me she expected to move in with me so i could take care of her. I said NO and got the whole "but you are my daughter" manipulative speech. I told her i loved her and would help her research living, transport, meal options - but that i just couldn't be a caregiver with a full time job and young child. (plus my mom would drive me insane within a day). She didn't want to hear it and after several years i still get the guilt trip "Linda moved home to take care of her mom - wasn't she in your grade in high school?"
Bottom line - they are not going to be happy with your setting boundaries. You will be happy and have health and a life.
Alternative - they are still never happy and you are exhausted, sick, resentful, and it will never ever end.
Stay strong. Read the stories out here. Seek advice. We wish you the best.
My mother is like this, too. It bites. It becomes necessary to step back from it and establish your boundaries as a separate independent adult. It's hard to do at first, as others have said. But it's the only way to avoid being turned into a resentful, unhappy slave.
In February of 2016 my mother fell and broke her wrist. She wasn't using her newly purchased cane because "I don't think I need a cane" -- even though it was suggested by her doctor.
A social worker visited to suggest people who could help with shopping, laundry, bathing, etc. My mother's response was, "My daughter will do it."
I am her only living child and there is no other family nearby. So... it falls to me to do everything. She refuses to talk about getting "strangers" in to help, even once a week for a few hours. I've tried saying, "What if something were to happen to me?" She replies, "Well, I hope nothing happens to you" and flat out refuses to see that this is not a healthy or normal relationship for either of us.
I believe she has narcissistic personality disorder, and a therapist I've spoken to agrees.
It's always been there, even when I was growing up. Now in my mother's old age, it's exacerbated and I leave her apartment frustrated and angry.
Sorry for not having advice and only venting, but just know that you are not alone.
Take care of yourself -- friends, therapy, church, whatever works.
How often do you go to her apartment, and how long do you stay there? I am sorry that your mother is such a selfish narcissist. What does your therapist say?
CarlaCB: "but it's only the authoritarian parent-controls-child aspect that remains after the caring, supportive aspect of the relationship is gone. A lot of parents seem to find that to be the easiest way to deal with the fact of being dependent on their children. If they act like they're still in control, maybe you'll be fooled into thinking they are, and they can also feel as though they are, instead of feeling like helpless, dependent old people. "
I think there's a lot of truth in the above. My mother likes to order me around, and expects to be obeyed. Yet her abilities are so compromised -- she must think she's fooling everyone!
One time at the coumadin clinic my mother prounouced for anyone to hear, "I don't know what people do who don't have DAUGHTERS!"
Well, she has a resentful daughter (me). I don't want to do much of anything for her. I wish she lived near one of my Golden Boy brothers. At least I've put it out there for the Golden Boys to know that if at some point it gets to be too much, that I am walking away from it all. And I will.
My mother and I are like oil and water; we don't get along on a number of topics; housekeeping and hygiene being just two (I'm OCD, compulsive about personal cleanliness and the cleanliness/neatness of my home). She's just the opposite - showering once a week (but only because she's going to church, otherwise 'I may fall and I don't want to shower/bathe, a sponge bath will do it)...and her home looked like an explosion went off; food, debris, trash, mail, catalogs/magazines, everything piled high and cluttered; dirty dishes, unmade bed...the list could go on and on.
She told me once when she visited that my house looked like a museum - that I was too picky...for once in her life couldn't she just say, 'my you keep a clean home'...looks good...nope, not my mom...always critical...and accusing...it just never ends.
So having her come and live with my husband and I wasn't ever going to happen; I told her on multiple occasions that I care for her and love her; but that I will not take care of her; there is a difference. I've done my best to find in-home caregivers for her - only to have her fire them after a few visits - every single time. Now she's in an Adult Foster Care home and tells me everytime I talk to her - 'You've made a big mistake putting me in here! This isn't the right place for me. That woman is mean to me and I don't trust her.' And now she's longing for her old messy apartment - the one that just a month or so ago she said she couldn't stand going back to!!!
So no matter what I do, or where she goes she will be unhappy. She would be miserable in my home too - I know that for certain. So I say, what's worse? Having her safe in a place where she is being looked after or having your there all day, every day hearing all those complaints in person? I'll take the first option and listen to the complaints from a distance (it's only a few miles away)...but I have some control on when I get to listen to the constant complaints.
Find some other resources to help take care of your elders. There are no laws that say daughters have to bear the brunt of that responsibility. Set your parameters and try your best to stick with them (limit those phone calls, runs to the ER, etc.) - let someone else know that you won't be available - and if they want them looked after, etc. they should do it.
I believe my mother should feel very bad about putting us in this position, but clearly she does not. She seems to believe it's owed to her as a mother to have her kids take care of her. Her only son is the youngest of 7 kids (the oldest is now deceased so it's down to 6) and he's still up north working and raising a family, so he's no help. Three remaining sisters are also up north. I would love to move back up north where I came from but I have trouble justifying leaving the whole burden on my remaining sister. She likes my mother even less than I do, and they have never been close.
My mother has a housemate who does most of the day to day (laundry, errands, meal prep) in exchange for free rent, but when she needs a break I'm the one who stays with Mom and does all of those things. And there are millions of medical appointments and we all sort of feel that a family member should go with her and keep track of what's going on. I've also done numerous ER trips and hospital admissions with her. I think what my sister and I have both come down to is the idea of doing only what we feel is necessary, and pushing back on all the frivolous or unreasonable demands. Still, it's a lot, and it's very aggravating to be in this position for years on end.
I don't understand this at all. I think it's more likely that people who give unstintingly of themselves will be resentful if the same is not done for them in turn. I don't have kids and don't expect anyone to take care of my needs in old age, let alone my wants, whims, and desires. There's nobody to resent. But that does make me more resentful of my mother's expectation that I should cater to her. I am forced to sacrifice so much, knowing there won't be anyone to do the same for me. It doesn't make me happy at all, but I still can't imagine expecting anyone to put their life on hold, give up their job, etc. to be at my beck and call, even if I did have kids.
It is a heated topic for certain but is also as Sassy75 said, "caring for those we love is the human experience". Until the last 65 or so years there were not really other options for caring for the elderly. The children were expected to care for the parents. It is likely that your parents were from the WWII generation and it is just how the world was. It is also true that the woman are expected to be the ones to do the caregivers. It is no new thing. Women ARE the caregivers. Men ARE the hunter/gatherer's. It is in our DANA. Are we always successful in our human roles? No but it is just the way it is. Women will always be looked at as female and men as male. Is it fair? No...but then whoever said that life was going to be fair? Live and let live.
Parents with Alzheimer's and Dementia can be very taxing to care for and they lost the ability to be their Best Selves. But we should TRY to remember that it is the illness and not our parents that is doing the things that we hate so much. Sometimes our parents are what they always were...cranky. In that case you're probably already used to it! Smile!!!! Life is too short..one day we will all lose our dignity. But we ALL deserve to keep it as long as possible. If our parents have become cranky they must be forgiven. As if we put ourselves in their shoes, losing our minds and abilities slowly and with zero cure, we would be cranky too! =)
Now, I also believe that everyone has the ability to do only what is in their control at any given time. This is a very transient world, people are living all over the world. It's not always feasible to drop everything and help our parent(s) out. However, I do believe it is always possible to help out in some way. It can be in ways like monetarily, taking care of paperwork (so much can be done online these days), researching care facilities or home care, making phone calls, etc.
If you don't feel that you can provide the type of care that is needed, then perhaps you can do your part in making that care happen. I am not a believer in being manipulated and bullied into doing something. That is not necessary. So don't let them do that to you. Have a heart to heart talk with yourself, your spouse (if you have one), your children (if appropriate) and be sure everyone is in agreement with what type of help and how much you can provide. Good Luck
Also - as a child I never expected my mom to be my slave and cater to every damn whim - as my mom and my IL's do.
My parents raised me to be independent, to make decisions for myself, to not mooch off them but seek out my own solutions. Why is this unreasonable to expect of them as they are capable? My mom is capable of driving herself, doing her laundry, etc but DOES NOT WANT TO. Sorry - i'm not going to step in.
I will; however, see that as she ages, she is taken care of with me advocating for her care and visiting her. I just won't be doing the hands on that she wants.
And then things changed.
I lived through several decades of the Me Culture. Narcissists ruled the world, were worshipped and glorified.
Adults make their own choices and, unfortunately, many make poor ones. When they're done making poor choices, they expect both the doctor to fix the consequences and their children to help them remain independent.
I remember when I was little I heard my mom talking with the neighbor lady, who I heard say: "Life is hard and then we die." Obviously that made quite an impression on me. So while I agree, Sassy75, that "our society would do well to regain the sense of family rights and responsibilities" I also believe that we need to get back to basics and regain the self discipline necessary for making good choices. Excellence is a journey and discipline is how we get there.
She knew all she had to do was wait and I would get it done if she had asked or directed.
But I shared the joy with siblings and grandkids. All the way home...three hour drive I would tell and retell how she was doing that day and what she asked me to do this time.
When my mother gave up her condo on the coast to move inland near my two sisters (and, later, me), she insisted on buying a house. She was 80 years old and in no way capable of maintaining a house, plus she had no down payment. But she insisted, saying "I've never lived in a place I didn't own." As it turned out, it was impossible to find an affordable handicapped-accessible rental in my sisters' area, and she ended up having to buy a home ( I supplied the down payment from my 401(k)). Immediately the whole house and everything in it became somebody else's problem. And yes it was hard to set limits at first, and it's hard now because we moved her to that house and now it feels like we have to make it work for her.
I so wish my mother had money for assisted living and that she'd be willing to go to one. It would make my life so much more manageable!
Another option for you might be, right now, to establish yourself as empathetic. Let your Mom vent with you and only if the communication is open and you think she'll respond well - say "it must be scary to face the aging process, Mom." Don't argue with anything she says, just understand, listen, empathize. I think you will find this will improve her level of confidence in your support. And, if you have to have others care for her, you will be in a better position to do that - because she knows you get it, and that you will not let her be mistreated in any way.
I've established my emotional boundaries for myself with my Mom, only because I've been hurt by her so many times. I have told her that I love her, but I have to keep my distance emotionally. Of course, it helps that we are 1300 miles apart!
So. It's no wonder that many of our elders have Not-A-Clue about how our generation may be impacted, because, Back-in-The-Day, most adult children dealt with mere months or weeks of intensive eldercare.
For many of us, on the other hand ... 24/7 hands-on, do-it-yourself eldercare can well result, for many years, in lost opportunities to live our own lives and plan for our own "Golden Years."